The Federal Government on Wednesday said
while it had met seven out of the eight demands of the Academic Staff
Union of Universities, it could not meet the union’s demand for earned
allowance worth N284bn.
This, the Federal Government said, was due to economic recession.
The Minister of Labour and Employment,
Dr. Chris Ngige, said this while answering questions from State House
correspondents at the end of a meeting of the Federal Executive Council
presided over by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo at the Presidential Villa,
Abuja.
Ngige said there was no way the government could pay the allowance because there was no money.
The minister said the government had
conceded to the union the right to exclude endowment funds that accrued
to universities from the Treasury Single Account.
He said while the government agreed to
ASUU’s demand to exclude endowment funds from the TSA, that did not mean
that universities’ councils would not have right to audit such an
account.
Ngige added, “The other aspect of it is
the earned allowance. The earned allowance is the only one that is not
sorted out now because everybody knows and agrees that we are in a
recession.
“If we are in a recession and you are asking us to pay you N284bn, nobody will pay it because the money is not there.
“So, they (ASUU) agreed and the National
Assembly also agreed, but the government offered them some amount
pending when we finish auditing of the first tranche of money that has
been given to them in that same area of earned allowances.
“That tranche of money that they
collected is being audited, but the auditing process is very slow
because some people for some strange reasons are not allowing auditing
to take place. So, a time frame has been fixed of six months within
which the auditing will be done.
“Within those six months, government has
offered something that they will be paying on a monthly basis and ASUU
has also made a counter proposal to government so both parties have gone
back to their principals.
“ASUU has a principal which is the
national executive body and government has come back to look at our
finances viz-a-viz with the National Assembly which will appropriate
that particular fund because for 2016, there is nothing in the budget
for it. It will be done and appropriated as and when due.”
Ngige said ASUU was expected to return to the negotiating table with its counter proposal.
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