University Lecturers Berate Minister Over Statements On ASUU Strike.

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), has accused the minister of labour and employment, Dr Chris Ngige, of misinforming Nigerians, especially on issues surrounding the union’s ongoing industrial action.

Ngige had, last Tuesday, on a Channels Television programme, said that the ministries of finance, education, labour and employment and the office of the accountant general of the federation would meet with ASUU to resolve the disagreement on Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS).


Ngige specifically said that “The issue of ASUU will soon come to an end for two reasons – ASUU has called the federal government, to be represented by finance and the office of the accountant-general and the education ministry, to come for the test, ”a reference to the verification test on the suitability of the University Transparency and Accountability Solution, UTAS, a tool developed by the union as a rectification complement to the federal government’s Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) the use of which is currently being protested by ASUU.

“We are ready to do that. After the Independence Day celebration, the four ministries and agencies involved will gather together with ASUU. We will look at the UTAS. If there are shortcomings with IPPIS as complained which UTAS has corrected. What’s wrong about it? It is software, we will look at it.



“Secondly, ASUU members have been collecting their money since COVID-19 came and I wrote a memo to Mr President that ASUU members are still Nigerians. Even the members have families that they care for. By upper week, we are going to arrange for this demonstration.”

However, the Lagos Zone of the union, in a statement issued on Wednesday and signed by the zonal coordinator, Olusiji Sowande, debunked the minister’s claim that a meeting had been scheduled between the university teachers’ body and government representatives to assess the University Transparency and Accountability Solution (UTAS) developed by the union as an alternative to the government’s seeming controversial Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS).

The union also denied the minister’s claim that the IPPIS was the only reason for the union’s strike, and claimed that, “Dr. Chris Ngige was also economical with the truth by misinforming the public that the government has been paying the salaries of members of our union to date.”

ASUU said that, one month after the UTAS was produced and a letter addressed to the labour ministry on the development, it was yet to be acknowledged, not to even talk of inviting the union to any meeting.

The statement reads in part; “The minister also misinformed the public by narrowing down the issues in contention to our rejection of IPPIS which UTAS seeks to replace. Other issues in contention for which our union is currently on total, comprehensive and indefinite strike include failure of government to fully implement the 2009 FGN-ASUU Agreement and February 2019 Memorandum of Action with timelines for release of funds for the revitalisation of dilapidated infrastructure in public universities, payment of outstanding earned academic allowances, conclusion of the renegotiation of 2009 FGN-ASUU Agreement, setting up of visitation panels to federal universities and proliferation of state universities.”

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