“Should we go and borrow to pay N1.2 trillion yearly?” Keyamo snapped while fielding questions on Channels television.
“You cannot allow one sector of the economy to hold you by the jugular and then blackmail you to go and borrow N1.2 trillion for overheads when our total income would be about N6.1 trillion. And you have roads to build, health centres to build, other sectors to take care of,” he said
He then asked parents across the country to beg ASUU.
His words: “Like the President said the other time, those who know them, appeal to their sense of patriotism
“Let them go back to classes. They are not the only one in Nigeria. They are not the only ones feeding from the federal purse. The nation cannot grind to a halt because we want to take care of the demands of ASUU.”
Adamu will submit a proposal on how to end ASUU strike soon – ministry’s spokesman
However, the Federal Ministry of Education hinted yesterday that the Minister, Mallam Adamu Adamu, would soon submit a proposal on how to end the ASUU strike.
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The Director, Press and Public Relations, Federal Ministry of Education, Ben Goong, said in an interview in Abuja that Adamu offered to take over negotiations with the university unions from the Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, who has been leading the negotiation.
The ministry spokesman said the minister was working within the time frame he requested to end the strike by the university unions.
Goong said: “We are still within the time frame. I can assure you that the Hon Minister will submit a proposal to the President on how the crisis could be resolved within the stipulated time frame.”
It was gathered that the minister had an informal meeting on Monday with the leadership of ASUU.
This was confirmed by President of ASUU, Prof Emmanuel Osodeke
The ASUU president insisted that the university lecturers would not return to classrooms as directed by some state governors.
Governor of Kaduna State, Nasir El-Rufai, had threatened to sack lecturers of the state-owned university who failed to resume work.
This week, pictures of students of the Kaduna State University (KASU) writing examination surfaced on social media.
But Prof Osodeke, who condemned the governor’s directive, insisted that its members will not return to the classrooms.
He said: “A governor has the right to say go and reopen (classrooms) but our members have the right to say they are not going.
“Forget what they have done; we are going to challenge it. You can’t call somebody who didn’t teach a course to come and examine the students and you are using old questions for a course that was not taught. You go and hire a first degree holder to come and examine students using old questions. Is that the idea of a university?
“Ninety per cent of your lecturers are on strike and only ten per cent are conducting examinations for everybody. Is that correct? It is pure deceit and the nation will pay for it.
“We will graduate a student in engineering or medicine who was not properly taught. That is exactly what they are doing and Nigerians are watching.”
The industrial action took off as a four-week warning strike on February 14 and was extended on March 4 by another two months to allow the government meet all of its demands.
That was further extended by 12 weeks on May 9.
Among other demands, ASUU is seeking the payment of N1.1 trillion university revitalisation funds; an amount government says it does not have.
The Nation