Only court can decide varsity lecturers withheld eight-month salaries - Minister – Newstrends
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Only court can decide varsity lecturers withheld eight-month salaries – Minister

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The Federal Government says it is awaiting the ruling of the National Industrial Court (NIC) on what to do with the withheld eight-month salaries of university lecturers.

Minister of Labour and Employment,  Senator Chris Ngige, stated this in Abuja on Sunday.

The executive council of the Academic Staff Union of Universities will be meeting this week to take a decision on the payment of half salary to the lecturers for October by the government.

Activist lawyer and counsel to ASUU, Femi Falana (SAN), has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to direct the payment of the eight-month salaries to the lecturers who were on strike between February and October.

For now  Ngige maintained that “the matter is in court. We are waiting for the court to call us back. It is part of the substantive issues remitted to the court for pronouncement; whether they can be paid that (eight months withheld salary arrears) or not.

“The court has not called us. It is when the court calls us and we appear that the issue of out of court settlement or alternative dispute resolution will arise.’

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According to the minister, he has not met with the leadership of ASUU since the matter was referred to the NIC.

“Only the court can direct resumption of negotiation with the leadership of ASUU,” Ngige said.

He also said that ASUU members dragged his ministry to court over the registration of the Congress of Nigerian University Academics (CONUA) and the Nigeria Association of Medical and Dental Academics (NAMDA).

The minister said ASUU leadership dragged him and the Registrar of Trade Unions before the NIC over moves to withdraw the registration certificate issued to the union for failing to submit its audited accounts since 2013.

He added that these two issues were before the NIC for adjudication.

The minister said, “I have not met with the leadership of the union. It is the court that will direct me to go back and resume negotiation with the union. That is why I told the Speaker of the House of Representatives that I cannot come there to do any negotiation at the National Assembly.

“It will be a neglect of the court ruling. Our people have filed all the issues and we are waiting. Two matters are in court: the registration of CONUA and NAMDA. They took me to court. We have also filed our defence and counterclaim.

“The other matter before the court is the non-rendition of ASUU’s audited account since 2013 to date. The Registrar of Trade Unions wrote them in 2020 and they didn’t render any account that 2020.

“I wrote to them (ASUU) in 2022 and asked them to show cause why a proof of Section 15 of Trade Union Act should not merit them the withdrawal of their certificate or cancellation of their certificate of registration as a trade union.

“ASUU ran to court and asked the court to restraint the Registrar of Trade Unions and Minister of Labour and Employment from ever doing that (withdrawing their certificate of registration).”

After suspending its eight-month old strike on October 14, the government last week Thursday reportedly paid the university lecturers half salary for the month of October, a development that triggered fresh anxieties over ASUU’s suspended strike.

Education

Tinubu orders conduct of all schools, teachers census 

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Tinubu orders conduct of all schools, teachers census 

 

President Bola Tinubu has ordered the conduct of a census in the education sector to aid proper planning.

The directive which came on Thursday is aimed at producing accurate data on all schools in Nigeria from primary to tertiary level, their present conditions and facilities, proximity to one another and infrastructure.

It is also know the number of teachers in the country, their qualifications, training support received; number of pupils and students in primary, secondary, and tertiary institutions, gender, and exam grades.

A statement by Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity Bayo Onanuga said the policy DOTS, an acronym for Data Repository, Out-of-School Children Education, Teacher Training and Development, and Skill Development and Acquisition, will comprehensively overhaul the education sector.

This, he said, would improve learning and skill development, increase enrolment and ensure the academic security of the nation’s children.

According to the Presidency, the information that will be derived from the exercise will guide federal and state interventions for teachers’ training and development as well as overall support.

The statement read in part, “It will also provide data on gender ratio (boys and girls), their specific learning needs, and who is in school or who has dropped out based on daily monitoring with year-by-year reporting.

“There will be a dedicated portal/dashboard in the Federal Ministry of Education, offices of state governors, and local government chairpersons, which will host and disseminate this information for the federal government, states, and local governments to monitor in real time.

“This new data tracking architecture will enable the government to track the progress of students, thus having a clear data-driven mechanism for interventions, especially concerning out-of-school children, [especially] girls, and those with specific learning disabilities, among others.”

The Presidency also gave an update on out-of-school children’s education and training.

It said the Federal Ministry of Education was already implementing the government’s policy through the activities of four of its agencies, with about two million beneficiaries recorded thus far.

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22 Zamfara varsity students, staff members released after six months in captivity

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22 Zamfara varsity students, staff members released after six months in captivity

 

Twenty-two abducted students and staff members of the Federal University Gusau, Zamfara State, have finally been released after six months in captivity.

The victims, comprising 15 students and seven workers of the university, were abducted from the university in September 2023.

They were received on Monday April 15 in Abuja by the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu.

The captives were released in three batches, with the last batch returning home on Sunday April 14.

Ribadu said the rescue operation was coordinated by the National Counter-Terrorism Centre.

He urged them not to allow their experience to break them, but should rather make them stronger.

He said, “On behalf of the President, I thank all those involved in the successful rescue of the victims without losing anyone of them or paying any ransom.

“This is yet again a success story in our efforts to free all those being unlawfully held in captivity.

“We have so far released over a thousand of such victims without noise and with complete respect to their privacy and safety.

“This occasion marks a final juncture in a series of rescues we have undertaken in the last few months, to free victims of recent cases of mass abductions.

“Going forward, we are strengthening law enforcement and security measures to prevent these abductions, and strengthen physical security across vulnerable communities.”

National Coordinator, NCTC, Maj.-Gen. Adamu Laka, recalled that those rescued were abducted from the school on September 22, 2023, at about 0230hrs.

He said the bandits armed with various weapons attacked three off-campus students’ hostels at Sabon Gida in Gusau and kidnapped a number of female students alongside some male artisans.

Others, he said, were a private security guard and a protocol officer of the university.

He added that the bandits ransacked the hostels, and carted away foodstuffs, mobile phones, laptops, ATM cards, cash and other valuables.

According to him, the abductees were subsequently herded on motorcycles and foot to a location through a town in the Tsafe Local Government Area of Zamfara.

Laka said, “Search and rescue was conducted by a combined team of law enforcement agencies and the abductees were subsequently released in three batches, after 207 days in captivity.

“The first batch was rescued on March 15 while the second batch was rescued on April 12 and the last batch was rescued on April 14.

“All the abductees were profiled at the NCTC while the ONSA Medical Team examined them and administered minor treatments on the bruises sustained by 3 of the abductees.”

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Oromoni’s death natural but avoidable, coroner rules

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Oromoni’s death natural but avoidable, coroner rules 

Sylvester Oromoni died of a natural cause and not due to any action by his school, Down College, or accused five students of the college.

This is the verdict of a coroner, Mikhail Kadiri, who presided over the matter on Monday during a seven-hour magistrate court sitting in Ogba, Lagos.

The judgement coming after a two-year inquiry, affirmed that the 12-year-old died of sepsis emanating from an infection of the lungs and kidney due to an ankle injury.

The coroner however said his death was an avoidable case of parents and medical team’s negligence.

Sylvester Oromoni Junior who was a student of Dowen College in Lekki, Lagos, died on November 30, 2021.

The coroner cleared the five students of the college accused in the case, ruling that they played no part in the death of Sylvester and should not have been involved in the matter.

He also advised parents not to take their children’s health with levity.

The magistrate also called for better cooperation between the police and medical team and that the police must exercise caution before making arrests in the future.

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