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ASUU: Labour Threatens Nationwide Strike

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Blackout, Naira Scarcity Loom As Electricity, Bank Workers, Others Join Labour Strike
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The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) on Friday threatened to embark on a nationwide strike following the lingering industrial action of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

NLC has expressed its grievances over the failure of the Federal Government to resolve the industrial strike of ASUU.

The President of NLC, Ayuba Wabba stated this during an interview on Arise TV on Friday.

Members of ASUU have been on strike since February 14 following the failure of the Federal Government to agree to its demand.

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Wabba, while speaking on the outcome of the 3-day solidarity protest with ASUU, said the protest did not yield the desired results.

The NLC President said, “A whole academic year has been lost and we are toying with the future of these children, no justifiable reason is good enough to say why we cannot address the issue, and that is why NLC had to wade in.

“I think at the point we are at, we must also act. What you can do today, why should you wait to do it tomorrow? So time is of the essence and that is why we are doing that consultation after the consultation, we’ll also communicate our position to the government.

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“Hopefully, before next week they should also be able to resolve the issue. From what I heard, there have been some discussions with some of the unions, but that has not yielded the desired results. Till our children are back to school we cannot rest on our oars. NLC will be willing to do anything to make sure that our children are back to school.

“It will be a matter of last resort for the government to allow the last decision of our National Executive Council, which is the withdrawal of services of all the workers in Nigeria to take effect and we are considering all of that because it is already a decision that is on the table and we are working towards that.

“Issues like this, particularly issues that pertain to industrial relations are better resolved on the table, but where they fail, we have to use workers’ power because if a worker has not been paid for seven months, you should know that his entire family is in disarray and if you look at the chain of people that are affected, if the school system is working, you know that those that sell food, those that sell books, those that sell all manner of things in the value chain will also benefit. In this situation, all those in the value chain are also out of work, they don’t have means of livelihood and therefore it will add to the insecurity and the social challenge that we have in our system.

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“We also know for sure that if children are out of school for seven months, a lot of things can happen. So nobody is happy and that is why it has given NLC a lot of concern my advice to the government is to not allow us to deploy workers’ power as a matter of last resort.

“ASUU has a case and they have made that very clear and I think we should separate facts from information that is not correct. We will be ready to take on anybody on the issue, I think we should play fewer politics on the issue, we should speak about the substance of the issue and how to resolve it. It will be an act of irresponsibility for anybody to say that these issues do not matter or that we don’t have solutions. The burden of leadership is actually to find solutions and address it.”