President
Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday met behind closed-doors with Governor
Gabriel Suswam of Benue State and some key ministers over the ongoing
industrial action embarked upon by members of the Academic Staff Union
of Universities.
Suswam is the Chairman of the National
Economic Empowerment Development Strategy Assessment Implementation
Committee of the universities.
Others, who attended the meeting,
included the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; Minister of
Education, Prof. Ruqqayat Rufa’i; and the Minister of Labour and
Productivity, Chief Emeka Wogu.
The meeting, which was held inside the President’s office at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, lasted for a few hours.
No official statement was made available at the end of the meeting.
Okonjo-Iweala and Suswam left the
premises, using a gate that allowed them to evade journalists’ that
might have wanted to ask questions.
Wogu, who was initially walking towards
the Press Gallery, quickly made a detour when he sighted journalists
waiting for him and left through the same gate that the minister and the
governor had passed through earlier.
Rufa’i, however, walked into the journalists’ ambush before she realised it.
She initially declined comments on the
meeting but when pressed further, she said the government was on course
in its negotiation with ASUU.
The minister, however, appealed to the striking union to call off the industrial action in the interest of the nation.
“I have not been mandated to speak to
journalists on the matter but I can tell you that we are on course. I
will only appeal to ASUU to call off the strike in the interest of the
nation,” she said.
Meanwhile, ASUU on Monday foreclosed an
early resolution of the industrial crisis rocking the nation’s
university system as the union insisted that it would not call of its
industrial action until all its demands were met by the Federal
Government.
The President of ASUU, Nasir Fagge,
insisted that the union was resolute in sustaining the ongoing strike
action to ensure that the topical issues affecting the nation’s
university system tackled decisively once and for all.
He said it was inconceivable for the
union to call of the strike without achieving the objectives of the
action only to call another one later.
The ASUU President, who made the
comment while speak with journalists at the Benue State Governor’s
Lodge, Asokoro, Abuja, said the union decided to continue with the
strike because of the failure of the government to address the issues
raised after previous industrial actions were called off.
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