The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH) and University of Ibadan chapters, have tasked the Federal and state governments to release monies deducted from the Union.
The Union also urged the government to give more and due attention to tertiary education funding.
Chairmen of ASUU, LAUTECH and the University of Ibadan, Dr Babatunde Lawal and Professor Ayo Akinwole, respectively, made the demands.
This was while addressing newsmen shortly after protesting against the foot-dragging attitude of the Federal Government to the demands of the Union.
The LAUTECH ASUU boss said the demands of the Union are legitimate. He said improved learning conditions will contribute to the development of science and technology and national development.
The Union had protested against the delayed renegotiation of the 2009 FGN/ASUU agreements and the haphazard.
Dr Babatunde called on the government to release third party deductions. These included cooperative contributions, pension deductions and union check-off dues. They were made through the IPPIS platform to the Union. He said prompt action and not delay strategy would work
“IPPIS is a violation of the university autonomy as well as the Acts establishing the universities. Added to this illegality is its notoriety as a fraudulent platform that is inflicting unprecedented hardship on Nigerian academics. It is corruptly distorting university operations with respect to the payroll management.
“It is on these grounds that ASUU is consistently rejecting IPPIS. We are, however, worried that the grip of IPPIS on the universities is far from being eased.
“This is more than four months after the government directed the exit of federal universities and other tertiary institutions from the discredited payment platform.
“As of today, the salaries of our members are still whimsically withheld. Third-party deductions (cooperative contributions, pension deductions, and union check-off dues) are not released.
“The platform, with all its encumbrances, is still being used to pay our members under the disguise of “New IPPIS”. This is contrary to the Federal Executive Council’s (FEC) directive,” Babatunde said.
Chairman of the Union at the University of Ibadan, Professor Ayo Akinwole, made similar demands. He said this after the University of Ibadan ASUU alsobprotested against the precarious conditions under which lecturers work.
Akinwole described as fraudulent deduction of monies of unions and cooperative societies with members belonging to without remitting same since 2020.
“Members of the Union, by lawful association, subscribe to unions, cooperative and other sundry societies within their respective universities where they pay monthly check-off dues, deductions, contributions etc.
“In line with the extant labour laws and industrial best practices, these labelled third party deductions are deducted from source (directly from their monthly salaries). They are expectedly to be remitted directly to the account of the beneficiary unions and societies on behalf of subscribed members.
“Due to the menace of IPPIS, these dues have now been deducted by the operators of the IPPIS since February 2020.
“Some of these deductions made by the IPPIS since 2020 have not been released to these unions and societies. This is not only an act of sabotage but also fraudulent,” he said
Akinwole added: “We cannot fold our arms and allow the university system in Nigeria to be destroyed by successive transient governments.
“It is our historic duty as a Union of intellectuals to defend university education in Nigeria and protect knowledge production for future generations.”
ASUU urged the government to utilise the new window of opportunity presented to it by the Union to resolve all outstanding issues. It gave the advice in order to avert industrial crisis in public universities.