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Showing posts with label COEASU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COEASU. Show all posts

1 April 2014

Prolonged ASUP/COEASU Strike: Students Continues Protest

ASUP
Angry students took to the streets of Lagos in continuation of their protest over the prolonged ASUP/COEASU strike.


The students who were led by the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Zone D Coordinator, Comrade Sunday Asefon said the protest was to identify with spirit of the late human rights activist and lawyer, Chief Gani Fawehinmi, SAN.

He implored the FG to listen to the pleas of the students who have stayed at home for 8 months now and meet the demands of the two unions.

The students called on Governor Babatunde Fashola to reverse the fees of LASU to the minimum, and urged the Federal Government to honour the 2010 agreement entered into with COEASU and ASUP.

They also demanded the conversion of Higher National Diploma (HND), to Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech, 26 per cent budgetary allocation to education as recommended by the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and the removal of Supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike.

20 March 2014

ASUP, COEASU strike: Minister urges lecturers to call off strike

asup,coeasu strike
The supervising Minister of Education, Barr. Ezenwo Nyesom Wike,has urged the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) and College of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU), to call off the protracted strike.

This was made to known to the public in a statement released to the press in Abuja yesterday by his Special Assistant (Media), Mr. Simeon Nwakaudu.

The minister said he had led negotiations with ASUP and COEASU leaderships to resolve the on-going strike on several occasions and hoped that the two unions would respond positively to the latest efforts of the Federal Government and call of their strikes.

He said: “These negotiations has led to the Federal Government meeting about 90 per cent of the demands of the unions.

”Only one principal demand is yet to be finalised, but the Federal Government has placed before the two unions the payment of arrears of CONTISS 15 put at over N40billion for the two unions. The Federal Government has proposed two instalmental payments, which the unions rejected.”

He said further negotiations were held last week, adding that there was hope that in the coming days, the outstanding issues would be resolved.

The minister said the Federal Government had worked round the clock to resolve all issues presented by ASUP and COEASU.

“It is the hope of Nigerians that the associations will reciprocate by calling off their strikes in the coming days,” he said.

It would be recalled the Federal Government, through the Federal Ministry of Education, set up the Needs Assessment Committees for Polytechnics and Colleges of Education, and the two committees are in the process of concluding their reports.

27 September 2013

COEASU Gives FG a 60-Day Ultimatum to Meet Demands or Else

The Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) has given the Federal Government a 60-day ultimatum to meet its demands. The President of the Union, Mr. Asagha Okoro, said “the nation would regret looking down on the teaching education sector if concrete steps are not taken to address COEASU’s grievances.”
In an exclusive interview with our source, Okoro said: “we have packaged all the issues facing the teaching education sector. If we do not see concrete action within 60 days, we will employ non conventional industrial methods to make our voice heard. What we are asking for is not much; most of these demands can be met with as little as N26bn. After a one week warning strike, the Union met with government representatives at the office of the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Emeka Wogu, last Thursday.
Outome of meeting
Okoro, speaking on the outcome of the meeting said: “We were told that our concerns were germane and will be addressed. However, the issues discussed were forwarded to the Minister of State for Education and we were told that a meeting would be scheduled with him as soon as possible.”
The union had pointed out 17 issues to be addressed by the government. They include: “the suspicious delay in the release of the 2012 visitation white paper; the refusal of colleges managements to recruit commensurate academic manpower to cater for the high dearth of academic staff to meet the contemporary challenges engendered by the rising population of students; the non-harmonization of conditions of service for academic staff of all tertiary institutions to stem brain drain from the colleges of education to the universities; the proposed selective imposition of IPPIS in the CoE and the polytechnics; the truncation of a hitherto functional and innovative Tertiary Education Trust Fund leading to obvious regrettable gaps that compromises the critical need for the consolidation of the gains recorded during the past five years; non implementation of CONPCASS, 65years retirement age and Migration to CONTISS 15 in some state CoE; the non conduct of Needs Assessment for CoE to address students and staff needs for the enhancement of quality teaching and learning.”
Others are: the refusal of government to approve an Independent degree awarding status for all CoE certified by NUC as being qualified to award degrees in Teacher Education; illegal imposition of Group Life Insurance underwriters and the non payment of death benefits to our deceased colleague’s families between 2000 and 2013; non budgetary allocations for outsourced services and the refusal of government to heed the call for the abrogation of outsourced services and the offer of regular employment to all those in the outsourced cadre and the payment of out-standing arrears to the tune of N2,443,278,543.96; the non allocation/release of funds (N2,344,765,841) for crucial academic activities like accreditation programmes, among others.
Meanwhile, in its bid to forestall another strike action by COEASU, the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Wogu, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with COEASU which charged the Federal Ministry of Education to, as a matter of urgency, meet with the Union to determine some of the issues at stake.
At the end of the Thursday meeting aimed at reassessing the extent of the implementation of the agreement reached on the 30th of August 2013 between the Ministry of Education and COEASU.
Source: Vanguard

10 September 2013

Colleges of Education embarks on a 7-day warning strike

For more than two months that the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), shut down academic activities in both Federal and State’s universities across the country, lecturers in colleges of education, under the umbrella body of Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) had on Tuesday, began a 7-day warning strike to press home their own demands from the Federal and States Governments. While joining their colleagues in other colleges, Adeyemi College of Education (ACE), Ondo chapter of COEASU on Monday closed down the main entrance to the college and brought every activities on the campus to a halt in an early mourning protest march. Chairman of COEASU in the college and the national Vice-President of the union, Samuel Akintunde and Smart Olugbeko, respectively led other members in the protest March that preceded today’s (Tuesday) commencement of the strike action. The union leaders said COEASU embarked on the strike action over failure of the Federal Government to honour the gentleman agreement it entered with the teachers’ union in 2009. The union also condemned the protracted delay in the release of the White Paper of the Presidential Visitation panels to Federal Colleges of Education, arguing that the delay could only be understood as a deliberate and calculated attempt at not addressing the critical issues that the panels unearthed. It also rejected the introduction of Integrated Personnel Payment System (IPPIS), stressing that it was not only retrogressive, but infringed on the very laws establishing colleges of education and the regulatory body; thereby capable of obstructing the smooth running of colleges of education. COEASU then called on both Federal and State governments to fund education sector maximally, given its strategic necessity as an indispensable need in the development strides of any nation. Meanwhile, the management of Adeyemi College of Education has suspended the ongoing examinations in the school, urging the students to remain calm until COEASU call off the strike. Deputy provost of ACE, Olufemi Olajuyigbe told newsmen that the request for weaver to allow the students to finish their exams was turned down by the local chapter of COEASU in order not to incur the sanction of the national body. Olajiyigbe, however pleaded with the Federal Government to save the education sector from total collapse with the ongoing strike actions by different academic bodies. Source: DailyPost
 

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