By Darlighton Anule

I have always sensed that the dissonance between obstinate  patriotism and  arrogance of  will,  may eventually lead to  blackmail over who takes the blame for the prolonged ASUU industrial action. This feeling is not aided by a seeming rivalry and connivance, laid bare by the  discordant accounts of the meeting between the President, his ministers and heads of relevant agencies over the strike. Some of the headlines:  “Buhari Orders Ngige to hands off negotiation.” “Minister of Education Requested Ngige to hands off Negotiation.” Buhari Didn’t Ask me to hands off talks with ASUU.”  Then, came a parody of what ought to be an unambiguous, a tell all  readout from the presidential spokesperson about the meeting.  Why the statement was skewed to create an impression of a misunderstanding is best known to the author.  It was even better to allow Nigerians speculate than leave an innuendo that pitches  the Education Minister , Adamu Adamu  as an antithesis to his Labour and Employment  counterpart, Senator Chris Ngige.  The reports  in a section of the media which silhouetted Ngige,  look more like a planted insight or a promoted  editorial mischief. That the Education Minister was quoted by the Premium Times as saying  he abandoned ASUU negotiation the very day Ngige raised in the Federal Executive Council, that once an industrial dispute snowballs into a strike,  it becomes the  prerogative of the Ministry of Labour, draws more curiosity. I thought that such deliberations in the Federal Executive Council are classified and hidden from the public. In spite, section 3 & 4 of the Trade Disputes Act, Cap T8,  Laws of Federation of Nigeria, 2004  clear every ambiguity on the  handling of industrial disputes, hence render impotent, this assertion that suggests a hijack of his  responsibility.

These  sections of the Trade Disputes Act on apprehension state that whenever a union and its parent Ministry, in this case ASUU and the Ministry of Education,  fail to resolve a dispute and it ends  in strike, the matter migrates inevitably to the Minister of Labour for conciliation. Here, ASUU declared a dispute with the Ministry of Education and both couldn’t resolve it. The union consequently  went on strike on the 14th of March 2022, effectively paving the way for transmission  to the  Minister of Labour and Employment, who acting under section 17 of the Act apprehended the strike at the  conciliation meeting, held March 1, 2022. The section also says that once the matter is apprehended, the union shall call off strike while negotiations go on. But Nigeria is not governed by laws , otherwise  ASUU wouldn’t still be on strike. The idea of hijacking the ASUU negotiation is therefore not factual, in fact baseless. Such misconception arises because government officials don’t read and do not to ruminate on what  they dish out to the public. Our press has also been overtaken by untidy and shallow reporters, incapable of little research on beats. If  the presidential spokesman had shed light on this simple procedure, this embarrassing suspicion of infighting would have no place. Had the Education Minister  also handled the dispute  with ASUU successfully, the union would neither have gone on strike nor the matter migrate to the Ministry of Labour. It is a cycle we saw  in 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021 and now 2022.

Also, a clear understanding of section 9 &14  of the Trade Disputes Act nullifies claims that Labour Minister was asked to hands off negotiation.  It explains that  when he  is unable to settle a dispute , he will either transfer  the matter to the Industrial Arbitration Panel or the National Industrial Court of Nigeria. The question will now be why he didn’t migrate this case. My experience in labour activism is  that a  matter as critical as the current ASUU/FGN imbroglio which straddles the artery of national progress will prove  counterproductive at both levels. First is that the Federal Government is dealing with intellectuals whose  willed inflexibility  nears outlawry. ASUU is no ordinary union you can coerce especially under democracy. The other is  that the sensitivity of the matter and the overriding need to give it a closure for sake of posterity towers above other considerations. Hence, migrating it backwards in de novo, is the best option. In simple terms, the matter goes back to the Ministry of Education for fresh talks and where it fails, the Ministry of  Labour will wade in once more.

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Overall, Ngige’s pitfall traces to his stubborn patriotism. Those close to him would have warned him that obstinate nationalism of the Great Zik of Africa  whose apostleship he claims, is time-worn, hence not the right oars to paddle safely along Nigeria’s windy rivers of intrigues and mischief. Ngige’s matter with ASUU revolves around his unbending devotion to perfectionism where others would ordinarily skate along.  It is also about the untrammeled  patriotism of an Igbo in high public office, often an orphan who must seek fastidiousness to avoid being sacrificed. Ngige wants everything done the right way, no short cut. He wants the 2009 agreement negotiated in such a manner that government can implement. He doesn’t want a bogus agreement like it was in 2009, an agreement for  sake of agreement that has led to this current impasse . He is  over protective of the Federal government finances  as if they belong to him. He insists FG can’t pay N1.9m monthly to a professor.  That education currently takes the nearly 40%  of the federal salaries .This is the departure point with ASUU and perhaps, others who don’t like his style . ASUU which has always been comfortable with Ngige, eulogizing him for pushing their cause and for living an example in having all his children in public university at home, suddenly made him an enemy.  ASUU leadership mutters  preference for Adamu who would wink at what Ngige would scowl at. Any surprise it accuses Ngige of standing in their way to Udoji awards!  ASUU President, Emmanuel Osodeke’s text of press conference  on 19thJuly, 2022 made no pretences about this at all. Just as Adamu declassified FEC deliberations to make Ngige a fall guy, Osodeke squealed that Ngige asked ASUU in one of their meetings to piquet Education Ministry. The tone of his revelation exposes  back stage politics. But there is nothing wrong in asking a union to piquet the office of its employer instead of a debilitating strike, after all, the NLC has piqueted  Ngige, even blocking his house with a forty feet petrol tanker. But let me ask as an aside,  if Professor Osodeke read that statement before going to press, for I observed over thirty-five  grammatical and typographical errors. Is it part of the failure of the revitalization fund ? The standard has fallen so regrettably .

Ngige should squarely take the blame for misconstruing Nigeria’s finances for his. Breathing down the neck of ASUU with lessons on dwindling government resources, citing ability to pay as key in collective bargaining, even in the face of longitudinal corruption, conjures an imaginary grinding axe between them. The rejection of 300% pay rise by  Muzali Committee did not go down well with ASUU. Rejecting the 180% by Nimi Briggs is adding salt to injury.  Perhaps Ngige should have tanked in and let the roof fall on the succeeding administration. But even at that, the urgency he accorded theBriggs Committee says a lot. Unfortunately, his six weeks-time frame was elongated to three months by the Education Ministry. Earlier, the Munzali report gathered dust also at the Ministry of education until it became moribund, with  Ngige kicking. Let Ngige  also  take the blame . In deed, at the meeting of March 1, 2022, the newly posted Permanent Secretary of the Education Ministry, profusely  apologized  for the laxity of his Ministry over the years. He admitted  that the ministry wasn’t attending meetings and pushing issues as it ought to. It was at the opening session before the press exit. Ngige should also take the blame. Some of the industrial action won’t last long if concerned parties treat it with dispatch. From absenteeism to under representation at meetings, Nigeria’s bureaucracy culpable somehow . Ngige has been sighted at  the Accountant General’s Office following up  payment to ASUU because officers would sleep over it. He also advised ASUU to create the office of a  secretary general and deputy who can do the leg work, that Professors might find deigning  at the Ministries and relevant agencies. Now that the matter has reverted to Education, lets see how it also resolves the issue of payment platform where UTAS and UPPPS are at daggers drawn, even in the background of seeming government’s reluctance to ditch IPPIS.

•Anule, a labour activist lives in Abuja.