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» IPPIS: FG Paid Some Professors N8,000 As Monthly Salary – Abiodun Ogunyemi - Education
The Academic Staff Union of Universities
(ASUU) on Thursday said it is yet to call off its ongoing strike
because the federal government has made a smooth negotiation very
impossible.
Disclosing this on Channels Television programme
‘Politics Today’ monitored by Daily Independent , the national body of
the university lecturers, led by its President, Prof. Abiodun Ogunyemi
said that they are waiting for the government to conduct an integrity
test on the University Transparency and Accountability Solution (UTAS), a
homegrown payment platform created by ASUU in place of the government’s
Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS).
Ogunyemi
said due to the IPPIS structure, some university lecturers are losing
up to 70 percent of their salaries while some professors received N8,000
as monthly salaries for several months.
He also accused the
federal government of reneging on agreements with the union since 2013
including frustrating the plan by ASUU to introduce an alternative
payment system for university lecturers.
While calling for the
understanding of students and their parents, he said that as far as they
are concerned, they don’t have any issue with going back to work, but
they want more sincerity on the side of government.
“People are
losing about 50 to 70 percent of their salaries. In fact, there were
professors that were paid about N8,000 in some months in our campuses.
So, we don’t expect something otherwise because that platform is not
meant for the university system”.
“I believe our students and
their parents will understand. If we have lecturers that have not been
paid for eight, nine months, how can we have that person putting in
their best into the system? If people are going back to the
universities and they will be paid half or less of their usual salaries,
how can we cope with that?”
“And salary is not the only issue
like I said, there were allowances that were discussed; there was the
issue of the salary scale. If we have been on the same salary structure
for 11 years, I think our members have the right to say ‘No, that
cannot happen. Government has made it difficult for smooth negotiation”.
It
will be recalled that ASUU embarked on an industrial action about
eight months ago across the country, following its dispute with the
Federal Government over their insistence on the implementation of the
Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) in the
payment of University lecturers’ salaries and allowances.
Alternatively, ASUU developed a homegrown payment platform, UTAS, which they believe guarantees the autonomy of the university.
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