ASUU Calls off Strike, Fuel Scarcity Looms as Tanker Drivers Down Tools.
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NNPC assures jetty fire will not cause scarcity.
By BENEDICT ODINAKA writing for ODOGWU MEDIA.
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) last night called off its over one-month strike after reaching an agreement with the federal government.
NNPC assures jetty fire will not cause scarcity.
By BENEDICT ODINAKA writing for ODOGWU MEDIA.
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) last night called off its over one-month strike after reaching an agreement with the federal government.
The ASUU President, Ogunyemi Abiodun, announced after a meeting with the union’s executives that they would suspend the industrial action for one month till end of October.
Abiodun said this was to allow government enough time to fulfill its promises as contained in the recent agreement reached with them.
To this end, the union directed university lecturers to resume duty from today.
The union
had embarked on an indefinite strike on August 13, following
government’s failure to implement the agreement reached with the union
in November 2016.
ODOGWU MEDIA gathered that the union’s decision to suspend the strike was reached
after an almost four hours closed-door meeting with the federal
government delegation led by the Minister of Labour, Chris Ngige.
At the meeting, a memorandum of understanding was signed by the union and Ngige on behalf of the federal government.
Others who
signed the document were: President of the Nigeria Labour Congress
(NLC), Ayuba Wabba, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education, Sonny Echono, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Labour, Mr. Bolaji Adebiyi and other members of the government team.
He listed
highlights of the agreement reached to include; funding of government
universities, payment of earned academic allowances, government
responsibility as regards academic staff schools (primary wing), pension
matters for professors, payment of salary shortfalls on which
implementation has already commenced and resolution on exemption of TSA
payment system in certain areas.
The labour
minister said the grey areas were conclusively dealt with to the
satisfaction of both parties which he attributed to the spirit of giving
and taking exhibited by both parties with great acknowledgement of the
economic situation of the country.
Expressing
hope that ASUU would call off the strike, Ngige said: “ASUU will go back
to consult its organ with a view to calling off the strike. We hope to
hear a good news from them in the next 24 hours so that our children can
go back to class. They got nearly everything they wanted.”
Reacting,
ASUU President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, said: “Government will hear from
us in the next 24 hours. It could even be less than that because our
members are waiting for us.”
Ogunyemi who
promised that the union would not rest on its oars until the country’s
education system is transformed, said it was high time Nigeria returned
back to the era of being an educational tourist destination for other
African countries.
He
appreciated both the labour minister and the education minister as well
as other stakeholders that were involved in the series of consultations
that resulted in the milestone reached through the signed agreement
.NNPC assures jetty fire will not cause scarcity..
Meanwhile, despite the assurance by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) that it has in stock sufficient quantity of diesel, kerosene and aviation fuel to serve the country, fuel crisis looms as the Nigerian Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas workers (NUPENG) yesterday stopped loading at the various depots in Lagos.
This is coming as the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Dr. Maikanti Baru, assured
motorists and other consumers of petroleum products nationwide that the
fire incident, which occurred at Apapa loading jetty at the early hours
of yesterday would not affect supply of petroleum products.
According to the NNPC boss, the corporation has more than 1.6 billion litres of petrol, enough to last for 48 days.
No fewer
than four people lost their lives with several others severely injured
when the Apapa PWA loading jetty belonging to the NNPC caught fire in
the early hours of yesterday.
Apapa has three jetties – PWA, BOP and NOJ-all belonging to NNPC for the discharge of imported petroleum products.
Despite the
NNPC’s commitment to ensure uninterrupted supply of petroleum products,
NUPENG has embarked on strike in solidarity with the Joe Ajaero-led
United Labour Congress of Nigeria (ULC), which commenced nation-wide
industrial action yesterday.
NUPENG, which also comprises Petroleum Tanker Drivers (PTD), belong to Ajaero’s labour faction.
Efforts to
reach the Western Zonal Chairman of NUPENG, Alhaji Tokunbo Korodo, were
unsuccessful as his mobile phone was switched off, but ODOGWU MEDIA confirmed
that the drivers did not load fuel at the depots.
ULC had
urged Nigerians to stockpile foodstuff and other basic necessities that
could last them during the duration of the strike as critical sectors of
the economy would be affected by the action.
Ajaero
listed critical sectors that would be affected to include
transportation, petroleum products supplies, power supply and banking
and other financial operations.
ULC’s action
was in protest against what it described as the militarisation of some
states and had demanded that“the federal government bans the stationing
of the army and police in our workplaces and factory premises.”
“This will
stop employers who are now colluding with the army and other security
agencies from setting up garrisons in our factories for the purposes of
intimidating and harassing workers in order to deny them their rights
and privileges. The army and the police should immediately withdraw
their garrisons in the different workplaces where they are currently
stationed.”
The NNPC
has, however, advised motorists not to engage in panic buying over the
jetty fire incident, adding that they should report any challenge they
may have in the course of purchasing to the Department of Petroleum
Resources (DPR) which is statutorily empowered to deal with such issue
ODOGWU MEDIA gathered that the fire at PWA Jetty started around 3 a.m. when hoodlums
tampered with the manifold, which is the connecting pipe to the vessel,
to scoop fuel.
It was not
clear how hoodlums managed to enter the jetty, which is heavily guarded
by personnel of the Nigerian Navy and other security agencies.
But there
are concerns that security officials allegedly connived with miscreants,
who scoop fuel from the pipelines at the jetty every night and in the
early morning hours.
The fire incident was said to have occurred shortly after a vessel, MT HISTIA IVORY, finished discharging petrol at the jetty.
Though the jetty was gutted by fire, the vessel was not affected.
It was also
gathered that the casualty figures would have been much higher if
security officials of NIPCO Plc on duty had not opened the company’s
exit gate through which the people at the jetty escaped from the raging
inferno.
When ODOGWU MEDI visited the facility, the four dead bodies were still lying unattended to.
A source
close to the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), which
manages the three NNPC jetties at Apapa, told THISDAY that it took the
intervention of fire fighters from the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) and
NIPCO for the fire to be put off.
“The fire started
around 3 a.m. when hoodlums tampered with the manifold at the jetty to
scoop fuel. Nobody knows how hoodlums managed to enter the jetty with
the large number of naval personnel on ground. MT HISTRIA IVORY just
finished discharging petrol and was supposed to have sailed away on
Sunday. When a vessel finished discharging, the pipelines and manifold
still contain many trucks of product and that was what those people went
to scoop,” he explained.
The
spokesman of NNPC, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu has, however, assured motorists and
other consumers of petroleum products nationwide that the fire incident
would not affect supply of petroleum products.
Ughamadu
said in a statement yesterday that NNPC had also deployed a team of
engineers to the jetty while the repair of the affected parts would
commence immediately.
He disclosed
that the fire was sparked from the activities of hoodlums who were
scooping fuels spilled from ships discharging fuels at the jetty.
According to him, Baru, who has been fully briefed on the incident, described the occurrence as unfortunate, assuring that NNPC has more than 1.6 billion litres of petrol, enough to last for 48 days
ASUU CALLS OFF STRIKE, FUEL SCARCITY LOOMS AS TANKER DRIVERS DOWN TOOLS.
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Tuesday, September 19, 2017
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