Connect with us

Education

‘Stop Misleading Your Members’- FG Asks ASUU To Respect Court Order, Resume Duty

Published

on

The Federal Government has asked ASUU to stop misleading their members, and advised them to resume duty

the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, has been advised to cease taking laws into its hands by directing its members to continue with the eight months old strike in defiance of the interlocutory injunction by the National Industrial Court, NICN, which restrained the union from further action.

The Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, gave this advise to the leadership of the union.

This call was contained in a statement by the ministry’s Deputy Director, Press and Public Relations, Olajide Oshundun, on Sunday.

 

Ngige had accused the union’s leadership, saying, “The union is dishonest and misleading its members and the general public, that it has filed an appeal as well as a stay of execution of the order of National Industrial Court on September 21, 2022, though it has not.

“Rather, ASUU only applied for permission to appeal the order. Also attached to the application, is a proposed notice of appeal which it intends to file if the leave to appeal is granted.

 

The application for a stay of execution as of this moment has not even been listed for hearing. Where then is ASUU coming from?

 

“It is therefore contemptuous, dishonest and misleading for the union to tell its members that it has not only appealed the interlocutory injunction by the National Industrial Court, directing it to call off the strike and return to work but that it also has a stay of execution.”

 

The minister, in a separate statement, also denied walking out in a meeting between the House of Representatives and ASUU.