The University of Jos (UniJos) chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has directed lecturers not to resume work until the federal government settles their withheld salaries.
The chairman of ASUU in the university, Dr Lazarus Maigoro, said this in Jos, the Plateau State capital, on Friday.
Maigoro said the ASUU members were not on another strike, adding that the decision to stay at home was taken at a congress held on Friday.
Maigoro, however, said part of the agreement reached with the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, was that 50 per cent of withheld salaries would be paid with immediate effect.
“As we speak, only 17 days prorated October salary was paid to our members by the office of the Accountant-General of the Federation.
“In view of the bottleneck on the payment of backlog of salaries, the congress of ASUU at the University of Jos met and resolved to stay at home until the withheld salaries are paid.
“We are not on another strike, though. For the avoidance of doubt, our members are back to work, willing and ready to teach but are unable to work.
“Based on the revised academic calendar for the 2020/2021 session approved by the Senate of the university, lectures should have started, but the lack of payment of salaries has constrained our members from going to the classrooms to teach,” the UniJos ASUU chairman stated.
According to Maigoro, the decision not to teach means that students who have resumed will wait indefinitely while lecturers await the payment of withheld salaries.
The national body of ASUU suspended its eight-month-old strike on October 14, following a court order directing union members to resume lectures and an intervention by the House of Representatives leadership
A few weeks after calling off its 8-month-old strike on October 14, both the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the newly registered Congress of Nigerian Universities Academics (CONUA) have kicked against the payment of half salaries to their members for October
The Nigerian government has insisted on implementing the ‘No Work, No Pay’ policy for the period the university workers were away from their duty posts.