TSA stalling varsities’ research – ASUU

The Treasury Single Account (TSA), introduced by the Federal Government to check corruption in the system, is stalling research in the universities, according to the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

Exempting the universities from the TSA is among the demands of ASUU, whose members embarked on a one-week warning strike on Wednesday, Nov. 21.

According to its National President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, other demands include the payment of Earned Academic Allowances, effective funding of the universities, an end to the payment of fractions of salaries to some institutions, among others.

Ogunyemi has already warned that ASUU would embark on an indefinte strike after the warning strike, if their demands were not met.

Speaking specifically on the TSA, in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Dr. Christopher Piwuna, Chairman, Jos chapter of the union, said that the policy was of utmost concern to the universities because it was impeding their core mandate – research and breakthroughs.

“The TSA is a good policy, but its bottlenecks are too much,” Piwuna told our correspondent on Sunday in Jos.

“International and corporate bodies send research grants to universities, which are paid into the acounts of the institutions, but they get trapped in centralised TSA accounts that are not accessible.

“Such grants come with timelines and the granting institutions get agigated and start asking questions which we can neither answer nor explain. Often, this leads to forfeiture,” he said.

He regretted that the development had led to the loss of many research opportunities and possible breakthroughs, adding that it had also ruptured the confidence between the angry granting institutions and the helpless supposed recipients.

“ASUU has nothing against the TSA, we are only saying that the unversities should be exempted from it in view of the speed with which universities’ activities are carried out and also because lots of funds paid into the schools’ accounts come in from foreign sources,” he explained.

Piwuna admitted, however, that the TSA policy had checked a lot of excessess in the system and should be sustained.

“Some institutions have been found to have up to 25 accounts, some of which are not even known to their Chief Executive Officers.

“Obviously, such accounts were opened by corrupt elements to steal funds; it is a good thing that the TSA has stemmed such recklessness,” he said.

He explained that the warning strike was aimed at forcing government to revitalise the public universities “especially in view of the economic recession that has made it difficult for people to send their children to private universities”.

The ASUU chairman accused government of not giving education the attention it deserved, and vowed that the union would stand its groundS until the right thing was done.

He wondered why government would wait until lecturers began a strike before listening to their concerns.

“Since we started the warrning strike, we have held several meetings with the Senate President and other top stakeholders; one keeps wondering why it is difficult to listen to ASUU early enough so as to avert the worst scenarios.”

He alleged that 22 universities were paying incomplete salaries to workers, and argued that such would only affect commitment to service.

“The Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi, for instance, used to collect only 92 per cent of their salaries, but even that has been slashed to 85 per cent.

“ As a union, we have tried to find out why and what we are told is that the budget office has taken six per cent of their recurrent expenditure without any explanation. Certainly, this is a recipe for confusion,” he said.

Piwuna said that ASUU was also “shocked and angry” that states that had not been able to fund their universities were establishing new ones.

He particularly criticised the Edo State Government for starting a new university when the state-owned Ambrose Alli University was being under-funded.

Piwuna also wondered the Bayelsa State Government was working toward establishing an additional state university when it had not been able to meet its commitment to the Niger Delta University.

The ASUU official expressed the union’s readiness to work with stakeholders willing to shore up the fortunes of the educational sector, pointing out that the nation’s fortunes were tied to its growth.

FG threatens to revoke Ekiti federal varsity building contracts.

The Inter-Ministerial Committee on Government Projects has threatened to revoke some contracts awarded at the Federal University, Oye Ekiti, in Ekiti State.

The committee issued the threat after inspecting some ongoing projects at the institution.

The team, led by the Deputy Director of Procurement in the Federal Ministry of Education, Mr. Musa Odiniya, particularly warned Tripod Nigeria Ltd. and Dumaco Best – the contractors handling the Central Administrative Block and the University Library projects, respectively.

The Vice-Chancellor of the university, Prof. Kayode Soremekun, who conducted the team round the project sites, expressed disappointment at the slow pace of work on the two projects.

He said, “The larger story is that some of the critical projects have been abandoned. The contractors handling the construction of the library and the Central Administrative Block have been lackadaisical.’’

Soremekun said that he stopped the payment of N50m to a contractor because there was nothing to show for the N23m he had earlier received.

“What is the guarantee that he will not abscond again? The effect is that Nigerian students will study with substandard facilities. If these structures were put in place, Nigerians would generate foreign exchange because people from other countries would enroll their children here.”

The VC blamed the attitude of the contractors on impunity within the system, saying, “Some people believe they can do things without consequences. I hope there would be consequences this time. The implication is that you are killing the future of Nigerian youths that are supposed to be using the facility.”

The committee noted that the contractors did not show that they had the funds to handle the job even after 85 percent payment to one of them.

Kwara To Spend N3.8bn On Varsity’s Upgrade

Kwara State Government is to spend N1.8billion on capital projects in its university; Kwara State University, while another N2 billion will be spent on two other campuses of the institution.

Commissioner for Tertiary Education, Science and Technology, Dr. (Mrs.) Aminat Ahmed, who made this known yesterday in Ilorin said a sum of N181.4million has been spent on the ongoing Engineering block project in the university.

Also, a sum of N60million was spent in the university to accredit 8 Engineering courses with the Council for Registation of Engineers in Nigeria, COREN, and the Nigerian Universities Commission, NUC.

Credit: Nationalmirror

ASUU Petitions Buhari Over Academic Fraud At Varsity

Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, has petitioned President Muhammadu Buhari over allegations of academic fraud, corruption and acts of impunity leveled against Vice Chancellor of Michael Okpara University of Agriculture, Umudike, Prof. Hilary Odo Edeoga.

According to the union, the allegations bothered on “extortion of money from students, extra-budgetary expenses, unlawful recruitment, misappropriation of TETFUND money, charging unapproved fees, fraudulent contract awards, and academic fraud.”

It called on Buhari to constitute a special Presidential visitation panel for the university to conduct detailed enquiries into the way and manner the affairs of the institution have been conducted for the past four years.

ASUU’s petition, addressed to the President through the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Education, which was signed by Dr. Uzochukwu Onyebinama and Dr. E.S. Willie, chairman and secretary, respectively, was made available to journalists at the weekend in Ibadan, Oyo State capital.

The union with evidences attached to the petition, alleged that the VC issued statement of results to 90 students, who were admitted into the B.Sc Agribusiness not approved for the university and without NUC accreditation, which made the graduates to be demobilised and decamped by the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC.

Credit: NationalMirror