How Tinubu can revive University system

By Sunday Saanu

03 September 2023   |   3:00 am 

Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU). Pix:Bellanaija

Motivation to do this write-up is predicated on the perception that President Bola Tinubu is public-opinion sensitive and determined to take Nigeria to greater heights. He also seems to be committed to doing whatever can bring greater good to a greater number of Nigerians.

null

From all indications, Tinubu, unlike his immediate predecessor, Muhammadu Buhari, is more communicative and interactive with obvious willingness to make life more bearable. It is against this background that one is persuaded to join many eminent Nigerians, in raising the issue of public university system with him.

There is no controverting the fact that the system is currently tottering at the brink of collapse as it is dying of insipidity. Without being euphemistic about the poor condition of the system, it is unfortunate that many federal universities in their laboratories have resorted to using kerosene stove in place of Bunsen burner. In metaphorical sense, the system is not only sick, it is on an intensive care unit, gasping for breath. During the Buhari regime, the system sweltered from crisis to crisis, as various campuses of universities became cloudy with so much aches and pains.

In response to the nagging problems of poor funding, decayed infrastructure, poor welfare of workers, therefore, campus-based associations: Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT), and Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU) as usual, took on Buhari’s regime, after shouting themselves hoarse, embarking on an indefinite strike.

Perhaps the last year strike which began on Monday February 14, 2022 and was called off on October 14, 2022 remains one of the longest with debilitating effects on the system. For eight months, the system was in a complete paralysis and rigour mortis. With Buhari and his cunning and contemptuous silence style in charge, assisted by the Education Minister, Malam Adamu Adamu and Labour Minister, Dr. Chris Ngige, the then government sadly provided leadership atrophy which clearly destroyed the system. It is unfortunate that the strike was allowed to drag for that long.

However, irrespective of what may be perceived as the unions’ “excesses or offences”, no responsible government should have allowed a crisis to fester for eight months. And, after eight months of starvation, stress and distress, the government invoked the “no-work,no-pay” policy, thereby withholding payment of the striking workers! Who does that? Who says ASUU members did not work during the crisis? Many of them were still stealthily supervising theses and dissertations of their students with hunger in their stomach. I know many students who completed their Ph.D programmes during the eight months of strike.

Who says SSANU and NASU members were not working during the strike? Security men and women who are members of these unions were coming to work every day to protect government’s property. Armed robbers could have invaded the campuses and wrecked havoc but for the services of our patriotic security personnel. Yet, Buhari’s government was audacious enough to say those who sacrificed so much to safeguard lives and property should not be paid! And they have not been paid up till now!

What Buhari and his Ministers did to the university system was more than an equivalent of the coup d’etat in Niger. The way they handled the face-off amounted to a deliberate destruction of the system. Let me slice it a little thinner: Buhari handled the crisis with extreme apathy and unfriendliness. While Ngige, in a fit of vengeful hubris was always presenting a phalanx of statistical inaccuracies, sarcasms, and negative innuendos, Education Minister, Adamu appeared to be at loss; standing so aloof with no creative solutions to the raging storm. At the end of the day, it was a triumph of politics over rationality, with humongous spill-over effect.

null

Today, many academic and non-academic staff members have resigned and migrated abroad in search of the proverbial greener pastures. Political elites forced them to seek safety elsewhere. If there is any sector that has experienced “Japa” syndrome, It is the university system as workers resign on a daily basis in all the university campuses. Refusing to pay varsity workers in different categories for four and eight months respectively is an indiscretion that is currently hunting at a higher cost to the integrity of the system.

Indeed, if Buhari and his boys thought they defeated and decimated the campus-based unions, they only need to look back and see the backlash of their draconian decision. In a particular department in a university, only three lecturers are left behind as ten of them have resigned and migrated abroad, saying they could not withstand the indignity of begging to feed their families. Again, many of the young academics sponsored abroad for further studies by Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETfund) have refused to come back to the system.

Now, what is the way forward?. This is where I invite President Tinubu to step forward and remedy this national disaster. If there was a government that inadvertently destroyed a system, there must be a government that should be credited with renewing and rebuilding. Tinubu should be able to bind the wounds inflicted on the system and dress its suppurating gashes. The first step in this regard is to pay eight months withheld salaries of the academics and four months of the SSANU members. Forget about the court ruling upholding “no-work, no-pay policy”. Tinubu shouldn’t be legalistic in this matter, rather he should be moralistic!

How much is the salary of a professor? An average professor goes home with a little above Four Hundred Thousand Naira. The payment is pittance and the wages are wretched  in today’s economy. It is therefore heinous and heartless for any government to have withheld such poor salary for eight months. Apart from the eight-month salary withheld, ASUU in its recent release claimed that the government has stopped paying promotion arrears since 2018. SSANU has also confirmed the same claim, adding that the government has never paid 23 percent salary increase implemented among other federal workers recently.

The mood of the university workers, since last year, has been dour. From the recent strike, they have ended up with burns and blisters. The workers have paid the price of crucifixion in order to ensure that the system enjoys the glory of resurrection. The point cannot be overstated that they need healing. The healing they require urgently now is the payment of their seized salaries and other allowances. This is the road to recovery.

In all likelihood, one is hoping that President Tinubu, along with his Education Minister, Prof. Tahir Mamman should be able to dislodge the siege of stagnation hovering over the university system in country. This government should strive to inspire hope out of the current hopelessness in the system. This is the desired direction. Tinubu should save the system from intellectual haemorrhage. He should empower the remaining university workers who have not “japaed” As John Maxwell will say, “leaders become great, not because of their power, but because of their ability to empower”.

Interestingly, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo came in 1999 and increased university workers’ salary, thus writing his name in gold. It must not be said that President Tinubu perpetuates the leadership deficit foisted on the system by Buhari. Indeed, this wickedness against the university workers must not be sustained through inadvertence. The destruction of education is the destruction of the country. It is so demoralizing for a professor to be begging to feed his family, while those who could not boast of five credits at school certificate examination level are sharing billions in Abuja. Nigerians are watching and waiting.

How Tinubu can revive University system

By Sunday Saanu

03 September 2023   |   3:00 am 

Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU). Pix:Bellanaija

Motivation to do this write-up is predicated on the perception that President Bola Tinubu is public-opinion sensitive and determined to take Nigeria to greater heights. He also seems to be committed to doing whatever can bring greater good to a greater number of Nigerians.

null

From all indications, Tinubu, unlike his immediate predecessor, Muhammadu Buhari, is more communicative and interactive with obvious willingness to make life more bearable. It is against this background that one is persuaded to join many eminent Nigerians, in raising the issue of public university system with him.

There is no controverting the fact that the system is currently tottering at the brink of collapse as it is dying of insipidity. Without being euphemistic about the poor condition of the system, it is unfortunate that many federal universities in their laboratories have resorted to using kerosene stove in place of Bunsen burner. In metaphorical sense, the system is not only sick, it is on an intensive care unit, gasping for breath. During the Buhari regime, the system sweltered from crisis to crisis, as various campuses of universities became cloudy with so much aches and pains.

In response to the nagging problems of poor funding, decayed infrastructure, poor welfare of workers, therefore, campus-based associations: Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT), and Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU) as usual, took on Buhari’s regime, after shouting themselves hoarse, embarking on an indefinite strike.

Perhaps the last year strike which began on Monday February 14, 2022 and was called off on October 14, 2022 remains one of the longest with debilitating effects on the system. For eight months, the system was in a complete paralysis and rigour mortis. With Buhari and his cunning and contemptuous silence style in charge, assisted by the Education Minister, Malam Adamu Adamu and Labour Minister, Dr. Chris Ngige, the then government sadly provided leadership atrophy which clearly destroyed the system. It is unfortunate that the strike was allowed to drag for that long.

However, irrespective of what may be perceived as the unions’ “excesses or offences”, no responsible government should have allowed a crisis to fester for eight months. And, after eight months of starvation, stress and distress, the government invoked the “no-work,no-pay” policy, thereby withholding payment of the striking workers! Who does that? Who says ASUU members did not work during the crisis? Many of them were still stealthily supervising theses and dissertations of their students with hunger in their stomach. I know many students who completed their Ph.D programmes during the eight months of strike.

Who says SSANU and NASU members were not working during the strike? Security men and women who are members of these unions were coming to work every day to protect government’s property. Armed robbers could have invaded the campuses and wrecked havoc but for the services of our patriotic security personnel. Yet, Buhari’s government was audacious enough to say those who sacrificed so much to safeguard lives and property should not be paid! And they have not been paid up till now!

What Buhari and his Ministers did to the university system was more than an equivalent of the coup d’etat in Niger. The way they handled the face-off amounted to a deliberate destruction of the system. Let me slice it a little thinner: Buhari handled the crisis with extreme apathy and unfriendliness. While Ngige, in a fit of vengeful hubris was always presenting a phalanx of statistical inaccuracies, sarcasms, and negative innuendos, Education Minister, Adamu appeared to be at loss; standing so aloof with no creative solutions to the raging storm. At the end of the day, it was a triumph of politics over rationality, with humongous spill-over effect.

null

Today, many academic and non-academic staff members have resigned and migrated abroad in search of the proverbial greener pastures. Political elites forced them to seek safety elsewhere. If there is any sector that has experienced “Japa” syndrome, It is the university system as workers resign on a daily basis in all the university campuses. Refusing to pay varsity workers in different categories for four and eight months respectively is an indiscretion that is currently hunting at a higher cost to the integrity of the system.

Indeed, if Buhari and his boys thought they defeated and decimated the campus-based unions, they only need to look back and see the backlash of their draconian decision. In a particular department in a university, only three lecturers are left behind as ten of them have resigned and migrated abroad, saying they could not withstand the indignity of begging to feed their families. Again, many of the young academics sponsored abroad for further studies by Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETfund) have refused to come back to the system.

Now, what is the way forward?. This is where I invite President Tinubu to step forward and remedy this national disaster. If there was a government that inadvertently destroyed a system, there must be a government that should be credited with renewing and rebuilding. Tinubu should be able to bind the wounds inflicted on the system and dress its suppurating gashes. The first step in this regard is to pay eight months withheld salaries of the academics and four months of the SSANU members. Forget about the court ruling upholding “no-work, no-pay policy”. Tinubu shouldn’t be legalistic in this matter, rather he should be moralistic!

How much is the salary of a professor? An average professor goes home with a little above Four Hundred Thousand Naira. The payment is pittance and the wages are wretched  in today’s economy. It is therefore heinous and heartless for any government to have withheld such poor salary for eight months. Apart from the eight-month salary withheld, ASUU in its recent release claimed that the government has stopped paying promotion arrears since 2018. SSANU has also confirmed the same claim, adding that the government has never paid 23 percent salary increase implemented among other federal workers recently.

The mood of the university workers, since last year, has been dour. From the recent strike, they have ended up with burns and blisters. The workers have paid the price of crucifixion in order to ensure that the system enjoys the glory of resurrection. The point cannot be overstated that they need healing. The healing they require urgently now is the payment of their seized salaries and other allowances. This is the road to recovery.

In all likelihood, one is hoping that President Tinubu, along with his Education Minister, Prof. Tahir Mamman should be able to dislodge the siege of stagnation hovering over the university system in country. This government should strive to inspire hope out of the current hopelessness in the system. This is the desired direction. Tinubu should save the system from intellectual haemorrhage. He should empower the remaining university workers who have not “japaed” As John Maxwell will say, “leaders become great, not because of their power, but because of their ability to empower”.

Interestingly, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo came in 1999 and increased university workers’ salary, thus writing his name in gold. It must not be said that President Tinubu perpetuates the leadership deficit foisted on the system by Buhari. Indeed, this wickedness against the university workers must not be sustained through inadvertence. The destruction of education is the destruction of the country. It is so demoralizing for a professor to be begging to feed his family, while those who could not boast of five credits at school certificate examination level are sharing billions in Abuja. Nigerians are watching and waiting.

TETFUND considers suspending foreign training for staff, students

By Oluyemi Ogunseyin

17 August 2023   |   2:34 pm 

TETFUND Executive Secretary, Sonny Echono

The Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) has said that it is considering suspending foreign training for members of staff and students.

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The Executive Secretary of TETFUND, Sonny Echono, made this known on Wednesday at a One-Day Stakeholders’ Engagement on Emerging Issues with the TETFund Intervention in Abuja.

Echono said such training could stop because the recent policy initiated by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had created difficulties in the payment of foreign scholarships, tuition fees, and stipends.

According to him, the funds’ allocation was barely enough to service programmes under its Tertiary Scholarship for Academic Staff (TSAS).

As a result, TETFUND is considering suspending foreign scholarships while also looking at the possibility of an upward review of local scholarships.

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“The fund at this material time is also discouraging beneficiary institutions from initiating new Benchwork programmes,” Echono said.

“Additionally, there are issues related to scholars not returning to serve their bonds at their home institutions upon completion of their programmes.

“Infact, the challenge of scholars absconding has undermined and complicated the TSAS programme and brought it under intense scrutiny.

“It is for these and other reasons that this engagement was organised. We need to address these challenges and find solutions to ensure the effective and smooth implementation of our scholarship programmes,” he said.

Echono had on Tuesday while appearing at an investigative hearing organised by a House of Representatives ad hoc committee said that the current foreign exchange situation makes it impossible to continue the sponsorship of students overseas.

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The House Committee is investigating the alleged mismanagement of over N24 trillion by TETFUND.

“The money we allocated in naira cannot cover the dollar requirement for training,” he told the House of Reps. 

“For those who are currently there, we now need more naira to pay for the dollar that is required for their annual fees. We are trying to put a hold on it.

“Most of our trainings now will be done locally through our experienced, first-generation universities and other specialized universities based here. 

“This way, we can retain our resources in house and cope with the change in foreign exchange rates.”

Sacked Plateau Rep heads to Appeal Court

By NAN

13 September 2023   |   2:00 pm 

House of Representatives. Photo/FACEBOOK/SPEAKERGBAJA

Rep. Dachung Bagos (PDP-Plateau) says he plans to challenge the ruling of the National Assembly Elections Petitions Tribunal which nullified his election for the Jos South/East Federal Constituency.

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Bagos said this in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja.

He faulted the tribunal’s judgement, saying that previous judgements had indicated that only the party or its members had the power to challenge the nominations and sponsorship of candidates.

‘’Such issues are pre-election matters; one cannot help but wonder why this panel thought differently.

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“The outcome of the Election Tribunal against the mandate of the good people of Jos South, Jos East Federal Constituency raises a lot of questions.

“Can a mandate with an overwhelming winning vote of over 95,000 against 31,000 be a mere academic exercise?

“Democracy is for the people and with the people I will always stand; I call on my constituents and party faithful to remain calm and resolute as we seek redress in the Court of Appeal.”

NFF AGM a ‘tea party’, didn’t address key issues, says Jalla

By Gowon Akpodonor

14 September 2023   |   3:50 am 

Nigerian Football Federation (NFF)

The 79th Annual General Meeting of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF), held in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, on September 9, has been described as a mere ‘tea party’ following its failure to address some key issues affecting football development in the country.

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The Chairman, Task Force, Professional Footballers Association of Nigeria (PFAN), Harrison Jalla, said yesterday, that it is now obvious that one year into the Ibrahim Gusau-led board, the hegemony of the States Football Association Chairmen would continue to run the skewed administrative structure of the Nigeria Football Federation.

“This became evident in the content of the communique issued at the 79th AGM in Uyo on Sunday, September 9, 2023,” Jalla said. “As usual, no issue on the agenda was debated or contested in the 45 minutes closed door session.

“Not even the most contentious issues that suspended the NFF AGM for over nine months from convening before the September 30th, 2022, controversial election that birthed the Ibrahim Gusau-led NFF Board.

“The issues of reforms, composition of the Board, and congress on equal representative basis by all the statutory members of the NFF, which is still an ongoing litigation process as a resistance to the current order of the NFF administrative structure in both the Federal high court and the court of Appeal in Abuja was not even mentioned at the Uyo AGM,” he stated.

Speaking further, Jalla said: “This dangerous signal started manifesting in the list released on August 8, 2023, as members of NFF Standing and Adhoc Committees, where qualified and competent Nigerians with expertise in different disciplines relevant to such committees were shut out.

“From all intent and purpose, the Ibrahim Gusau-led board has already shut out other statutory members of NFF, and is plotting a return in 2026 through the usual block vote of the states Football Association Chairmen.

“Will Nigeria Football continue to wallow in this circus of the monopoly of these grossly incompetent States Football Association Chairmen? The months ahead will give a clearer picture whether this imbalance in the administrative structure would be addressed or the old order would brazenly continue to be sustained.

“There is no alternative to opening up the NFF administrative structure on equal basis for all statutory members, qualified Nigerians in relevant disciplines and the private sector for corporate participation. Nigeria Football cannot continue to remain a clan or kingdom for the States Football Association,” Jalla stated.

No official of the NFF was ready to speak on the issue, yesterday.

A’Court affirms Udende, Moro as Benue North, Benue South senators

By Ameh Ochojila, Abuja | 02 November 2023 | 5:26 am

Gavel

The Abuja Division of the Court of Appeal, yesterday, affirmed Emmanuel Udende of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as the winner of Benue North East Senatorial seat.null

The three-man panel of the Appeal Court held that Benue State National Assembly Election Petition Tribunal, led by Justice Ori Zik-Ikeoha, which had earlier entered judgment in favour of Senator Gabriel Suswam, erred by declaring Suswam winner of the election.

It held that the tribunal was wrong in its re-calculation of the votes, and questioned the procedure used in the deduction of the votes from the APC’s votes.

Similarly, the Appeal Court, yesterday, affirmed Senator Abba Moro of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) as winner of the senatorial election for Benue South District.

The court held that the appellants (Daniel Onje and his party) were unable to prove their case before the court to warrant nullification of the election.

The three-man panel of justices, therefore, upheld the declaration of Moro as duly elected senator representing the Benue South senatorial seat.

The court said that the allegation of forgery against respondent Moro was speculative and could not be proven by the appellant.

It, therefore, held that there was no evidence to prove that there was forgery and subsequently dismissed the case.
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Rep. Dachung Bagos (PDP-Plateau) says he plans to challenge the ruling of the National Assembly Elections Petitions Tribunal which nullified his election for the Jos South/East Federal Constituency. Bagos said this in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja. He faulted the tribunal’s judgement, saying that previous judgements had indicated that only the party or its…

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Suspected trafficker steals 6-year-old pupil from Makurdi school

certificate forgery

By Peter Duru, Makurdi

A six-year-old pupil of RCM Primary School, Tionsha on the outskirts of Makurdi town, Agatha Apenanibo is reported to have been stolen from her school by a suspected trafficker. null

Confirming the incident to newsmen in Makurdi, the Head Teacher of the school, Mrs. Grace Torkuma explained that the pupil went missing at the weekend while out on break with her mates. https://live.primis-amp.tech/content/video/amp/videoIframe.php?s=114290#amp=1

According to Mrs. Torkuma the pupil who was marked present when the morning attendance was taken by the class teacher was in class till the break period. 

She said nobody noticed her absence because it was normal for some of the pupils in the school to always dash home during break. 

“So because of that, I didn’t take her absence seriously until the following day when the matter was brought to my notice by her class teacher after the father reported the incident to the school.” 

She said findings from fellow pupils indicated that while the pupils were on break, the missing girl in the company of her mates was playing by the roadside which is not too far from the Makurdi-Naka road “when an unknown woman called her and gave her unspecified amount of money to buy biscuit but also followed her and the both of them never returned again.” 

Mrs. Torkuma who attributed the incident to the absence of a perimeter fence around the school which made it difficult to check trespassers and restrict the pupils to the confines of the school, said the matter had been reported to the Police. 

Efforts to reach the father of the girl failed as he refused to speak but the parish priest of RCM Church Tionsha, where Agatha’s parents are parishioners, Rev. Fr. Osbert Viashima, confirmed the incident. 

Contacted, the Police Public Relations Officer, Superintendent, SP Catherine Anene who confirmed the development said an investigation was ongoing into the matter.

Niger Delta leaders visit Wike, condemn moves to impeach Rivers gov Fubara

Published

on November 4, 2023

By Nsikak Nseyen

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Leaders of various ethnic nationalities in the Niger Delta have paid a solidarity visit to Nyesom Wike, the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), to convey the region’s appreciation to President Bola Tinubu for including him in his cabinet.

The Niger Delta leaders also congratulated Wike on his appointment as minister.

A statement issued by Dr Kingsley Kuku on Saturday, noted that the 60-member delegation of prominent Niger Delta leaders was led by Prof A.W. Obianime, a former President of Ijaw National Congress (INC).

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On current political developments in Rivers, the leaders noted that the state was strategic to the South-South region and could not afford to be in crisis.

“As Lagos State is very dear to the South West, so is Rivers State to the Niger Delta. This is because as an injury to one is an injury to all, we feel justified to condemn the macabre dance playing out there.

“We join PANDEF, INC, IYC, MOSIEND, MOSOP, Ogbakor Ikwerre and all other responsible bodies in the Niger Delta in condemning the mischievous attempts at the State House of Assembly to impeach the State Governor on frivolous grounds of ‘gross misconduct’.

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“It is quite unacceptable to us and to the entire Niger Delta. Any person, authority or group of persons involved in stoking this fire is strongly advised to desist from it and allow peace to reign,” the statement said.

The statement noted that as a political leader in Rivers, Wike wields the influence to broker peace as both the executive and legislators consist of his political proteges.

“They will listen to you when you talk to them. All eyes are on you. Be the peacemaker that you are and do all you can to timely quench this fire before it becomes devastating.

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“The consequences will do no one any good. It will not also speak well of us as Rivers people in particular and Niger Deltans in general.

“Your silence in this matter will not be golden and the world will think you’re playing the ostrich.

“We plead with you to step into a peaceful resolution of this matter so that the Nigerian populace will not say that Pompey was drinking tea when Rome was burning,” the statement said.

Senate Says It Gave Speedy Approval To Tinubu’s N2.17tn Supplementary Budget To Address Nigerians’ Sufferings

Senate Says It Gave Speedy Approval To Tinubu’s N2.17tn Supplementary Budget To Address Nigerians’ Sufferings

November 4, 2023

NEWS

Recall the appropriation bill was submitted to the National Assembly by President Bola Tinubu on Tuesday and the National Assembly suspended some of its rules to fast-track its passage.

The Senate has said the National Assembly took into cognisance the suffering of Nigerians in the speedy approval of the N2.17 trillion Supplementary Appropriation Bill.

The Vice Chairman, Senate Committee on Appropriation, Senator Ali Ndume, in a chat with newsmen in Abuja on Saturday, said passing the budget within 48 hours was a patriotic duty.

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Recall the appropriation bill was submitted to the National Assembly by President Bola Tinubu on Tuesday and the National Assembly suspended some of its rules to fast-track its passage.

The bill was read for the first and second times and sent to the Appropriations committees of both chambers.

The report of the joint committee was presented, considered and approved within 48 hours.

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While explaining what happened, Ndume said, “The increases of prices of fuel, costs of essential services and food items have gone up in the country following the withdrawal of fuel subsidy.

“Workers embarked on strike many times as a result of this and there were negotiations between the organised labour unions and the Federal Government.

“At the end of the negotiations, the Labour and the Federal Government agreed that workers would be paid N35,000 in addition to their minimum wage.

“If N35,000 is paid to each of the over 1.5 million workers, the amount is huge. The money was captured in the supplementary budget.

“There were also agitations among parents of students in tertiary institutions following the increment in the tuition fees and the Federal Government came up with a wonderful idea of giving loans to students in tertiary institutions hence provision of N5.5 billion was made in the supplementary budget for that purpose also.” He said.

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