Adamu Adamu, minister of Education, has said that he is not sure if federal government could meet the demands of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).
The union had declared a 30-day warning strike on Monday over the federal government’s failure to honour the agreement signed by both parties, a move the government had faulted.
Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting in Abuja, on Wednesday, the minister, who denied claims he had been shunning meetings with ASUU, stressed that he couldn’t confirm a resolution would be met by both parties within the 30-day period.
According to him: “ASUU, unfortunately, have gone on strike and I am looking for them because all the issues are being addressed.
“The last thing that happened was that our committee looked at their demands but there are renegotiations going on. They submitted a draft agreement which the ministry is looking at.
“A committee is looking at the draft document. Immediately it finishes, the government is meant to announce what it had accepted. Then suddenly, I heard them going on strike.
“ASUU will never say I deliberately refused to attend meetings. I always call the meeting myself. The meetings I didn’t attend were those that happened when I was in hospital in Germany.
“We want a peaceful resolution. The federal government is ready to meet them on all issues they have raised and if there are so many meetings and the gap is not closing, then, I think it’s not the fault of the government.
“There is a solution to this. The negotiations are the solution and that is why I have said that I am surprised that ASUU has gone on strike.”
“I can’t give you time. I am ready to reach an agreement with ASUU now but since I’m not the only one, I can’t give you time but certainly we are going to reach an agreement very soon.”