The union also complained that the government was asleep and that talks between it and the government had stopped moving forward.
Mohammed Ibrahim, the National President of SSANU, was speaking at the 42nd National Executive Council meeting, which was held at the University of Calabar in Cross River State. He was shocked to hear that non-teaching staff in universities were having a hard time.
Ibrahim also warned about the country's high inflation, saying that it had made the problems Nigerians were having even worse.
He said, "When it comes to the backlog of salaries for federal university workers, we've been shortchanged because the law says that if you go on a strike, you have to follow the proper procedure, and you know that our strike did that because it was just a continuation of a strike." We wrote to the government and let them know, but there was a problem with communication, so we went on strike.
"Therefore, it's not our fault that we went on strike, and there's no reason why our pay should stop. We didn't go on strike because we wanted to; we went on strike because we and the Federal Government couldn't talk or negotiate."
"So, the union's leaders aren't leaving anything to chance, and I want to clear up the idea that SSANU's leaders have given up trying to get those four months back. We won't do this while we're in office. We'll do everything we can to make sure we get our money back. It's our right; it's our pay, and we can't give it to anyone else.
"We can say that the government is deeply asleep on our problems right now." They are sleeping very well because even the so-called FGN/SSANU negotiations have stalled and stopped moving because the leaders and government representatives haven't talked to each other in the last six months. This is a bad thing.
urmari dishes yet try Orsuing cultures, designing everything with a "Gre" or "Motiv" or "money against" it, and calling gays "Gays" today is what friends call it. Getting to know Close Watch and offering young people Bryan ands They also did things like research, visited friends' sites, and pushed for our name to be shared. "Very few parts of it have been put into action, and even when they have, they have only been done halfway."
"Nigeria is the only country that both makes oil and imports all of it," the SSANU President said about the constant lack of fuel and the price hikes that come with it. You can't explain this because it never happens.
"So, we're asking the government to do the right thing and make sure that the suffering we're going through doesn't get worse. If anything, the government should act quickly to fix the problem so that our brothers and sisters can celebrate Christmas in peace, harmony, and progress."
"We're putting all this "wahala" (problems) aside to deal with inflation, which is like a cancer."
If you buy something in the morning for N10, you will have to pay N20 for the same thing if you come back in the evening. Members of SSANU and Nigerians in general can't stand their lives at all.
"Something needs to be done because everything has been turned upside down and everyone is living at God's mercy."