Students Stranded As Plateau Tertiary Institutions Begin Indefinite Strike
Students have been left stranded as the Joint Union of Plateau State Owned Tertiary Institutions (JUPTI) on Monday, September 3, embarked on an indefinite strike over five months salary arrears.
The industrial action is coming on the back of a letter dated August 23, which was signed by Paul Dakogol and Ayum Solomon, JUPTI chairman and secretary, respectively.
In the letter, the union gave government a seven-day ultimatum within which the arrears should be paid or face the consequences.
Luka Panpe, Secretary, Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Plateau Polytechnic Chapter, and a member of JUPTI, told NAN that the strike became necessary following the failure of the government to keep to its side of the bargain.
He said the union had reached an agreement with the government who promised to clear the salary arrears before the end of 2017 but failed.
“Our five months salaries was withheld because of the no work, no pay policy introduced by the previous administration. We took government to court in search of justice,” he said.
On why the government has failed to fulfil its agreement, Yakubu Dati, the state Commissioner for Information and Communications, attributed the failure of the government to pay the arrears to paucity of funds.
NAN reports that students were denied access into the Jos campus of the Plateau State Polytechnic as the main entrance was under lock and key.
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