As the strike embarked upon by teachers of primary and secondary schools across Delta state enters its 14 day, the commissioner for information, Mr. Patrick Ukah has described the action of the teachers as most unreasonable, saying some of the teachers do not understand the present economic situation been experienced in the country.
According to the commissioner, “They are just most unreasonable in their request. Most of them do not understand what recession means. For a country that was selling oil at N150 per barrel, we are now selling oil at best at N56 and it went down as low as N28. It has never gone beyond this bracket. Automatically, if we sell 2.1 million barrels per day at this amount, we will have more money.
“Imagine if we sell 2.1 million barrels at this same N56, we will have more money. Imagine if you are selling it at N150, you will have more money but now the price has come down and yet the Niger Delta query and they have blown up all pipelines. The Escravos Line that carries most of the oils we sell from Delta State has been down and as I speak with you now, they are just
completing repairs.
“They have not started carrying oil through that line. So, that is the only hope we have for us to be able to sell the 2.1 million barrels. We are now selling at a lower price and the number of barrels we are expected to sell, we cannot sell. Are we truly not under recession?”. Ukah queried.
Ukah who expressed his displeasure concerning the teachers strike while playing host to the newly elected executive of indigenous chapel of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Delta state chapter, said the various meetings convened by the Head of Service (HoS), Mr. Reginald Bayoku, the Commissioner in charge of Basic and Secondary School Education, Mr. Chiedu Ebie and the state governor, reveals that the request of teachers were not grounded.
“We have held a meeting headed by the head of service another headed by the commissioner and another one headed by the governor. It was obvious that their argument was baseless”, noting that the payment of primary school teachers salaries was a constitutional provision for the local government councils and not state government and wondered that the issue has been trivialized by the teachers.
“It is obvious that state government does not pay primary school teachers’ salaries. Why do they now want the issue to be between them and the state government and no longer between them and ALGON? Are you seeing how they are turning it?
“And the basic issue is that the federal government in their laws stated that primary school teachers should be handled by the local government. That was why from the old they were taking 10 per cent initially but they now increased the percentage of the local government”, Ukah pointed out.
Ukah further disclosed that primary school teachers’ salary in the state is about N1.7 billion while their counterparts in the secondary school is almost about N1.8 billion, saying that “Each of them are ranking above N1.5 billion. The state government has squeezed the local government chairmen, they can’t spend anything except salaries are paid”.
“Now assuming JAAC comes and the whole local government in Delta State say is sharing N2 billion then you remove N1.8
or N1.7 what is left? And when you remove it, you will pay those primary school teachers. What of the other workers in the local government who by today are been owed 4, 5, 9, 10 and 13 months but those ones did not go on strike because they understand where their problem is coming
from.
“Now some local governments, by the time you make that deduction and they are getting minors X, how will they be able to pay teachers? Because it is based on your own allocation that we make deduction to pay teachers’ salaries.
“If Oshimili north teacher’s salary is N3 million and Oshimili north got N250 million when you minors N250 million, you are already indebted. It does not even pay the teachers’ salaries completely. Definitely Oshimili north will not be able to pay all the teachers in the local government. The same thing with the different local governments.
“That is why you find out that some are fully paid, some are not fully paid because there is a way they calculate it. Why are you turning it to a different issue entirely? And the job of the state government is not to pay primary school teachers”, Ukah stressed.
The commissioner explained that in their last JAAC meeting there was not enough money to pay primary school teachers, “What we are talking about is December, January and February and that December was ready after JAAC, they now said these other people are the same workers of the local government, when we pay you one month, we pay these other people one month. Let us do it for like three months. Maybe along the line this thing may increase, the teachers said never”.
“Then government now said, gentlemen let us be fair to everybody. Since the money can be enough to give to everybody 81 per cent of their salaries, remaining only 19 per cent. Can you please take 81 per cent so that the 19 per cent, let us watch it in the next three months, if there is no improvement, we will come back and pay the remaining 19 per cent then we continue, maybe along the line there will be an improvement, they said no”.
“So, now assuming ALGON goes on strike. Who will even prepare that salary for the teachers? But the ALGON that is doing the work for you and you are teaching, you don’t think they deserve anything. It is not between us and you, is for them to be reasonable. It means that there is something beating an external drum for them and they are dancing to it and we will not take it as a government”, Ukah said.
Continuing, Ukah said as at last week Tuesday, the teachers were in negotiation with the state governor for over four hours with all the demands, but it was discovered that the request was unreasonable.