Audio By Carbonatix
The Senior Staff Association-Universities of Ghana (SSA-UoG) and the Federation of Universities Senior Staff Association (PUSSAG) have suspended their industrial strike action with immediate effect.
In a press release, SSA-UoG stated that their decision follows a ruling by the National Labour Commission, some intervention from the Minister of Education, the Minister of Employment and Labour Relations, and the Fair Wages and Salaries Commission on behalf of the government.
According to SSA-UoG, these institutions have instituted a road map to ensure a speedy resolution of their demands.
The statement signed by the National Chairman, Zakaria Mohammed indicated that, “we will continue to engage faithfully with government and other relevant stakeholders in our fight for justice, fairness and equity in the salaries and allowances administration of our members.”
“I, therefore, call on all Senior Staff across the Sixteen (16) Public Universities in Ghana to resume work without further delay.”
The Senior Staff Association of Universities of Ghana declared a strike effective August 2, in connection with the failure by the government to resolve issues concerning their conditions of service.
In a statement, the group said the government failed to “respect and fulfil the agreements between both parties at different intervals.
Subsequently, the National Labour Commission invited the leadership of SSA-UoG to appear before it on August 5, 2021, to discuss the withdrawal of services.
Meanwhile, the University Teachers Association of Ghana (UTAG) has also been on strike demanding restoration of a 2012 Single Spine Salary Structure agreement that would have seen entry-level lecturers earn the cedi equivalent of $2,084 monthly.
In a press statement dated August 8, UTAG said its members will not return to work despite an injunction sought by the National Labour Commission against their industrial action.
In a statement released by the national body of the Association on August 8, 2021, National Secretary Dr K. K. Abavare indicated that UTAG has received resolutions from all 13 member public institutions mandating the continuation of the strike action.
“The call is also for us to remain focused, united and resolute in our quest to ensure that government initiates and implements appropriate measures to improve our CoS,” they added.
Latest Stories
-
‘He left me’ – Meagan Good says breakup with DeVon Franklin was painful but not a failure
2 minutes -
Alumni support essential to educational progress – Former GES Director
7 minutes -
Mahama pushes for joint ventures with China to boost Ghana’s economy
18 minutes -
Sekyere Rural Bank PLC increases profit by 246%, sets strategies to attain more
23 minutes -
Policy fragmentation slows EV growth -Koranteng advocates comprehensive national plan
24 minutes -
Utility tariff hikes too sensitive to ignore – Labour consultant demands stakeholder dialogue
26 minutes -
‘We will be ready’ – Mohammed Kudus welcomes England clash at 2026 World Cup
30 minutes -
4 Garrison Patrons Day Junior National Squash tournament ends in Obuasi
31 minutes -
The Paradox of power: Why military coups in Africa perpetuate rather than solve governance crises
39 minutes -
Minerals Development Fund implements environmentally sustainable, profitable initiative for small-scale mining
44 minutes -
Elon Musk’s X bans European Commission from making ads after €120m fine
46 minutes -
Road crashes aren’t linked with wizardry, but driver errors – Bono Region DVLA
49 minutes -
Fire ravages shop at Kukurantumi
50 minutes -
GTA responds to viral videos alleging kidnapping of tourists
53 minutes -
European leaders walk tightrope between backing Ukraine and keeping US on board
55 minutes
