Audio By Carbonatix
A member of Parliament’s Education Committee, Vincent Ekow Assafuah, has described as illegal and unpatriotic, the reluctance of the University Teachers Association of Ghana (UTAG) to back down on their strike while negotiations continue.
According to him, UTAG is setting a bad precedence with its entrenched stance in what appears to be a deliberate attempt by the Association to hold the government to ransom over its conditions of service.
“For the avoidance of doubt, basic labour laws simply do not allow negotiations whiles on strike. I am struck by the difficulty with which UTAG is failing to understand this basic labour law requirement. I fear the bad precedence being set by UTAG. The actions of UTAG is simply illegal and unpatriotic and same must be condemned by all,” he said in a Facebook post on Monday, February 14.
The Old Tafo legislator noted UTAG’s entrenched demand and failure to reach any compromise with government suggests they are insensitive to the plights of university students.
Mr. Assafuah said inasmuch as the lecturers’ demands may be legitimate, “they should come to the realisation of utilising an amicable and appropriate medium of expressing an emphatic demand rather than resorting to a prolonged strike which is not healthy for our educational sector.”
“I would like to entreat UTAG to loosen their hardened stance and have a second thought of their decision in order not to aggravate the issue by damaging their hard earned image of professionalism,” Vincent Assafuah added.
For the second time, the Labour Division of the High Court directed the National Labour Commission (NLC) and UTAG to settle the industrial action out of court.
This follows an earlier directive by the same Court which was ignored by the University lecturers on the basis that they cannot negotiate with a party that has filed a lawsuit against them.
Both parties have been at a deadlock for over five weeks, a development that is threatening a mass shut down of public universities across the country.
Academic work and activities have been brought to a halt after several weeks of inactive teaching and learning.
There have been calls by some university students and education think tanks for universities to close down due to the strike action which they believe will threaten the academic calendar.
But Vincent Assafuah wants the NLC to be unbiased as it regulates discussions between the government and the lecturers.
“The NLC needs to play a pivotal role in bringing this impasse to a closure laced with mutual respect and understanding.”
UTAG’s demands
UTAG wants the government to reconsider the payment of its annual research allowance to a more realistic allowance “as this is critical to our research output, promotion and ultimately national development.”
They also want the 2013 Interim Market Premium (IMP) of 114% on Basic Salary restored.
The Association had bemoaned the current salary arrangement which has reduced its members’ basic premiums to $997.84 instead of the 2012 conditions of service which put entry level lecturers on a monthly pay of $2,084.42.
Latest Stories
-
Michael Carrick: Man Utd reach agreement with ex-midfielder to take over at Old Trafford until the summer
3 minutes -
I’ve not signed or cancelled any number plate contracts — DVLA Boss
15 minutes -
Offinso crash death toll rises to three
17 minutes -
BBC seeks dismissal of Trump’s $5bn defamation lawsuit
27 minutes -
We did international activations ahead of December in Ghana 2025 – Abeiku Aggrey
29 minutes -
‘Have GH¢100,000 or don’t wed’: Duncan-Williams slams lavish weddings
30 minutes -
Decision time for Trump on Iran but what does he ultimately want?
33 minutes -
‘They just kept killing’: Eyewitnesses describe deadly crackdown in Iran
34 minutes -
Armwrestling: Ghana confirmed to host 15th Africa Armwrestling Championship in April 2026
34 minutes -
Supreme Court defers ruling on Kpandai by-election to January 28
35 minutes -
IBF congratulates John Laryea on Continental Africa Featherweight triumph
38 minutes -
Ofori-Atta is embarrassing Ghana, says Martin Kpebu
45 minutes -
Africa Prosperity Network unveils Projet Afrique ahead of APD 2026 in Accra
46 minutes -
ACRR analysis and assessment of the SSNIT 2026 Pension Indexation Report
49 minutes -
If you want 2026 to feel like your happiest year yet, let go of these 7 habits
52 minutes
