Nigerians lament declaration of indefinite strike by university teachers
LAGOS, Nigeria (AA) – Nigerians on Wednesday lamented the declaration earlier this week of an indefinite total strike by university lecturers in the country.
Taiwo Amodu, a public servant and parent based in the capital Abuja, told Anadolu Agency that the announcement of a total strike will further exacerbate tensions among parents and university students.
Laide Nasir, an associate professor at the Federal University Oye-Ekiti, said the closure of universities in the country has a negative impact on students, teachers and parents.
He also described the government’s suspension of their salaries since March as “wicked, adding this is affecting the economic well-being of the teachers and their dependents.
In a statement late Monday, the president of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke, announced the rollover of the nearly seven-month-long industrial dispute to a total and indefinite strike.
“The NEC resolved to transmute the strike to a comprehensive, total and indefinite action,” he said, referring to the union’s National Executive Council.
He said the lecturers resolved to continue their strike because the government was yet to honor an agreement reached between the two parties since 2017, without elaborating.
However, a spokesperson for the Federal Ministry of Education, Ben Goong, said the government had taken all possible steps to end the strike.
He said it was unreasonable for the strike to linger for over six months.
Nigerian public universities have been experiencing a crisis since 1993 over teachers’ wages, the financing of research, and other issues.