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ASUU Strike Is Becoming An Annual Celebration

Recurring industrial actions are no longer just labour disputes. They are a national development crisis affecting millions of students and the country’s future.

Once again, the familiar question dominates conversations across campuses and homes: Will ASUU go on strike?

In Nigeria, this is no longer breaking news. It has become a recurring chapter in a long-running cycle of warnings, negotiations, walkouts, and temporary suspensions.

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) maintains that it is demanding improved funding for public universities, better welfare for lecturers, and full implementation of agreements signed with the Federal Government, particularly the widely referenced 2009 agreement. The government, on its part, frequently cites economic constraints and competing national priorities as obstacles to immediate compliance.

Both sides defend their positions. Both sides present arguments.

Yet while discussions continue, lecture halls fall silent.

Students, the central stakeholders in this crisis, bear the heaviest consequences. Academic calendars collapse. A four-year degree stretches into five or six years. Graduation timelines become uncertain. Motivation declines. Families, already grappling with economic pressure, absorb additional emotional and financial strain.

Perhaps most troubling is the normalization of this instability. The national conversation has gradually shifted from “How do we prevent this?” to “When will it happen again?” When disruption becomes predictable, it signals deeper structural dysfunction.

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Education is not a peripheral sector. It is the foundation upon which economic growth, innovation, leadership, and national stability are built. Repeated shutdowns weaken public confidence in Nigeria’s university system and widen inequality, as those who can afford alternatives turn to private or foreign institutions while others are left waiting.

Temporary suspensions of strikes may restore activity briefly, but they do not resolve the underlying issues. Sustainable funding mechanisms, transparent implementation of agreements, fiscal accountability, and long-term policy reform are necessary if this cycle is to end.

The ASUU strike is no longer merely a disagreement between a union and the government. It is a test of national priorities. It concerns the future of millions of young Nigerians whose ambitions should not be subject to recurring uncertainty.

Until structural solutions replace temporary fixes, Nigeria’s universities will remain vulnerable to pause, and with them, the nation’s progress.

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