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ASUU’s 14-Day Ultimatum to FG: Another Showdown Looms in University Education

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has once again placed the Federal Government on notice, issuing a 14-day ultimatum to resolve longstanding grievances or face industrial action.

At its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Abuja on Sunday, September 28, 2025, the union, led by its national president, Prof. Chris Piwuna, warned that a two-week warning strike would commence if government failed to act—potentially escalating into a full-blown, indefinite strike.

The Core Issues

The demands are familiar. For years, ASUU has insisted on:

The government has repeatedly promised reforms, even setting up committees such as the one chaired by Education Ministry permanent secretary Abel Enitan, but progress has been slow.

Why It Matters

This ultimatum is not just another union-government spat—it cuts to the heart of Nigeria’s education crisis. University students are the ones who bear the brunt of repeated strikes, often losing months or years to academic disruptions. For lecturers, it is a matter of dignity, welfare, and the survival of the public university system.

Observers note that with Nigeria’s fragile economy, the government may struggle to meet ASUU’s financial demands fully. Yet, failure to act decisively risks another prolonged strike, further eroding confidence in public universities and pushing more parents toward costly private or foreign education.

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The Bigger Picture

The showdown also reflects a deeper governance challenge: the inability of successive administrations to find a lasting solution to the funding of tertiary education. Each strike cycle follows a familiar script—agreements reached, promises made, deadlines missed, strikes declared, and last-minute interventions that provide temporary relief but no permanent fix.

For ASUU, the 14-day ultimatum is a test of its bargaining power. For government, it is a test of political will. For students and their families, it is yet another anxious wait, hoping history does not repeat itself.

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