🟥 Strike Activated After Deadline Lapses on Negotiation Talks
Administrative operations across public universities have been halted following a nationwide strike by the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions and the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities, with non-academic staff withdrawing services over unresolved wage and welfare disputes.
The decision was formally conveyed in a letter dated April 30, 2026, addressed to the Minister of Education, Tunji Alausa, and signed by NASU General Secretary Peters Adeyemi and SSANU President Mohammed Ibrahim.
“In view of this, with the agreement not concluded as at 30th April 2026, and with no new offer, the strike action shall commence by 12am on May 1, 2026,” the unions stated.
🟨 Allowance Dispute Remains Unresolved After Policy Withdrawal
At the centre of the dispute is a 30 per cent increase in the Consolidated Non-Teaching Tools Allowance, initially communicated by government but later withdrawn — a move the unions acknowledged but said failed to resolve the underlying issues.
“Despite this, the withdrawal did not resolve the core issues in dispute,” the union leaders said.
They added that no alternative proposal had been presented to replace the withdrawn allowance.
“While the letter on the withdrawal… is acknowledged, no new offer has been made to supersede the 30 per cent allowances contained in the withdrawn letter.”
The unions argue that the absence of a replacement offer, combined with delays in renegotiation, left their demands unmet.
🟥 Deadline Set, Missed, and Enforced by Labour Leadership
The Joint Action Committee (JAC) of both unions had earlier set April 30 as the deadline for concluding negotiations, with a clear mandate from members to trigger industrial action if talks failed.
“The consensus outcome of the consultation is that our demand vis-à -vis the slow pace of the renegotiation process has not been met.”
With the deadline unmet and no fresh proposal from government, union leadership moved to activate the strike.
“We hereby inform the Federal Government… that as a result of the failure of Government to avert the strike by positively acceding to our demands, all members… will commence total and comprehensive strike action.”
08112935565, 08161558757
🟨 Operations Across Universities and Centres Set to Halt
The strike is expected to disrupt operations across federal universities and inter-university centres, affecting administrative and support services critical to institutional functioning.
Non-academic staff play central roles in:
- admissions processing
- documentation and certification
- campus logistics and services
- institutional coordination
Their withdrawal from duty is likely to trigger immediate operational paralysis across affected institutions.
🟥 Labour Enforces Negotiation Pressure
The NASU SSANU strike highlights a structured escalation by labour unions — from negotiation to deadline enforcement and finally to industrial action.
This is not a sudden disruption, but the outcome of a defined sequence:
- policy introduced
- policy withdrawn
- negotiations slowed
- deadline issued
- deadline missed
- strike activated
The development reinforces how labour groups are using deadline-driven strategies to compel government response.
⚠️ Academic System Faces Renewed Disruption
The implications of the strike are immediate and potentially prolonged.
- administrative operations halted nationwide
- academic timelines risk disruption
- pressure mounts on government to resume negotiations
- uncertainty deepens across the education sector
For Nigeria’s universities, the issue is no longer whether disruption will occur — but how long the system can sustain repeated cycles of negotiation breakdown and strike action.
This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.