Nigerian students protest 7-month lecturers strike

Nigerian students on Monday protested the strike deadlock that has shut the countrys public universities for seven months, causing frustration for an estimated 2.5 million students.Defying armed security personnel in the commercial hub of Lagos, hundreds of students blocked a major road leading to the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Nigerias busiest airport.


PTI | Abuja | Updated: 19-09-2022 22:03 IST | Created: 19-09-2022 22:01 IST
Nigerian students protest 7-month lecturers strike
Representative image Image Credit: Wikimedia
  • Country:
  • Nigeria

Nigerian students on Monday protested the strike deadlock that has shut the country's public universities for seven months, causing frustration for an estimated 2.5 million students.

Defying armed security personnel in the commercial hub of Lagos, hundreds of students blocked a major road leading to the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Nigeria's busiest airport. Some flights were disrupted.

They marched with placards and chanted songs urging the Nigerian government to carry out the demands of public university lecturers who have been on strike since February to demand improved working conditions.

University strikes are common in Nigeria with more than 100 public universities and an estimated 2.5 million students. But the latest is one of the longest in recent years. It was extended after talks between the lecturers and the government ended in deadlock.

A Nigerian court meanwhile continued on Monday to hear a suit filed by the country's government asking it to compel lecturers to resume. The court is set to deliver its judgement on the case on Wednesday.

The National Association of Nigerian Students accused the country's government of “crass irresponsibility” over its failure to fulfil all the terms of an agreement signed with lecturers in 2009. The students' body threatened to continue the protest for one week unless the industrial action is over.

The government has withheld the salaries of the lecturers for the period of the strike, causing more hardship for those who already were complaining of poor pay.

''Nigerian lecturers are far behind in terms of welfare when compared to others,” said Femi Atteh, a lecturer at the University of Ilorin in northcentral Kwara state, who now works with his wife to run a retail food business.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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