Opinion
Incessant Strike And Fate Of Education
Oliver Okpala
The spate of strike actions and labour disputes in our universities, polytechnics and other institutions of higher learning has reached an alarming proportion. These days, labour disputes appear to be the order of the day in our citadels of learning spread across the country. The frequency and regularity of these industrial actions has had negative impact on the tertiary institutions. It has also sent dangerous signals within and outside our shores about our universities and polytechnics.
It has become necessary to make an incursion into labour unrest in our institutions of higher learning. Currently, several unions in our tertiary institutions are involved in a face off with their employers over many burning issues. The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities (NASU) are interlocked in a war of attrition with their employers. Their grievances range from non-payment of salaries, allowances, entitlements to non-provision of research grants and an enabling environment for learning in the citadels.
It is to be expected that in an environment of intellectual endeavour, there must be decorum and decency. Anything short of these values will impact negatively and dangerously on the business of learning and character moulding which are the primary purposes of our higher institutions.
Industrial instability and squabbles do not make our higher institutions the appropriate and cognate centres of learning and excellence which they ought to typify. On the contrary, industrial actions distract lectures, the school calendar and pro• grammes, and throw the students into confusion. Academic activities are disturbed, while programmes are abandoned. The students are thus unable to undergo the training, learning and lectures scheduled for the session.
The result is obvious. The tertiary institutions eventually turn out students and graduates who did not properly undertake and undergo the prograrnmes and studies designed for their courses. This gives way to the production of half baked graduates who lack self-confidence and courage, and who cannot compete favourably with their counterparts from other climes.
Strike actions should be a weapon of the last resort by labour. It should not be the primary objective of labour to confront their employers. No worthwhile benefit comes from an industrial crisis. It is with dialogue the stakeholders are able to reason together and embark upon a cross-fertilisation of ideas which will move our higher institutions forward.
It is conceded that a labourer deserves his wages. ASUU and NASU members deserve to be paid for work done. But these bodies must realize that they should limit their demands on the various governments to the financial abilities of the governments.
To demand from the government what she cannot afford is to open the floodgate to disharmony and strife in the institutions of higher learning.
ASUU and NASU must appreciate the existence of the global meltdown. Nigeria is not an island. She is part and parcel of what has become a global village. Our nation is not immune to the adversities of the meltdown. The demands of labour should be in line with the present economic reality. The arms of the government must not be tied by ASUU and NASU.
Again, Government has a very wide obligation. The obligations are to Nigerians as a whole. Government has the runs to provide infrastructural facilities for Nigerians. Our roads need maintenance, our hospitals need drugs, standard of living must be improved, our airports need to be upgraded to ensure safety and we have our international obligations as well.
ASUU and NASU are not the only stakeholders in the Nigerian project. Indeed, all Nigerians are stakeholders. No group, body or organisation should arrogate to itself any claim to special privileges and no organisation should hold the country down or to ransom simply because of some group interests. The nation must come first in everything we do. This is what the re-branding project encapsulates.
ASUU and NASU should understand that their strike actions often entail closure of our higher institutions with its attendant consequences. Students roam the streets. They remain idle and they fall into various temptations. Some of them resort to the new fad of kidnapping, either to make ends meet or occupy themselves. The daring among them go into armed robbery. Yet, others resort to all sorts of crime and deviant conduct because of their idleness.
Our undergraduates are our future leaders and our future hope. Since a lot is invested in their training, a lot is expected from them. ASUU and NASU must not cut this national dream short. The two bodies operate in a very sensitive and delicate environment and they should not allow their actions and inactions to jeopardise the interest of the nation.
The billions of naira which the government pumps into institutions of higher learning must not be allowed to go down the drain. Nigerians owe this country the duty to be patriotic and to think of the next generation.
Unrestrained strike actions in the citadels expose our country to ridicule internationally. It puts a question mark on the quality of our graduates. A strike action is not a weapon in the hands of labour to dare government. It is an instrument of last resort. It is when extensive and exhaustive dialogue has failed that the option of a strike action can come in.
As a matter of fact, in sensitive institutions as our universities and polytechnics, a strike action should be completely ruled out. It amounts to sabotage for NASU and ASUU to continuously distort our educational programmes in the citadels by calling out their members on strike. There should be a stop to this practice.
Okpala wrote from Lagos
Opinion
Wike VS Soldier’s Altercation: Matters Arising
The events that unfolded in Abuja on Tuesday November 11, 2025 between the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Chief Nyesom Wike and a detachment of soldiers guarding a disputed property, led by Adams Yerima, a commissioned Naval Officer, may go down as one of the defining images of Nigeria’s democratic contradictions. It was not merely a quarrel over land. It was a confrontation between civil authority and the military legacy that still hovers over our national life.
Nyesom Wike, fiery and fearless as always, was seen on video exchanging words with a uniformed officer who refused to grant him passage to inspect a parcel of land alleged to have been illegally acquired. The minister’s voice rose, his temper flared, and the soldier, too, stood his ground, insisting on his own authority. Around them, aides, security men, and bystanders watched, stunned, as two embodiments of the Nigerian state clashed in the open.
The images spread fast, igniting debates across drawing rooms, beer parlours, and social media platforms. Some hailed Wike for standing up to military arrogance; others scolded him for perceived disrespect to the armed forces. Yet beneath the noise lies a deeper question about what sort of society we are building and whether power in Nigeria truly understands the limits of its own reach.
It is tragic that, more than two decades into civil rule, the relationship between the civilian arm of government and the military remains fragile and poorly understood. The presence of soldiers in a land dispute between private individuals and the city administration is, by all civic standards, an aberration. It recalls a dark era when might was right, and uniforms conferred immunity against accountability.
Wike’s anger, even if fiery, was rooted in a legitimate concern: that no individual, however connected or retired, should deploy the military to protect personal interests. That sentiment echoes the fundamental democratic creed that the law is supreme, not personalities. If his passion overshot decorum, it was perhaps a reflection of a nation weary of impunity.
On the other hand, the soldier in question is a symbol of another truth: that discipline, respect for order, and duty to hierarchy are ingrained in our armed forces. He may have been caught between conflicting instructions one from his superiors, another from a civilian minister exercising his lawful authority. The confusion points not to personal failure but to institutional dysfunction.
It is, therefore, simplistic to turn the incident into a morality play of good versus evil.
*********”**** What happened was an institutional embarrassment. Both men represented facets of the same failing system a polity still learning how to reconcile authority with civility, law with loyalty, and service with restraint.
In fairness, Wike has shown himself as a man of uncommon courage. Whether in Rivers State or at the FCTA, he does not shy away from confrontation. Yet courage without composure often feeds misunderstanding. A public officer must always be the cooler head, even when provoked, because the power of example outweighs the satisfaction of winning an argument.
Conversely, soldiers, too, must be reminded that their uniforms do not place them above civilian oversight. The military exists to defend the nation, not to enforce property claims or intimidate lawful authorities. Their participation in purely civil matters corrodes the image of the institution and erodes public trust.
One cannot overlook the irony: in a country where kidnappers roam highways and bandits sack villages, armed men are posted to guard contested land in the capital. It reflects misplaced priorities and distorted values. The Nigerian soldier, trained to defend sovereignty, should not be drawn into private or bureaucratic tussles.
Sycophancy remains the greatest ailment of our political culture. Many of those who now cheer one side or the other do so not out of conviction but out of convenience. Tomorrow they will switch allegiance. True patriotism lies not in defending personalities but in defending principles. A people enslaved by flattery cannot nurture a culture of justice.
The Nigerian elite must learn to submit to the same laws that govern the poor. When big men fence off public land and use connections to shield their interests, they mock the very constitution they swore to uphold. The FCT, as the mirror of national order, must not become a jungle where only the powerful can build.
The lesson for Wike himself is also clear: power is best exercised with calmness. The weight of his office demands more than bravery; it demands statesmanship. To lead is not merely to command, but to persuade — even those who resist your authority.
Equally, the lesson for the armed forces is that professionalism shines brightest in restraint. Obedience to illegal orders is not loyalty; it is complicity. The soldier who stands on the side of justice protects both his honour and the dignity of his uniform.
The Presidency, too, must see this episode as a wake-up call to clarify institutional boundaries. If soldiers can be drawn into civil enforcement without authorization, then our democracy remains at risk of subtle militarization. The constitution must speak louder than confusion.
The Nigerian public deserves better than spectacles of ego. We crave leaders who rise above emotion and officers who respect civilian supremacy. Our children must not inherit a nation where authority means shouting matches and intimidation in public glare.
Every democracy matures through such tests. What matters is whether we learn the right lessons. The British once had generals who defied parliament; the Americans once fought over states’ rights; Nigeria, too, must pass through her own growing pains but with humility, not hubris.
If the confrontation has stirred discomfort, then perhaps it has done the nation some good. It forces a conversation long overdue: Who truly owns the state — the citizen or the powerful? Can we build a Nigeria where institutions, not individuals, define our destiny?
As the dust settles, both the FCTA and the military hierarchy must conduct impartial investigations. The truth must be established — not to shame anyone, but to restore order. Where laws were broken, consequences must follow. Where misunderstandings occurred, apologies must be offered.
Let the rule of law triumph over the rule of impulse. Let civility triumph over confrontation. Let governance return to the path of dialogue and procedure.
Nigeria cannot continue to oscillate between civilian bravado and military arrogance. Both impulses spring from the same insecurity — the fear of losing control. True leadership lies in the ability to trust institutions to do their work without coercion.
Those who witnessed the clash saw a drama of two gladiators. One in starched khaki, one in well-cut suit. Both proud, both unyielding. But a nation cannot be built on stubbornness; it must be built on understanding. Power, when it meets power, should produce order, not chaos.
We must resist the temptation to glorify temper. Governance is not warfare; it is stewardship. The citizen watches, the world observes, and history records. How we handle moments like this will define our collective maturity.
The confrontation may have ended without violence, but it left deep questions in the national conscience. When men of authority quarrel in the open, institutions tremble. The people, once again, become spectators in a theatre of misplaced pride.
It is time for all who hold office — civilian or military — to remember that they serve under the same flag. That flag is neither khaki nor political colour; it is green-white-green, and it demands humility.
No victor, no vanquish only a lesson for a nation still learning to govern itself with dignity.
By; King Onunwor
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