University unions ASUU and CONUA are demanding the release of their withheld salaries, even after the Federal Government cleared five months of outstanding allowances. The clearance brought some relief to lecturers, but the unions say major financial disputes remain unresolved, keeping tension high across Nigeria’s federal universities as staff press for money they insist they are owed.

What the withheld salaries dispute is about
At the heart of the row is pay docked during past industrial action. CONUA is demanding the immediate release of three and a half months of withheld salaries tied to a 2022 strike, arguing that academic work was completed and students have since graduated. The unions contend that withholding the money is unfair, given that the disputed periods produced teaching, research and results that universities still rely on today.
Other outstanding entitlements
Beyond the withheld salaries, the unions point to a stack of unmet obligations. These include the outstanding 25 percent and 35 percent wage awards and large arrears of promotion allowances accumulated over several years. The lecturers say these entitlements have lingered without full settlement, fuelling frustration even as the recent clearance of five months of allowances eased part of the immediate financial strain on members.
The government’s position
On the disputed wage awards and promotion arrears, the unions say the government has promised to capture the funds formally in the 2026 federal budget. That commitment offers a possible path to settlement but stops short of immediate payment, leaving lecturers waiting. The mix of partial clearance and pending promises has produced a cautious mood, with relief over what has been paid tempered by anxiety over what has not.
Why it matters for students
Disputes over pay in Nigeria’s universities have a long history of spilling over into the classroom, with strikes repeatedly disrupting academic calendars. A lasting resolution would help protect students from further interruptions and steady the system. For now, the unions are pressing their case through demands and negotiations, and any escalation could once again put teaching and learning at risk on federal campuses.
A long-running pattern
Pay disputes between the government and university unions have recurred for years, often following strikes and the contested application of no-work-no-pay rules. Each cycle tends to leave a backlog of contested salaries, allowances and awards that take time to resolve. The current standoff echoes that history, with partial payments easing pressure but failing to settle every claim. Observers note that lasting peace in the sector will require a durable funding framework rather than one-off clearances. Until then, periodic flare-ups over money remain a risk, with students often caught in the middle whenever talks break down or trust erodes.
Viorah TV is reporting the unions’ demands and the government’s stated commitments without taking sides in the dispute. How quickly the outstanding sums are settled will shape the months ahead. Viorah TV will continue to follow the talks and any developments around the withheld salaries. A durable settlement, rather than another temporary fix, is what would finally give students and lecturers some lasting stability on campus.