Academic activities were grounded at the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH) Medical School on Wednesday, following the commencement of an indefinite strike by medical lecturers under the Nigerian Association of Medical and Dental Academics (NAMDA), LAUTECH Chapter.
The strike, which began on Friday, August 1, 2025, was formally announced in a letter addressed to the university’s vice chancellor and signed by the acting chairman of the association, Prof. M.A. Olamoyegun, and acting secretary, Dr. A.O. Alabi.
The lecturers are demanding the immediate implementation of the Consolidated Medical Salary Structure (CONMESS) and payment of accrued arrears from January 2025.
According to NAMDA, the university management has failed to address the long-standing issues despite repeated communications, a 14-day ultimatum, and several appeals.
The final straw, the association noted, was the payment of July 2025 salaries without reflecting the CONMESS adjustment, which they interpreted as a clear signal of the administration’s unwillingness to resolve the impasse amicably.
“This action covers all academic engagements, including lectures, teaching ward rounds, tutorials, examinations, supervision, and participation in committee duties across the Faculties of Basic Medical Sciences, Basic Clinical Sciences, and Clinical Sciences,” the letter stated.
NAMDA clarified that the strike was not targeted at the LAUTECH Teaching Hospital but strictly at the university management.
The lecturers, who double as medical doctors, emphasised that their demand is specific to their academic roles and remuneration under the university system, not the hospital’s clinical operations.
The association expressed frustration that, over the past year, it has shown restraint and institutional loyalty in the hope of a fair resolution. Instead, it has been met with “continued neglect and lack of satisfactory responsiveness” from university authorities.
To this end, NAMDA said it had no choice but to completely withdraw services from all teaching and academic activities within the medical school.