What makes the Supreme Court JUSUN chapter refuse to participate in the nationwide judiciary strike happening now in Nigeria?

Updated June 4, 2025 • 1-min read

Posted by Anonymous

Jun 3, 2025

1 answer

judiciaryNigeriajusunsupremecourtstrike

1 Answer

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Posted by Anonymous - Jun 3, 2025

The way I see it, the Supreme Court chapter is just playing by its own rules because they think their situation is kinda unique. They've come out and said their chapter isn’t joining the Nigerian judiciary strike with JUSUN because the Chief Justice is already working on their problems behind the scenes. So, for them, walking out now feels pointless, since negotiations are already ongoing.

It honestly sounds a bit controversial, because everyone else is like, “Let’s make noise so the government actually listens!” Meanwhile, the Supreme Court group is sticking to discussions and hoping things will get fixed quietly. Some folks I’ve talked to think it’s all political, or maybe they’ve just got more faith in the current leadership to sort things out.

But it does make you wonder about unity and if breaking off like this hurts the whole movement—like, would the strike be even stronger if everyone stuck together? Either way, it just goes to show not all workers are on the same page, even when they're fighting for the same basic things like fair pay.

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