 Of staying with education, barely six months after the academic staff union of universities has suspended its nine month industrial action, there are threats of another. This development often makes students wary as they have to go through disruptions in the academic calendar and lots more. Plus, TV Africa's correspondent Uche Uwehi Daniels went to the University of Lagos to field the polls of the student, her report. Ovaha Ovokiru Salem and Ayola Akiayo are ambitious and determined 200 level students of the University of Lagos who have been hit hard by the storms of ASUS indefinite strikes. They anticipated finishing school at a stipulated four years given to them for their course of study but the federal government still has course to settle with the union. Many other students find themselves in Salem and Akiayo's shoes they have spent at least one more year than they should have and feared that they could spend even more time on campus. Salem and Ayola have their hearts torn apart after the news of this latest threat. I don't think you should be going on strike on this particular non-teaching strike or pause in academic whatever. I don't think you should be going on strike just to get attention of the government. You should look for other means to get attention. If you want us to strike with you we'll help you go and carry placards to match to just still teach us. Finding that the government is probably not standing on what they had promised the ASU guys is making all of this come up again and it's very very sad. I understand the academic staff are fighting for our rights and their rights indirectly because if you don't pay them well they won't teach us well and that's not going to be nice enough. However they are keeping us waiting for years that we cannot account for. A lecture of the Department of Political Science Ebenezer Ishala justified ASU's stand on the decision of the strike. Generally the issues are clear on the reason why there are talks about striking there but also say well strikes are there as the last result for ASU. ASU would not just wake up one morning and say we'll decide to go on strike. There must have been a series of engagements that have yet to produce the desired fruits that's why you have this talk. So what we have now let me just say is a matter of announcements is a matter of town crying. Sadly about 1.2 million students studying at Nigeria's public universities might have the academic calendar disrupted again and this will gravely affect the academic pursuits. Uchechi Uwehidhanel reporting for PLOS TV Africa.