Since January 2016, there have been a lot of protests in tertiary
institutions, some resulted in drastic disruptions to the academic
calendars, destruction of school properties, many schools were shut down
and other students were arrested and prosecuted. In some extreme cases,
some students were rusticated while some died in the process.
In some extreme cases, many students were rusticated while some died in
the process of fighting for ‘ALL’. Other Protests went peacefully in
some schools with no traces of violence, but here are 5 Deadly Students
Protest In 2016:
YABATECH Students Protest Death Of Colleague
Oluwabukola Charity Dazan, a student of the Yabatech College of
Education, Department of Office Technology and Management (OTM) died on
Wednesday, February 11, 2016. It was noted that the student who died few
weeks to her graduation was due to absolute neglect on the part of
officials at the institution’s Medical Centre. The 27-year-old, only
child of her parents finished writing a practical examination when she
suddenly fell ill and died.
After her death, the angry students who were infuriated by the action of
the school management, denied all entry into the institution as the
campus gates were locked by aggrieved students, who sang solidarity
songs and displayed placards that read: “Injustice to one is injustice
to all”, “This Nonsense Must Stop”, in a protest to register their
grievances concerning the death of their colleague. The school
management ordered all students to vacate the institution till further
notice.
UNILAG Students Protest Poor Welfare Conditions
On Wednesday, April 6, 2016, the University of Lagos (UNILAG) students
led by the students’ union leaders started a crucial peaceful protest to
decry the management’s obvious nonchalance and uncaring attitude
towards the terrible living conditions on campus.
As the protest grow wider, the authorities announced the indefinite
closure of the campus on Friday, April 8 while all the students were
given just a few hours to pack up and leave. When students insisted they
were not leaving, heavily armed police were brought in to effect the
closure.
The management later announced the suspension of 17 students’ union
leaders due to what they stated as ”specific acts of misconduct during
the protest for which they were punished include: Locking the university
gates, locking staff inside the Student Affairs Office, harassing
lecturers and disrupting lectures and/or examination, assaulting and
damaging the vehicle of a visitor and a student, invading the premises
of UNILAG Ventures.
UNIPORT Protest Turns Bloody Over Varsity’s New Tuition Fee Policy
On the 11th of April, students of the of the University of Port Harcourt
(UNIPORT), said ‘NO’ to the ‘no tuition fee, no examination policy’ by
the university management. The protest, which initially started on a
peaceful note, later turned violent.
The students blocked all entry points into the institution, carried
placards with inscriptions, ”UNIPORT management, stop exploiting
students”, “Prof. Ndowa Lale (Vice Chancellor) must go”, “N45,000
tuition fees highest among federal-owned universities”, among others. In
the process to maintain peace and order, the police allegedly opened
fire, killing one Peter Ofurum, a final year student in the faculty of
Management Science.
Rustication Of 500L Student: UI Students Protest, DEFY Closure, Cooks Outside School Gate
In April, the students of the University of Ibadan, after a protest
ignored the school management in an order to vacate the school halls of
residence for staging a peaceful protest against the rustication of
their colleague.
Tunji Epketi Micheal, a 500L student of the Department of Petroleum
Engineering, Faculty of Technology and a resident of Independence Hall
was rusticated for participating in one of the halls over the poor state
of electric and water supply. The aggrieved students who were all seen
chanting songs of solidarity, cooked outside the school gate and also
posted several pictures of their cooking session on the social media.
FUNAAB Black Thursday
It all started on the 17th of August, 2016 in the Adejoke hostel in
Isolu where some students of the Federal University of Agriculture,
Abeokuta (FUNAAB) were robbed at gunpoint. The incident infuriated the
students who claimed they had been left to their fate by the
institution’s management, the students’ protest followed this attack.
As early as 6.am, the aggrieved students paralysed academic and
administrative activities in the institution in a peaceful protest over
the university management’s “insensitivity” to rampant robbery attacks
on their colleagues living outside the campus, until a police team
arrived at the scene. A 100-level student of Forestry and Wildlife,
identified as Taiwo Abisoye, was allegedly fired by a policeman but
miraculously responded to treatment.(Myschool)
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