Tension In Ogun Varsity As Students Threaten Showdown With Vice Chancellor
Tension is high in Olabisi Onabanjo
University as students prepare to ground all activities and lock down
the school on Monday, March 18, 2013. The cause of the tension is due to
the lingering issue of repetition that the Acting Vice Chancellor,
Professor Saburi Adeyemi, is bent on implementing; a policy that will
affect more than 5000 students.
The Vice Chancellor had announced in
January that students who were unable to pay their fees for the previous
session(s) will have to write letter of reinstatement, after which they
would be reinstated to their previous level. The announcement caused a
three-day protest in the school, which led to boycott of lectures. The
final decision reached by the Senate on Tuesday, March i2, 2013 is that
despite all pleas, the students must repeat.
This information has further heightened the tension on campus.
The school management itself is aware of
the tension. The matriculation ceremony that was supposed to hold on
Thursday, March 14, 2013 was postponed for fear of it being disrupted by
angry students. Policemen have being deployed to the school premises in
anticipation of the shutdown.
Information from the school is that all
students are unified on the planning and holding of the protest. The
Students House of Senate(SHS), the activist group(CDHR) on campus,
religious groups, and even the Student Union Government that were known
in times past to shy away from protests/confrontation have been reported
to be ready to lead the protest.
The SUG President, Comrade Omojola
Ayokunle was quoted to have said he is tired of begging, and that all
their beggings have not changed the VC’s mind as he is hell bent on
implementing the policy. In fact, it was reported that the letter of
appeal that was written by the SUG President to the University Senate
was torn and as at Friday evening, the University refused to reply the
Student Union’s letter.
As the stage is set for a massive
confrontation between students and the management/government, a warning
must be sounded loud and clear that the world is watching! Situations
like the Nasarawa massacre must not repeat itself. The students’ right
to protest is guaranteed in the Nigerian constitution.
Stakeholders, both at home and in the
diaspora, must rise up and join their voices with the students to call
for a reversal of a policy that will see more than 5000 students repeat
their levels.
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