Students shut down Ibadan
Yesterday’s national day celebration in Ibadan, Oyo State, was marred
by protests by members of National Association of Nigerian Students
(NANS), South-West zone. For more than three hours, the protesters
numbering about 1,000 also paralysed commercial activities in the state
capital. According to the students, the action was triggered by what
they described as government’s underfunding of the education sector,
including the ongoing strike by members of the Academic Staff Union of
Universities (ASUU).
The protest which started around 9.00am saw the students marched
through Agbowo, Mokola Round-about, Total Garden, Agodi-Gate before the
procession terminated at the Iwo-Road inter-change. At each point, the
students barricaded major roads, thereby disrupting the flow of traffic.
As they marched along the streets, the protesters sang anti-government
songs. They accused the Federal Government of insensitivity and demanded
proper funding of the education system.
Meanwhile, the protest was observed by policemen from state command
who drove in Hilux vans, to ensure that the demonstration was not
hijacked by hoodlums.
Leading the protest was NANS, South-West coordinator, Monsuru
Adeyemo, who, in a communiqué read by him, said there is the urgent need
to rescue the country’s education sector from total collapse, from the
claws of the ruling elite.
He said:” As a result of poor government funding, in spite of
stupendous wealth of the country, public education, from the primary to
tertiary level is bedeviled by lack of adequate facilities for proper
teaching, learning and research. Hostel facilities in the few schools
where they still exist, are dilapidated and insufficient. This is why
over 10 million children are out of school in Nigeria,” the communiqué
read.
“Only this year, about 1.7 million candidates sat for the Unified
Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) and from the available space
in the public universities, polytechnics and colleges of education in
the country, less than 29 per cent of the candidates will be admitted,
thus leaving out over 1.2 million candidates.
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