Tag: EKSU

  • Marketing Dept. underway

    The university is working on the establishment of a Department of Marketing. This was announced by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academics), Prof Olugbenga Aribisala.

    He spoke while receiving the executive members of the National Institute of Marketing of Nigeria (NIMN) who paid a courtesy visit to EKSU.

    Aribisala, who spoke on behalf of the vc, said the establishment of the department is part of the vision of the institution to have functional courses.

    He, however, urged NIMN National Institute to flush out quacks in their midst.

    The national president of NIMN, Mr Ganiyu Koledoye, said the Institute has interest in collaborating with EKSU.

     

  • EKSU alumni back no-fee-no-lecture rule

    The Alumni Association of the Ekiti State University (EKSU) has supported the institution’s no-fee-no-lecture rule.

    It said the rule would facilitate development in the university.

    The Association’s National President, Mr. Bola Ogunlayi, spoke with reporters in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, while inaugurating three committees, including the constitution review committee.

    Ogunlayi said: “The Vice-Chancellor (VC) has drawn his master plan for the varsity’s development. He knows what he wants and how he intends to achieve this. Whoever opposes him on such a simple rule is opposing his plans for the institution’s progress.

    “When we were here as students, we never had issues with paying school fees. Then, the university gave students a few weeks of grace, after which whoever failed to meet the deadline paid additional sum for lateness.”

    On the association’s plan to review its constitution, Ogunlayi said: “The decision would introduce freshness into how the association is run. Areas, such as the status of graduates who underwent part-time programmes, those who did diploma programmes, the zoning of elective posts in the association, the delegate system to elect its leaders, verification and mobilisation of state chapters would be reviewed in light of current realities.

    Prof. Sunday Asaolu, who chairs the Constitution Review Committee, said “the committee would come up with a constitution that would address the identified issues.”

  • Ekiti varsity’s days of rage

    Ekiti varsity’s days of rage

    It was an unusual morning at the Ekiti State University (EKSU), Ado-Ekiti. Members of the university community woke up last Thursday to the fury of a students’ demonstration.

    Many were shocked by the protest. As early as 6:30am, students from various off-campus hostels started moving to the main gate. The protesters arrived in batches, shut the gate and prevented staff, visitors and workers from entering.

    Students living at Iworoko were the first to gather at the gate for the protest. They were about 70. An hour later, their colleagues from Osekita, Satellite Phase 1 and Phase 2 joined, carrying various placards with inscriptions such as “EKSU for sale to FG”; “Enough is enough in EKSU”, “EKSU students are not secondary school pupils”; “Our parents are poor and cannot afford to pay N100,000 at once”.

    The protesters said they were registering their displeasure over the management’s policy of “no school fee, no lecture”, “the proscription of Students’ Union for two years” and the introduction of “school uniform to some faculties”.

    The management asked the students to pay their full school fees, which range from N100,000 to N165,000, at once. But students pleaded with the authorities, saying their parents could not afford to pay such an amount at once.

    A demonstrator, who simply identified herself as Bisola, said: “When we heard that management had introduced a ‘no school fee, no lecture policy’, we thought it was a rumour. Not many of us took it seriously until the Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Academic, Prof Olugbenga Aribisala, asked students who have not paid their school fees to leave the class. It was then we knew the management was seriousl about the policy.”

    On the first day of the protest, the students planned to barricade the federal highway linking Ado-Ekiti, Ilorin and Kogi. Some of them objected to the plan, saying management and the government could send soldiers to disperse them. They abandoned the idea.

    But the students caused a gridlock on the highway, urging motorists to help them beg the government and management to “pity our parents”. They wrote the plea on the windshields of vehicles.

    There was a drama when some students tried to take photographs with their phones when they were being addressed by the Dean of Students Affairs, Prof I.G. Adanlawo. Security officials tried to seize their phones but students rebuffed the move, shouting “Ole (thief).”

    Later, men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) were drafted to forestall the break down of law and order. As the NSCDC officers arrived, students shouted: “My oga at the top”. This introduced a drama to the demonstration.

    The students chanted anti-government songs, urging Governor Kayode Fayemi and Prof Dipo Aina, the Vice-Chancellor (VC), to rescind the “no school fees, no lecture” policy.

    At 11am, the protesters were addressed by their colleagues, who led the protest. One of them said: “My fellow students, we are fighting a good fight; we have shown them we are not the animals they think we are. They thought we are going to come here and destroy university property, which is our property but we have conducted ourselves in a peaceful manner. Let us all go back to our respective hostels and we would be back here by tomorrow (Friday) if they do not reverse the policy.”

    By 7am on Friday, the university main gate was again besieged by the protesters, causing a long queue of vehicles to the NNPC filling station, which is a few kilometres away from the gate. Teaching and non-teaching staff were left stranded. Many of them parked their vehicles at safe distance to avoid the students’ wrath.

    The students brought a disc jockey (DJ), who played some solidarity songs including the late Fela Anikulapo Kuti’s songs. Some played basketball and football during the demonstration.

    Some lecturers, who spoke to our correspondent, condemned the policy, saying it was not in the students’ interest. A lecturer who identified himself as Mr Taiwo, said: “I am fully behind students in this matter because a no school fee, no lecture policy, is absurd for a tertiary institution in the 21st century.” A professor, who craved for anonymity, said: “When I heard about the policy, I told my colleagues that it would lead to another closure of this school. If they had said ‘no school fee, no examination’, I would have supported that. But to say there should be no lecture is not good. The management must look into this and allow students to pay in installment like it is done in some other universities.”

    Some past union leaders pleaded with the students to go back to their hostels. They claimed they met with the VC and representatives of the governor, who allegedly promised two weeks extension to the payment of school fee on installmental basis.

    The protesters rejected the plea, saying if management was sincere, the VC would have addressed them. Students said the former union leaders had taken bribe. The protesters attacked one of the past leaders.

    In the heat of the demonstration, former Governor Segun Oni passed by in a black Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV), but the students did not immediately recognise his vehicle. One of the students said: “If we had known it was Segun Oni that was passing, we would have torched that yeye (useless) jeep because he is part of the root cause of our predicament”.

    At 3pm, the management announced the closure of the school for two weeks. A statement directed students to go on compulsory break. The management said there would be university-parents forum on May 18 in the main auditorium.

    Jide Koalwole, a 400-Level student, said: “The protest is not sponsored by anyone. It was led and sponsored by the whole students in EKSU. The protest train came from five different areas. We have been suffering in silence since the management and the state government adopted a policy of no lecture if we did not pay the school fees. We are not in primary school. We agree to a no school fee, no examination policy. The university should adopt other strategies of generating revenue but not by strangulating our parents.”

     

     

  • NANS alleges plans to punish EKSU students for protest

    NANS alleges plans to punish EKSU students for protest

    •Institution debunks claims

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Ekiti State University (EKSU) chapter, has alleged plans by the institution’s authorities to punish students that participated in a protest two weeks ago.

    The students peacefully protested the authorities’ decision to enforce a “no fee no lecture” rule.

    In a statement yesterday, the association’s Chairman, Comrade Damilare Bewaji, said the students would resist the decision through another protest, if it is not reversed.

    He said: “Is it a crime for students to peacefully agitate for their rights in a democratic government? It is wicked of the authorities to have invited and interrogated a select section of students over a peaceful protest.

    “They set up a panel to try the coordinators of the protest. They should tell the public when it became a crime for students to embark on a peaceful protest.”

    The authorities denied any plan to punish the organisers of the protest.

    The Deputy Registrar, Information, said the “students were cooking up lies to malign the authorities”.

    He also debunked the rumour that the authorities have allowed the students to pay their fees in installments.

    He said the “condition for allowing students into the lecture rooms remains full payments of requisite fees.”

     

  • Youths protest EKSU student’s killing

    Youths protest EKSU student’s killing

    •Demand N150m compensation for family

    Youths in Ilupeju-Ekiti, Oye Local Government Area, yesterday protested the killing of a 400-level student of the Ekiti State University (EKSU), Seyi Fasere.

    He was allegedly shot dead by a police officer, popularly called Akobi Esu (Devil’s first born), on February 28 after a robbery in Oye-Ekiti.

    As early as 7am, the youths gathered at the Methodist Pilot School and barricaded major roads, halting commercial activities and vehicular movement.

    Schools were hurriedly shut as the protesters went round Isidore, Iyana Ire, Abuja Express Road, Garrage and Menora Market.

    Waving tree branches, they insisted that “the police must produce Fasere’s killer”.

    They carried placards with inscriptions, such as “Where is Akobi Esu”; “We cannot be silent about Fasere”; “Wakama is shielding a killer”; “Governor Kayode Fayemi, Fasere was also your subject” and “IGP, Fasere’s blood is on your neck”, among others.

    The youths blocked the Ifaki-Lokoja highway, causing a gridlock for nearly eight hours.

    Motorists going towards Kogi State from Ifaki/Oye-Ekiti had to go back to Oye-Ekiti and make a detour through Isan-Ekiti.

    The protesters visited the palace of the Apeju of Ilupeju-Ekiti, Oba Olaleye Oniyelu.

    They accused the governor; Secretary to the State Government Alhaji Ganiyu Owolabi and Oye Local Government Chairman Mr. Akindele Ogungbuyi of not “playing their expected roles in bringing Fasere’s killer to justice and restitution to his parents”.

    The protest took an unexpected turn when the youths went to the Oye Police Station.

    The few policemen on duty shot into the air and fired tear gas at the protesters.

    This led to a stampede and one of the protesters, Omoniyi Deji, was critically injured. It was learnt that he has being hospitalised.

    President of Ilupeju Youths Evang. Ajayi Idowu, who addressed the youths during the protest, said it was “morally and constitutionally wrong for the police to conduct a postmortem on Fasere without involving his family”.

    He said: “Given the unjust killing and the trauma the slain student’s parents went through, the police should pay them N150 million as compensation.

    “The police are taking people for a ride. After killing a person unjustly and abusing his parents, they went ahead to conduct a secret investigation and are now telling the parents to come and take the body for burial.

    “We demand that Fasere should be buried at the command headquarters and the command be named after him, so that his death will not be in vain.”

    The President of Ilupeju Ekiti Students’ Union, Mr. Temitayo Fatile, said: “I expect the police to own up that Fasere was killed in error, rather than playing pranks with the unjust killing of a promising young man. We will not stop protesting until the government gives one of the deceased’s siblings scholarship up to the university level.

    “Secondly, since the police disgraced Fasere’s parents, the family must be compensated with N150 million. Thirdly, we expect a pronouncement from the police and the Federal Government that Fasere was not an armed robber and he was mistakenly shot.

    “The police made a mistake by conducting the autopsy without inviting any member of the family to witness it.”

    Police spokesman Mr. Victor Babayemi said the command was not aware of the protest.

     

  • Don’t associate with  cultism, freshers told

    Don’t associate with cultism, freshers told

    The secret of the success of Ekiti State University (EKSU) lies on the strong desire to always keep up high academic standards and moral probity, the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Patrick Aina, has said.

    He made the statement during the matriculation ceremony held for freshers admitted into the institution through an affiliate programme with Adeniran Ogunsaya College of Education, Otto-Ijanikin, Lagos State, last Saturday. According to the VC, the freshers must maintain such high academic standards and moral probity.

    Prof Aina, who was represented by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic), Prof Olugbenga Aribisala, warned that under no circumstance should any student be involved in examination malpractice, cultism, drug abuse and vices that could jeopardise their academic pursuit in the university.

    The Provost of the College, Bashorun Wasiu Olalekan, echoed the Vice-Chancellor’s warning in his address. He said students must behave well on campus according to the matriculation oath they had taken.

    He, however, called on governments to increase funding for tertiary institutions to promote excellence.

    At another ceremony held in Michael Otedola College of Primary Education, Noforija, Epe, Prof Aina, who was represented by Prof Olugbenga Aribisala, urged the students to maintain the culture and tradition of EKSU, stressing that any violation of the matriculation oath would be met with serious sanctions.

  • 18th convocation for April

    18th convocation for April

    Activities marking the 18th convocation of Ekiti State University (EKSU) will begin April 2, with a press conference to be addressed by the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Patrick Oladipo Aina.

    During the period, the Governor of Ekiti State and Visitor to the University, Dr. Kayode Fayemi will turn the sod of a building complex for the Institute of Governance while a convocation lecture to be delivered by Director, United Nation Institute for Development and Planning, Dakar, Senegal, Prof. Adebayo Olukoshi, will hold on April 4.

    The lecture is entitled “Africa: Meeting the Challenges of Leadership for a Changing World.” A statement issued by the Deputy Registrar, Information and Public Relations, Ajibade Olubunmi, indicates that the award of first degrees and prizes will hold April 5, while the award of higher degrees will be on April 6.

     

    The two events will take place at the Main Auditorium of the Institution. The Vice-Chancellor Professor Oladipo Aina congratulates the graduands while promising hitch-free ceremonies.

     

  • Fayemi delivers Ekiti varsity lecture

    Fayemi delivers Ekiti varsity lecture

    Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, will on Tuesday deliver the first Interdisciplinary Public Lecture of the Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti.

    The Governor, who is also the Visitor to the University, will be speaking on the topic: “Reflections on Values and the building of a successor generation in Nigeria” at the lecture which will hold at the University’s multipurpose auditorium.

    According to a statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Olayinka Oyebode, the lecture will be chaired by former Dean of the Faculty of Administration, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Prof. Ladipo Adamolekun, while EKSU Vice Chancellor, Prof. Patrick Aina, is the Chief Host.

    The lecture, which is organised by the School of Postgraduate Studies of the University, will commence by 2.00pm.

     

  • EKSU shut as students loot farm

    EKSU shut as students loot farm

    • Set ICT centre, five vehicles ablaze

    • Over colleague’s death

    The agricultural farm of the University of Ado Ekiti was yesterday looted. About 3,500 birds, 120 crates of eggs, 10 goats, 75 sheep, 25 rabbits, 30 pigs were carted away by students protesting the crushing to death of one of them by a hit and run driver.

    They also torched the institution’s Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Centre and set ablaze at least five vehicles and several buildings in the town.

    The university authorities said the losses might be more and immediately shut down the institution.

    Abiola Teslim Yusuf, a final year student died on Wednesday night of injuries he received after being run over by a vehicle close to Osekita Hostel, an off-campus students hostel in the town.

    The protesting students, about 150, launched out of their rooms early yesterday at the start of what was supposed to be a peaceful protest.

    However, the protest soon took a twist when the burning and looting started.

    The police spokesman in the state, Mr Victor Babayemi, said seven of the students who allegedly partook in the looting and vandalism have been arrested and a search for the fleeing driver commenced.

    The Vice Chancellor of the University, Professor Oladipo Patrick Aina, condemned “the most barbaric conduct displayed by supposedly cultured youngsters.”

    He told reporters that investigation would soon commence into the incident and the culprits brought to book.

    He said the action of the students was capable of jeopardising the on-going infrastructural development in the institution.

    Announcing the immediate and indefinite closure of the institution, Aina said the management, working in concert with internal security officials, would assess the level of damage to buildings and other properties, as well as uncover the extent of the involvement of students and staff.

    Prof Aina was disappointed at the failure of the police to respond to the institution’s distress call before the protest got out of hand.

    He said: “I had called the Police authority at about 7am on Friday to inform them when I got a security report that the students were mobilising for protest over the death of their colleague only for them to come well after the damage had been done.”

    The police denied the allegation with their spokesman, Victor Babayemi, saying they acted promptly.

    The VC said he personally supervised the transfer of the accident victim to the Ikere Ekiti Specialists Hospital for medical attention immediately after the mishap.

     

    He said: “When we realised that his condition was not stable the way we expected, we moved him down to the Intensive Care Unit of the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital. But on Friday, it was confirmed that he had to be operated upon by experts because he sustained serious head injury and this forced us to take him to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH).

    “The student died in Ibadan while being taken to LUTH on Friday. These are our efforts to ensure that he survived even when we have not asked about who was responsible for the student’s death.

    “I even went to Osekita Hostel on Friday shortly before the incident and spoke with the students, but it was shocking and amazing that they had to take to such act after all our efforts. To us, this is unjustifiable action that will be thoroughly investigated.”

  • Varsity holds fair

    Varsity holds fair

    TO formulate new research policies for EKSU and undertake periodic review of existing ones in line with international practices, the university will hold its 2012 maiden research fair between the 17th and 20th of this month.

    The theme of the fair is: Research for development with the objectives of creating opportunity for EKSU to demonstrate the diversity of its scope. It will also be an avenue for the university’s researchers to interact with stakeholders.