Tag: Final year

  • Final year UNIPORT student stabbed to death

    A final year Mechanical Engineering student of the University of Port Harcourt, Chidera Opara, has been stabbed to death.

    Dera, as the indigene of Akabo in Ikeduru Local Government Area of Imo State was fondly called, was reportedly stabbed to death near his parent’s house with a knife by a young man identified as Chimezie.

    Family sources told our correspondent the suspect handed himself over to the police after killing Dera, who would have written his final exams by November.

    An eyewitness, who pleaded not to be mentioned, told our correspondent the deceased was pronounced dead at the Abia State University Teaching Hospital (ABSUTH) along Ayaba-Umueze road after several hospitals declined to treat the deceased.

    “He (Chidera) was taken to about two hospitals but they refused to take him apparently because of his condition.

    “He had lost a lot of blood and when he was taken to ABSUTH, one of the doctors told the family that the undergraduate had died about one hour ago.”

    The source feared his death could worsen the parents’ health conditions.

    It was learnt the suspect had been transferred to the State CID for interrogation.

    Efforts to get Abia State Police Public Relations Officer, Geoffrey Ogbonna (DSP), proved abortive as at the time of filing this report.

     

  • Final year student’s death sparks row

    Final year student’s death sparks row

    A final year Agricultural Economics student of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), Tobechukwu Okeke, has been found dead in his off-campus hostel. Some say he committed suicide because of financial challenges, citing the suicide note found in his room. Others debunk the suicide theory, claiming that he may have been killed. JAMES OJO (400-Level Mass communication) reports.

    Is it a case of suicide or murder? Available evidence – a suicide note – points to the former, but some of  his friends alleged that he was killed. Last Sunday, the body of Tobechukwu Okeke, a final year Agricultural Economics student of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) was found dangling from the roof in his room. He left a suicide note, which reads: “My mother, father and brother, I am sorry. Sister Ify, may your children never suffer. Uncle Mathias, you gave me all. I am sorry. My department, I am so sorry.”

    His off-campus hostel at 6, Odenigwe Lane in Nsukka, Enugu State, was thrown into confusion after his body was found. The late Tobechukwu, with matriculation number 2012/185649, allegedly committed suicide, days after he was said to have complained of financial challenges.

    His neighbours returned from church to find his body. His Senate Lodge hostel was jampacked, as students gathered to see the body.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the incident may have happened in the wee hours of Sunday because the late Tobechukwu did not come out of his room in the morning. It was gathered that the body was found by his friend  in the evening.

    His department was quiet on Monday, following the incident. His mates were seen standing in groups, discussing the incident in hushed tones. There were no lectures for final year students because of the incident. Some of his classmates, who spoke with CAMPUSLIFE, described the late Tobechuwu as “brilliant and gentle”.

    Elizabeth Agwu, his classmate, described him as “easy-going and hardworking student”. She said: “He was popular in the department because people saw him as a nice guy. He made people laugh and he was one of the best football players in the department’s and faculty’s soccer teams.”

    CAMPUSLIFE learnt that the late Tobechukwu was absent from lectures for two weeks, leaving his colleagues wondering what was happening because he was not such a student.

    Elizabeth said: “We discovered that, in the past two weeks, Tobechukwu did not attend lectures regularly. This was unusual because he was one of the first set of students to arrive for classes. Last week, I was told he called one of our classmates and begged them for money. We don’t know the reason he committed suicide, because he was doing very well in his studies.”

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the body was evacuated by the police, while no arrest has been made. The body was taken away in a Toyota Sienna car at 7:30pm on Sunday.

    Some of his friends, who pleaded not to be named, said the late Tobechukwu had been complaining of owing many people.

    Kalu Lux-Sanctus, a 400-Level Linguistics student, told CAMPUSLIFE that the late Tobechukwu had just been given a contract to lay electric wire in the newly-accredited Department of Linguistics. “The wiring work was supposed to start last Monday,” said Sanctus, who lives on the same street with the late Tobechukwu.

    Bernard Uju, a 400-Level Crop Science student, who said he knew the late Tobechukwu from their first year, stated: “I am not surprised he killed himself. We all saw it coming. We are in different departments but we still get to see each other on a daily basis. He is always looking frustrated, distant and sad. He begged for money a lot and all the money he had went to Bet9ja gambling.

    “We noticed recently that he was broke, because he was begging for money. He was an electrician, too. Students used to give him minor electrical repairs. I never heard him saying anything about his family, because I don’t think they supported him financially.”

    Reliving his last encounter with the late Tobechukwu, Chinonso Nebechi, a 300-Level Political Science student, who lives close to his hostel, said he saw him cleaning his mouth on Saturday morning.

    “I saw him on Saturday when he was brushing his teeth. I didn’t  know it would be the last time I would see him,” Chinonso said, adding that he did not believe the suicide theory.

    He said: “I didn’t know it was Tobechukwu who died until I saw his picture. I still believe he was killed. How did the supposed suicide go? He was tall and his ceiling is not too high. When the body was found, his feet were on the floor. Only God knows what happened to him on Sunday morning.”

    CAMPUSLIFE spoke to the landord of the hostel, who declined to give his name. The landlord said: “We have given out enough information to the public already. I am not ready to talk on the issue again. What we are planning now is how to bury the body. For now, we are still trying to resolve the matter with the police. When the event happened, they came to his room and searched everywhere, yet they are demanding for money. That is all I can say for now.”

    The university’s Public Relations Officer, Chief Okwun Omeaku, said the incident did not happen on campus.

    He said: “We are in the know of the development. Even though the victim was our student, there is nothing we can say about it because the incident happened in an off-campus hostel. We will allow the police to do their investigation. The Chief Security Officer (CSO) of the university is aware of the development too; we will make statement based on the report that will be submitted to the school management by the CSO after the police investigation.”

  • Final year student dies in road accident

    Final year student dies in road accident

    Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) in Ago Iwoye, Ogun State was thrown into mourning, following the death of a final year Banking and Finance student. Jenifer  Chinonso Azuh died in an auto accident in Benin City, the Edo State capital.

    The news of Jenifer’s death hit the campus like a thunderbolt, leaving lecturers and students in grief. Her classmates wept and wailed endlessly.

    The late Jenifer was recently elected the president of Rotaract Club on the campus but she died before the swearing-in. She was also selected as the chairperson of the fundraising committee for the purchase of OOU Catholic Students’ bus.

    •Students joined Catholic priests in silent prayers after the interment
    •Students joined Catholic priests in silent prayers after the interment

    Last Thursday, her remains were buried in her hometown in Anambra State. Some students attended the funeral, while many stayed back on the campus to say prayers for her.

    The deceased brother, Arinze Azuh, a publisher of Yes! International Magazine on wrote her Facebook wall: “I am tempted to question God, but I won’t. Not today, not tomorrow and not even forever. Never ever will I do that. And in spite of how much death has dared me. My youngest sister, the baby of the house and our last born; the ever cheerful and gregarious Augusta Chinonso Azuh died in an auto crash.

    “I am crest-fallen and devastated beyond words. Yet, I won’t question my God. I won’t even ask anybody why a tragedy of this numbing proportion should visit my family again. And so soon after the demise of our patriarch, Ichie Azuh Chimezie.”

    In his tribute, Austine Falujo, a 500-Level Law student, who spoke on behalf of Nigeria Federation of Catholic Students (NFCS), said: “On that day, she left with the hope of returning to us, but sadly it was the last moment we saw and heard from her. Words cannot express how much we love you but God loves you more.”

    Speaking with CAMPUSLIFE, the NFCS President, Johnson Leonard, described the deceased as friendly, accommodating and hardworking. “I still can’t believe Jenifer is dead. She called me in April and told me she was working on how to get funds for the purchase of our bus. This is very painful. We will really miss her.”

  • Final year students hold dinner

    The University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) chapter of the Christian Medical and Dental Association Students (CMDAS) has held a dinner for its graduating members.

    The programme, tagged: “The Light” was held last Saturday at the Multipurpose Hall of the All Saints Chapel on the institution’s Ugbowo Campus.

    Dr Stanley Okugbo of the Department of Surgery, UBTH, charged them not to allow the love for money override the ethics of the medical profession. He highlighted the challenges of medical practice in Nigeria and encouraged them to take up the responsibility of redeeming the nation’s health sector.

    “As Christian doctors and dentist, you are expected to make impact because your life is that of purpose. You would be privileged to meet more people who wou;d come to the hospital for consultation than a typical religious leader. When patients come, don’t fail to attend to them with empathy. See patients as real human being and not mere cases or guinea pigs,” he said.

    He added that men like the late Nelson Mandela were those who contributed to their community. He charged them to be ambassadors of God wherever they aspire to practice, stating that their training in medical school was well grounded to meet the 21st Century challenges of the profession.

    Highpoint of the dinner was the presentation of gifts to all the graduating students and leaders of the association.

    A representative of the doctor’s arm of the association later presented induction certificates to formally induct the students. He charged them not to shy away from caring for their patients. This was followed by games and thanksgiving service.

    Godspower Ogbebor of the School of Medicine said he was grateful to God for sustaining him. He thanked the association for their support and encouraged the younger colleagues to be studious and cling to God.

    In attendance were doctors from the School of Medicine, School of Dentistry, executives of the association and members of the University of Benin Medical Students Association (UBEMSA).