Tag: OAU students

  • JUST IN: Anxiety as EFCC reportedly arrest scores of OAU students

    JUST IN: Anxiety as EFCC reportedly arrest scores of OAU students

    Outrage ensues as the Economic Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) reportedly conducts a night raid, invading hostels and arresting over 70 students of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun state.

    It was gathered that the EFCC operatives around 1 a.m. on Wednesday, November 1, stormed the student hostel located around Oduduwa Estate to raid the hostel.

    An eyewitness named Favour told our correspondent that the operatives who were wearing EFCC jackets arrived at the hostel in white unregistered buses for the raid.

    She said: “They invaded the hostel at Oduduwa estate, they were hitting the doors, directing and shouting for occupants to come out of their rooms. They did not hesitate, they slapped students who attempted to argue with them.

    Read Also: Soun: Confusion over verdicts

    “The operatives were brutal during the operation, what saved me was because I am a female, they arrested virtually all the male students. They file them into empty white buses they brought for the operation.

    “I made a short video of the operation. It was a terrible invasion, we even thought they were armed robbers not until we saw the jacket they were wearing.”

    She added: “I learnt that they have reported to the Acting Chief Security Officer of the Institution who confirmed that they are EFCC operatives.”

    The Public Relations Officer of the institution, Abiodun Olarewaju, when contacted, did not respond to calls placed to his phone and refused to respond to a text seeking a reaction over the matter.

    Details shortly…

  • Accommodation, insecurity: OAU students groan

    Many students of the Obafemi Awolowo University, OAU, Ile Ife, Osun State have fled their hostels following cultists threat to attack the school. Some suspects have been arrested. Others are said to have moved out because the hostels are not fit for human habitation, OMOLOLA AFOLABI reports.

    Students of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State, are moving out in droves from their hostels.

    Reasons: ‘deplorable’ state of the hostels and what they called “creeping state of insecurity”.

    In the past, the institution had a reputation as one of the most peaceful universities nationwide.

    It has a history of zero tolerance for cultism and related activities.

    There have been cases of kidnapping and ritual killings, though outside the university. Last month, the university received a note from a group of cultists who promised to unleash mayhem on the 57-year-old institution.

    The last time such dastardly act occurred was 20 years ago, when the then general-secretary of the Students’ Union George Akinyemi Iwilade, fondly called Afrika,  was killed alongside four others at the Obafemi Awolowo Hall of the institution.

    The letter caused panic on campus. Some students scanned and shared it on their mobile phones.

    The university also swung into action and arrested some suspects.

    In a statement, the university said the cultists’ planned attack was foiled by its security unit which apprehended and handed over the suspects to the police.

    “Obafemi Awolowo University has zero tolerance for cultism. No cultist can thrive on this campus. As far as we are concerned, when students are admitted on the first day in this university, they swear an oath of allegiance not to get involved in cultism, otherwise they are rusticated. Those who came here have been arrested and the police are handling the case,” Dean of Students Affairs Prof Ishiaq Aransiola told CAMPUSLIFE.

    Yet, this reassurance did not stem the fear of many. Some students fled thier various hostels to live in town.

    Two years ago, the management proscribed the Students’ Union over what it described as excesses and lack of leadership traits by the students’ body. The management has since insisted that it will not lift the ban until it sees a “refined students” body that is desirous of constructive dialogue. At present, only presidents of the various faculties manage students’ affairs.

    At the 20th remembrance of Afrika’s death last month, students and other activists called on the school to restore the SU, saying: ‘one cannot throw the baby out with the bath water’.

    Speaking with CAMPUSLIFE, the president of Faculty of Arts Students’ Association, Ayobami Adewale, lamented that the absence of the SU has adversely affected the security situation on campus.  Aside the threat letter, the poor state of the hostel is also one factor why students are vacating in hundreds.

    “There have been several reported cases of armed robbery outside the university campus and the students who live in town are filled with terror and fright,” Adewale said.

    He continued: “Students living outside the university campus are thereby exposed to a lot of security risks, which is as a result of the inadequate provision of living spaces. However, many of the spaces are not conducive enough to absorb the ever growing population of students.”

    Recently, the management revamped all the halls of residence, and therefater directed a reduction to a manageable number the population of occupants in the rooms. However, the students are describing the rehabilitation as merely ‘cosmetic’ as the toilets were left unfixed.

    The institution’s Public Relations Officer, Mr Abiodun Olanrewaju, said the management responded to students’ earlier call for the upgrade of the hostels. Unfortunately, Olanrewaju said the same students now fumed when the management directed a reduction in students’ population even when it was glaring the measure was the best to take at such crucial time.

    Olanrewaju said the students should be grateful for management’s efforts, adding that there are some universities that do not even provide accommodation for their students; yet the students still survive.

    “The university is a place to struggle and survive; OAU students should therefore develop some survival skills to enable them achieve   academic success while struggling through school,” Olanrewaju told CAMPUSLIFE.

    According to him, it might require management to increase the cost of hostel accommodation to be able to make the facilities more habitable and befitting.

    He said: “Till date, fresh students pay N3,090. The N90 is the only part that goes into the university confers while the rest is for maintenance of the halls. Tell me what you can buy with N90.It is the same amount I paid as a student here, but times have really changed as we all can see.

    “The N3,090  being charged presently is barely enough to  provide facilities and services that would meet up with global standards. Besides, it doesn’t conform with the current economic realities.”

    Nontheless, Olanrewaju appealled to the alumni body to come to the rescue.

    Corroborating Olanrewaju, Aransiola said management is taking the rehabilitiation of the hostel one step after the other.

    “On the issue of toilets, you can’t do everything all at once. Toilet facilities are not adequate, and that is what we want to focus on now. As we speak, some toilets are being built and we want this to go round. There will be additional ones aside the ones we plan to renovate,” he explained.

    Kenneth Idanwekhai, a final year History and International Relations, student, described the security situation on campus as ‘average,’ saying it could still be improved upon.

    “The security (situation) is fair,” Idanwekhai began.

    “However, we all want total security.

    “I think the management is really trying. When there were speculations about cultists, the school really stepped into the situation and took some drastic steps to ensure the safety of students. Also, there have been reported cases of students being threatened with arms but the security system on campus has really looked into it.”

    Like others students, Idanwekhai bemoanwed the poor state of accommodation on campus:

    “I think the accommodation policy is extremely poor and frustrating. We are not being treated fairly. Again, the management has tried its part by repainting all the halls many of which are still dilapidated. Also the porters on campus are like demi -gods. They feel they have all the powers to do as they please. For instance, the room I stay is terribly leaking and they haven’t done anything to fix it. It is bad enough that my books and food stuff are badly affected. I’ve gone to complain and even written a letter to the hall management but there is still no improvement.”

    Idanwekhai also pointed out the presence of pests that are vectors of diseases.

    “Bed bugs, rats and other annoying pests frustrate students in the hostel; in summary, there are a lot of wrongs in the university’s accommodation system that need to be fixed,” he said.

    Aliemeke Kelechi Praise, a 400-Level student of the English, pitched his tent behind a raise in the cost of hostel accommodation.

    He said: “I stay in a private hostel popularly called maintenance and I pay a lot per annum. If I were given an option of staying in one of the halls with its proximity to academics, adequate security and improved facilities, I would gladly opt for such an alternative.”

    Omolola Pedro, a 400-Level student of English, critised some of the directives by management in streamlining the hostels.

    She said: “At the beginning of last session, the vice chancellor decongested the halls of residence on campus. As remarkable as the action was, the fact that there were no alternative measures in place is condemnable. This action has put students in severe danger as they all had to move to town where security isn’t so guaranteed. Even the campus that is supposed to be the safest isn’t anymore.”

    According to her, all these could be curtailed if management reinstates the Students’ Union.

    She added: “The major plea of students is that the university management provides more hostels first, after which they can now revoke the accommodation policy that has put the student in grave danger.”

    As a student who is a resident in town, she said most landlords do not live in the same houses with students and are therefore apathetic to their plights.

    Osungbade Akeem Wisdom, a 300-Level Zoology undergraduate and former Chairman of the Angola hall of residence, also lent his voice on the issue.

    “The security of the university is nothing to write about especially in recent times. Although the university management brought in the DSS (Directorate of State Security) to tighten the campus security, still there are issues of suspected cultists invading campus amidst other security threats which are quite alien to the OAU we know,” he said.

    He added: “This can’t be disconnected from the attack on students’ unionism. In a situation where students are not allowed to unite, all forms of vices begin to thrive.”

    Going down memory lane, a former president of Junior Chamber International, OAU chapter, Temitope Ojo, recounted his experience as a student.

    He said: “I was as free as a bird during our time. I could walk as late as 3am and as far the university’s Conference Centre. Many of us then did not know if it was the university’s security that was tight or the uncompromising culture of the students. I feel we weren’t just troublemakers and the Students’ Union was always very vocal when it comes to any sign of violence amongst students.

    “Even if you were a former troublemaker, as long you enter the campus, you drop it at the gate. Only stealing within campus hostels happened and this is bound to happen when you have individuals across various backgrounds living together.”

    A post graduate, Funmi Oyetola who had her undergraduate studies in the university, similarly recalled how she struggled all through her undergraduate years in order to get settled.

    She said: “If the university can increase the rent charged with a commiserate  improvement in the facilities and services provided, It would even boost academic performance as students will be better settled on campus and will therefore be able to devote their time and attention fully to studies.”

    Nonetheless, Aransiola, who is from the Department of Local Government Studies, opened up on some of the plans of the university to solve certain lingering issues that directly affect the students, especially,  security, accommodation and transportation which still remain a major headache.

    “When you solve a problem, another one arises. What we did was to deploy the university buses to ease the problem from campus to the gate.We have one big Marcopolo bus and two coastal buses plying campus gate.

    “What the university is planning to do now is to get three additional buses,in fact the buses will arrive soon.We want to add them to the fleet of buses to ease the problem of transportation. We’ve informed some transport venture that would support what we have on ground.

    On security, Prof Aransiola said “We are having meetings regularly and we walk hand-in hand with various security agencies. Security matter is not for one person, its for all of us.”

    On accommodation, he said management is considering having more hostels through build, operate and transfer (BOT) basis.

    “ What we do now is to contact vendors who would  construct hostels on a Build-Operate-Transfer BOT agreement. The female students popularly known as ‘maintenance’ will be the phase one. The phase two will be around Parakin, while phase three is around Ede road. Both areas are in Ile ife and near the university campus. Now we are on phase three where contractors have started work. Some hostels will be of 10,000 and 5,000 capacity respectively. As we speak, there is a hostel behind the Alumni hall of residence for our foreign but its not on a BOT agreement. We also regulate the prices charged by the hostel  owners otherwise they would have jacked up the rents outrageously.

  • Food fiesta: Ogun donates rice to OAU students

    The Ogun State government has donated 1,000 bags of rice to students of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) at Ile-Ife in Osun State.

    Speaking on behalf of Governor Ibikunle Amosun at the ceremony for this year’s edition of Ife Festival of Food and Identity, organised by the Institute of Cultural Studies of the OAU, Deputy Governor Mrs. Yetunde Onanuga said the government was committed to initiatives to boost food security.

    Amosun said the state had developed agricultural initiatives to address food security.

    He noted that his government had invested massively in Ofada rice to make the staple easily available.

    “Agro-business with its attendant value chain has the potential to change the story of our nation’s excessive and dangerous dependent on oil. The government of defunct Western Region under the late Papa Obafemi Awolowo demonstrated the huge benefits that we stand to gain from agriculture. What is more: this beautiful university is one such proof.”

    OAU’s Vice Chancellor Prof. Eyitope Ogunbodede said the food festival was designed to showcase the rich diversity in Nigerian cuisine and delicacies, thereby creating awareness on our rich food culture

    Ogunbodede said the festival was organised to celebrate African culture within a “medley of traditional and contemporary performances, dances, music, theatre, adult and children’s cooking corner competition, food tasting, symposium, art and photo exhibition”.

     

  • 19 OAU students get scholarship

    Nineteen students of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State have won the scholarship of Deacon Oluwole Alle Memorial Egbe Omo Oduduwa, a United States-based socio-cultural organisation.

    The beneficiaries, with the highest Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA), were among students  from eight Yoruba-speaking states of Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ondo, Ekiti, Kwara and Kogi.

    The OAU Deputy Director of Linkages and Sponsored Research, Prof Bukky Ojo, advised the beneficiaries to face their studies and make good grades to justify the financial investments of the sponsor.

    Congratulating the beneficiaries, the Dean of the Faculty of Technology, Prof Kehinde Taiwo, urged them to use the scholarship to enhance their academic experiences.

    She said: “The people who sent you this huge amount of money have denied themselves of some luxury in order to help you achieve your goals and fulfil your dreams. You must not engage in anything that would truncate the lofty ideas you have set for yourselves, thereby rendering the scholarship useless.”

    The Dean, Students’ Affairs, Dr. Lateefat Durosimi, congratulated the awardees, encouraging other students to study hard to benefit from similar gestures.

    President of the Pharmacy Students Association Tunde Okoya hailed the donor for the gesture, promising that the students would justify the scholarship by working hard to achieve academic excellence.

    In a related development, 10 students have benefited from a merit award scheme of Etisalat Nigeria.

    The beneficiaries are eight 200-Level students and two 300-Level students. They had their bank accounts credited with the scholarship funds.

    They are Ayodele Israel Aduragbemi with a CGPA of 5.00; Janet Ilori, CGPA 4.95; Yusuf Tijani, CGPA 4.90; Boluwatife Adelowo CGPA 4.90; Oluchi Ikezogwo, CGPA 4.88; Chukwufunmnanya Ogbobu, CGPA 4.79; Thompson Ajayi, CGPA 4.56; Kehinde Emmanuel, CGPA 4.51; Olanrewaju Osunkunle, CGPA 4.43 and Michael Afolabi, CGPA 4.43.

    The Vice-Chancellor, Prof Bamitale Omole, praised the students for their brilliance, urging them to study hard to achieve academic excellence.

     

  • OAU students protest poor welfare in hostels

    OAU students protest poor welfare in hostels

    STUDENTS of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State, yesterday protested poor welfare conditions in their hostels.

    Carrying placards with various inscriptions, they demanded a reversal of the situation.

    They demanded the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Bamitale Omole,  be probed by anti-corruption agencies,

    According to them, epileptic power and poor water supply had made the ‘campus not conducive for learning.

    The students condemned the university authorities for the terminating the admission of a Year 11 History student, Olawale Owolabi.

    Owolabi, popularly known as Ogunruku, was rusticated for joining a protest against the increment of acceptance fee from N2,000 to N20,000 in 2011.

    The students said the protest was a warning to the management not to increase hostel fees.

    Following the protest, many students and workers were stranded as there was a gridlock at the main gate.

    Students’ Union President Omotayo Akande said: “The union has exhausted the tool of diplomacy without getting reasonable concession on how our welfare condition would improve.

    “Our demands are more than just light and water, as the horrendous living condition of our hostels requires attention.

    “A room in Moremi Hall caught fire and the students couldn’t get a fire extinguisher in the hall block. This, among other things, informed our demand for proper hostel facilities.”

     

  • Adesina’s appointment excites OAU students

    • ‘Make Dabiri-Erewa minister’

    There was excitement at the Department of English and Literary Studies of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State, following the appointment of Mr Femi Adesina by President Muhammadu Buhari as his Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs.

    Adesina, former Chairman of Nigeria Guild of Editors and Managing Director of The Sun, graduated from the department.

    Students, under the aegis of National Association of Students of English and Literary Studies (NASELS), have hailed the appointment, describing it as round peg in a hole.

    The association’s president, Sodiq Oyeleke, and Public Relations Officer (PRO), Adebimpe Omolaso, described the appointment as a good omen for the department.

    Sodiq said Adesina had proven his prowess in the media, noting that it gave credence to the department’s culture of excellence.

    He said: “The appointment gives credence to the effort of the department and the university to inculcate knowledge, discipline and culture of excellence in students. Mr Adeshina, an intelligent and strategic thinker with rare acumen, is one of the numerous successful graduates of the Department of English and Literary Studies.

    “Judging by his colossal experience in the field pf communication, Adesina stands out as one of the best journalists the country has produced. We believe he will bring capable his experience to bear in assisting the president to propagate the message of change.”

    Adebimpe said: “All NASELS members heartily felicitate with Adesina on his appointment, which is a manifestation of his relentless effort in sustaining the growth of objective journalism in Nigeria. The appointment is a morale booster for students of the department.”

    The students urged President Buhari to raise the bar of appointment, saying he should select competent people to work with him. They also pushed for the appointment of another alumnus of the department, Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa.

    Dabiri-Erewa, the students said, has proven to be outstanding among her contemporaries. Sodiq said: “Hon. Dabiri deserves to be appointed as a minister. We do not think that there is a better way to reward exceptional people than to give them higher tasks.”

  • OAU students protest suspension

    MEMBERS of Education Rights Campaign (ERC) of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) have staged a demonstration to protest the suspension of some students of the management of the institution.

    Addressing a press conference at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Chapel in Ibadan, Oyo State capital, the National Coordinator, Comrade Hassan Taiwo, who was flanked by other union activist, alleged the victimisation of students by OAU management and the Polytechnic, Ibadan respectively.

    Taiwo disclosed that eight students of OAU were recently placed on an indefinite suspension for their roles during a peaceful protest against the astronomical hike of school fees by the management.

    Six student activists, five of which are ERC members, Taiwo said, have been on suspension for close to one academic session. They are Olubanji Oluwole, Adabale Olamide, Adewumagun Johnson, Ibirogba Samuel and Sanyaolu Olajuwon.

    The student leader also alleged that the school management connived with the Osun State Police Command to charge to the affected students to court for the alleged abduction of one Habeeb Olayinka, who was the chairman of the electoral commission which organised the elections into the student union.

    Taiwo said: “The allegation of the abduction is untrue, contrived and trumped-up. The election to the students union held as planned and was conducted by the same Habeeb Olayinka.”

    Speaking on the steps taken by the ERC to seek redress on the alleged victimisation, Taiwo said the case was already in court.

    He called on institution’s stakeholders to call the Vice-Chancellor of OAU, Prof. Bamitale Omole, and the Rector of The Polytechnic Ibadan, Prof. Fawole to order.

  • Talk the Talk excites OAU students

    The Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife (OAU) has launched its new radio show tagged: ‘Talk the Talk’. The radio programme is the newest of the many talk shows hosted on the university’s radio station, Great FM 94.5.

    The station, which began operations in 2008, has hosted many educational programmes. Director of the station Prof Lade Adeyanju, a lecturer in the Faculty of Education, said the radio station was meant to educate members of the academic community.

    A co-host, Caleb Adebayo, 400-Level Law, said: “Talk the Talk is an informative talk show aimed at engaging students in lively and healthy conversations for the purpose of development and improvement.”

    The first broadcast of the talk show held in January on “Feminism in Nigeria.”

    Emmanuella Odum and Ajayi Adebiyi, students of the Faculty of Law were the guests at the show.  The discussion was lively as both guests discussed feminism from various viewpoints.

    Students, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, said the show was engaging. Badmus Yetunde, a 300-Level student of Social Studies Education, said it was a programme that showed that students could do a lot with little. Another student, Bolaji Oyekanmi said: “The topics are discussed in an easy manner and the presenters are fluid. That’s what makes it interesting and fun.”

    The show is aired every Monday at 12 noon.