The
aggrieved students of Lagos State University students stormed the office of
Governor Babatunde Fashola at Alausa, Ikeja, on Thursday and said they would
not return home until their school fees were reduced and their arrested
colleagues released unconditionally.
The
students, who arrived at the office at about 3pm in over 10 buses, came along
with mats, mosquito nets and cooking pots, among others.
To show
their seriousness, the female students quickly swung into action, setting up
firewoods to prepare beans near the entrance of the Governor’s Office.
The students
also defied a downpour that threatened their demonstration, as they danced to
solidarity songs and held mid-day prayers to seek divine intervention.
In a letter
to Fashola, titled, ‘Save our future’, which was made available to PUNCH Metro,
the students alleged that the tuition hike had taken education beyond their
reach. Continue
President of
the LASU Student Union Government, Mr. Yusuf Nurudeen, said the students had
resolved to fight their cause until their demands were met by the government.
He said,
“Our school has been shut down. Students are dropping out of the university on
a daily basis. We decided not to engage the party leaders because the people in
government do not understand any language. The only language they understand is
protest.
“We have
resolved to fight this struggle by ourselves. We are a pressure group in the
country. We can do this alone. We do not want any person to fight for us. We
elected Governor Fashola. We elected all the members of the House of Assembly.
They must listen to us.
“Fashola
promised us a ‘Better Rewarding Future’. How can we have a rewarding future
without education? He has denied us education by the tuition hike. Section 3(1)
of the law that established LASU stated that the university should be made
available for all people irrespective of their socio-economic background and
status. Now, the governor has made LASU the university of the rich.
“We will not
leave until we hear something from the government. We have gone everywhere and
the police shot at us. That is why we decided to come here today and tell the
governor what is on our minds. Also, our colleagues arrested by the police must
be released unconditionally.
“If the
governor refuses to come out, we will remain here until he comes out. If the
governor can respond to issues that are less important than this, he should
come out and respond to the students of the state he governs.”
As of press
time, no official of the state government had attended to the students.
Fashola was
said to have left for Port Harcourt to join his colleagues for the Nigerian
Governors Forum retreat holding at the Rivers State Governor’s Lodge on Friday
(today).
However, the
commissioners for Information and Strategy, Aderemi Ibirogba, and
Transportation, Kayode Opeifa, had on Wednesday, said the government would not
be able to reach a conclusion on the tuition till June 9.
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