BREAKING NEWS
University Of Ibadan College Of Medicine Stage Protest Over Increased Levy
Over one hundred students of the College of Medicine, University of
Ibadan on Sunday assembled at the second gate of the University College
Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, the Oyo State capital to protest the increment of
Professional Training and accommodation fees by the Senate of the institution.
The students, who sat by the side of the hospital second gate, along
Secretariat Road, Ibadan, were all clad in their white laboratory coats, with
their luggage, mats and other belongings to press home their demands.
We reported that the purported increment had been resisted by the
students who on Thursday blocked some entrances to some of the halls of
residence in the institution.
The university management in its swift reaction to forestall any outbreak
of law and order, however, on Saturday announced the immediate closure of the
Medical Students hall of residence.
But the students in a two-page leaflet titled “The university’s argument
and rebuttals, Our arguments”, disclosed that the institution on April 3, 2018,
proposed a health training levy of N100,000 per student, increased the
accommodation fee from N14,000 to N40,000, thus making an average student of
the medical school to be paying around N185,000 per session as against less
than N50,000 they paid last year.
They described the increment as one that has no justification, saying
“the levy is illegal, and in contradiction with the Federal Government’s
policy.”
The students noted that the institution’s management failed to take the
current economy situation in the country into consideration before coming up
with a figure which many parents would find difficult to pay.
The students argued that if the new rate as being proposed by the
institution’s management is effected, some medical discipline would require over
N337,150 per session, a figure they claimed was high for an average student
attending a public university in the country.
The students also alleged that the Provost of the College, Professor
Oluwabunmi Olapade-Olaopa insulted them.
The students said, “The levy has no justification or acceptable
explanation; the levy is illegal, and in contradiction with the Federal
Government’s policy which set a N45,000 fees for all federal universities; the
university administrators cannot provide proof that students were consulted
before this levy was decided upon and this is not in compliance with section
seven of the University Act of 2003; many students cannot afford the levy,
considering the current economic condition.
“One out of every three students said they will consider dropping out of
school in an opinion poll conducted independently; none of the 17 federal
medical schools in Nigeria pay as high as this levy.
“If we pay this levy, Ibadan medical school will be the most expensive
Federal Medical school in the country, paying about twice more than the average
fee in other schools.”
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