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School Fees Hike: El-Rufai Bans KASU Students From Protesting

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El-Rufai phone Kaduna

Governor Nasir El-Rufai has banned Kaduna State University (KASU) students from embarking on public demonstration over the increment in tuition fee of the institution.

The governor also compelled parents of students to sign expulsion undertakings.

The development was contained in statement signed by the university registrar, Samuel Manshop.

In the statement announcing the resumption of the academic session, parents and guardian of fresh and returning students of the 2020/2021 academic session are expected to sign a letter of undertaking that will forbid the students to protest against the recent hike in tuition.

The undertaking asked parents to promise that their wards “should be expelled without warning if he/she engages in any demonstration/protest against the increment in tuition fees or any contrary activities of the university’s rules and regulation.”

Prior to the commencement of the academic session on Tuesday, Nasir El-Rufai led Government had maintained that there was no going back onthe 500 per cent increase in tuition.

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This was confirmed to the students by Kaduna Deputy Governor Hadiza Balarabe in a meeting with the students’ representatives at the Sir Kashim Ibrahim House, Kaduna, on June 3.

On May 26, the students embarked on a peaceful protest at the university campus to express their dissatisfaction with the hike, lamenting the inability of many parents to afford the new school fees.

According to the new tuition fee structure, indigenes are expected to pay N150,000 for art and humanities and N171,000 for sciences, while non-indigenes will pay N221,000. Indigenes studying any course in the social sciences will pay N170,000 and non-indigenes N200,000. Meanwhile, indigenes admitted to study medicine will pay N300,000 and about N500,000 for non-indigenes.

The government also rebuffed KASU’s Academic Staff Union of Universities appeal to reverse the tuition increase, noting that the hike may result in 70 per cent of the students dropping out.

According to ASUU chairman Peter Adamu, “raising school fees by over 500 per cent will, without doubt, send thousands of the students out of school.”

Mr Adamu added that 70 per cent of the indigenous students were sons and daughters of peasant farmers, civil servants and petty traders.

“Worse still, the state government has sacked a good number of its workforce. Among them are parents and guardians of our students.

“These people struggle every day against the current economic downturn to pay the fees of their children,” he said.

The concept of schools forcing students to sign undertaking that are unfavourable to them is aadominant tool of coercion in Nigeria education system, It’s not peculiar to KASU. Other higher institutions across the country from time to time force students to sign undertakings that violate their fundamental human rights. The institutions usually ask the students to sign such an undertaking at matriculation or randomly to prevent a breach of peace on campus.

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