Protesting Edo students ground traffic on Benin-Ore road
Protesting Edo students ground traffic on Benin-Ore road
The protesting students.
Vehicular
movement was on Wednesday brought to a halt on the Benin-Ore Expressway
by a coalition of students from four tertiary institutions owned by the
Edo State Government.
They were protesting against the
inability of the state government to address the demands of their
lecturers and the poor state of facilities in the institutions.
The students, who noted that the
lecturers had carried out a seven-day warning strike last month, said
they feared that the current move by the academic staff to down tools
indefinitely would totally ground academic activities in the four
institutions.
The Colleges of Education Academic Staff
Union had last month halted academic activities in four
government-owned higher institutions ─ Colleges of education, Ekiadolor
and Igueben; School of Agriculture, Iguoriakhi; and Institute of
Management and Technology, Usen, to protest against what they described
as the reluctance of the government to pay their 16-month salary
arrears.
The arrears arose from a differential in
the implementations of the salary structure of CONPCASS and CONTEDISS
from July 2009 to October 2010.
PUNCH Metro gathered that the
students barricaded the busy expressway, leaving motorists and
travellers from both Lagos and Benin areas stranded for several hours.
It was the second time such a protest would be held this year.
The Student Union Government President,
Emmanuel Amenaghamwon, who led the protest, said the students could no
longer tolerate the ill-treatment faced by their lecturers.
Amenaghamwon, who also decried the poor
state of infrastructure in the institutions, appealed to the relevant
authorities to address the poor condition of the schools, which they
alleged could not compete with other institutions in the state.
The COEASU Chairman at the College of
Education, Ekiadolor, Mr. Fred Omonuwa, told our correspondent that the
union was aware that the students were protesting in solidarity with
their lecturers.
Omonuwa said that the union had planned
to down tools from next week, adding that the students’ protest was an
effort to prevent the plan by the union to down tools because it would
disrupt their forthcoming examinations.
“The students are also frustrated that
they are just in school and nothing is happening; the road that leads to
the school is bad and there is no water in the hostels.
“The union has said it is not going to conduct any exams until the state government meets the demands.
“So, they decided to use this medium to bare their minds,” he said.
Men of the Ekiadolor Police Division
were at the protest venue to forestall a breach of peace, while
personnel of the Federal Road Safety Corps were seen trying to manage
the gridlock caused by the protest.
The Toll Gate Unit Commander of the
FRSC, Ameen Adewale, told our correspondent on the telephone that the
protest created heavy traffic congestion on the highway.
He said that the protesting students,
had, however, been convinced to go back to their campuses around 12pm,
after appeals by the school management and security agencies.
He said, “On getting there, we discovered that some students were protesting and blocked the expressway. S
“Since then, we have been battling to see how we can ease the traffic situation there.
“But as I am talking to you now, there is free movement of vehicles to and fro, without any obstruction,” Adewale said.
The Edo State Commissioner for Higher
Education, Washington Usifo, could not be reached to react to the issues
raised by the students.
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