The death of a student, Oladimeji Olu, ND 1 Computer Engineering, led to
a demonstration on the Ikorodu campus of the Lagos State Polytechnic
(LASPOTECH). TOLULOPE OGUNLEYE (HND II Computer Science) reports that the
aggrieved students disrupted a meeting of principal officers.
BRANDISHING tree
branches and green leaves and with tears flowing down their cheeks, students of
the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) last Monday protested the death of
their colleague, Oladimeji Olu.
Academic activities
were grounded at the school’s Ikorodu campus as the students took to the
streets over the “poor medical services” in their clinic.
They claimed
Oladimeji, an ND1 Computer Engineering student, died because of the
lackadaisical attitude of the clinic’s personnel.
It was gathered
that the late Oladimeji was taken to the medical centre, last Friday, at 9:30am
after he took ill, but was transferred to the Ikorodu General Hospital, where
he died. The nature of his illness could not be ascertained, but his aggrieved
colleagues said the cause of death may have been malaria.
A student said the
deceased was left unattended to hours after his admission at the school’s
medical centre. Worried by the development, his colleagues complained to the
medical personnel on duty, who gave them a referral for him to the General
Hospital.
Sodiq Bello,
Faculty of Engineering students’ president, who spoke to our correspondent,
said he got an urgent call from the Computer Engineering Department’s
president, Taiwo Ogundero, that the late Oladimeji was “seriously sick” and had
been taken to the medical centre.
“Oladimeji was in
serious pain before the doctors started attending to him. When they discovered
that it was not a case they could handle anymore, they came back with a
referral for the deceased to be transferred to the General Hospital, Ikorodu,
where he gave up the ghost on Saturday in the midnight,” Sodiq said.
When the news of
Oladimeji’s death reached the campus, his colleagues sent messages to students
through the social media to converge on the convocation ground in the morning.
CAMPUSLIFE gathered
that scores of students, in a Marcopolo and six 18-seater buses, joined Olanike
Olu, the late Oladimeji’s sister, to retrieve his remains from the hospital.
At the hospital,
they were told the Oladimeji’s body would not be released to them. The
hospital’s reason, CAMPUSLIFE gathered, was hinged on its policy not to issue
death certificate to patients brought in less than 48 hours before death.
The students were
advised to go to the Ikorodu Local Government to get an affidavit. After obtaining
the document, signed by Olanike, the students moved to Igbogbo Police Station
in Ikorodu to get a police report, which was attached to the affidavit so as to
get the death certificate after paying N5,000 to the council. They later
presented the document at the hospital.
Tears flowed freely
as the late Oladimeji’s body was brought out of the morgue. His colleagues
wailed, with many cursing the institution’s medical personnel. The body was
taken to a cemetery at Sabo part of Ikorodu for burial.
After the
internment, the students returned to the campus, storming the clinic in
protest. In tears, the students chanted: “Oro nla l’eda, eyin t’epa Oladimeji
ti e je k’odagba, oro nla l’eda”, which means: “You have brought sorrow to our
hearts, you that caused Oladimeji’s death at his prime; it is great sorrow.”
The students
requested to see the Medical Director, Dr Ibrahim Abdulraheem, but the workers
said he was at a management meeting. The Dean, Students’ Affairs, Mr Nurudeen
Sonayan, and his deputy, Mr Adebayo Fapohunda, excused themselves from the
meeting to attend to the students. Their presence, however, could not calm the
inconsolable crowd, which insisted on seeing the medical director.
When the students
got to know that the medical director was in the boardroom, where the meeting
was being held, they stormed the place, chanting war songs.
The Public
Relations Officer (PRO) of the Students’ Union Government (SUG), Iroko When,
cautioned the demonstrators not to destroy the school property.
The Rector, Dr Abdulazeez
Abioye Lawal, summoned the Speaker of Students’ Representative Council, Sadiq
Taiwo and Yomi Usman, a member of the SUG parliament to the boardroom to
ascertain what the problem was.
The Speaker who narrated
what transpired at the medical centre. The rector reportedly responded that the
issue was part of the discussion at the disrupted meeting.
To calm frayed
nerves, Dr Lawal left the meeting to address the aggrieved students. He was
joined by other principal officers.
He urged the
students to remain calm, saying the state of the medical centre was part of the
discussion in the management meeting. He promised that changes would be
effected as soon as possible, urging the protesters to return to their hostels.
In an interview, Dr
Abdulraheem said the late Oladimeji was attended to by two doctors immediately
he was brought in.
“We were able to
stabilise him before the arrival of his family. When his sister arrived later,
there was need to refer him to Ikorodu General Hospital since the centre is not
running on 24-hour basis. We ensured that all facilities were in place to
transfer the deceased, who was taken in the school’s ambulance accompanied by
his sister and a nurse,” he said.
Abdulraheem said
the medical centre did all it could to save the deceased, saying the late
Oladimeji may have been seriously affected by the ailment. He advised students
to always visit the centre for regular medical check-up, saying: “Don’t wait
until you are seriously sick before you remember that there is a place called
medical centre on campus.”
Dr Abdulraheem gave
his mobile phone number for students to reach him in case of urgent medical
attention and poor service at the centre.
Efforts to speak to
the management of the Ikorodu General Hospital were futile.
Oladimeji, 21, was
a member of the SUG parliament. He is survived by his mother and siblings.
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Society
Rest in peace brother till we meet to depart no more....
ReplyDeleteR.I.P!Also lagos state govt you better take action interms of reforming problems affecting school clinics in the state.
ReplyDelete