•13 trucks destroyed
Hundreds of Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) students
yesterday besieged a plastic factory on the Lagos – Ore Expressway, damaging
products and 13 trucks.
The angry students vandalized
the reception area, threatening a repeat assault next week, if the government
did not bring to book the truck driver, who reportedly caused the accident in
which 12 of their colleagues died last Friday.
The Nation report continues:
The factory, said to
belong to some Indians, owns the truck carrying a 20 – feet container,
which fell atop a passenger bus conveying the students.
For the better part of
yesterday, vehicular movement came to a halt on both sides of the dual carriage
way. Travellers turned back. There was gridlock as motorists struggled to make
a detour.
The students, wearing
black T-shirts and jeans, arrived in four buses, including two luxury buses.
They were in tears as they converged to pray on the accident scene.
For over an hour, they
sang dirges for the victims and prayed for the repose of their souls.
A pastor, Tobi Adesanya,
from the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) prayed for the Christians.
Oresanya Adewale, a 300 Level Business Administration (Education) student,
prayed for the Muslims.
The prayers soon
morphed into yelling and cursing of the driver and his company.
Policemen, officials of
the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and operatives of the Ogun State Traffic
Agency (TRACE) tried to calm down the students but they refused to be
consoled.
For over three hours, the
students seized both lanes of the expressway on the Ikenne – Ilisan stretch and
later marched on the factory.
Armed policemen stationed
at the gate laboured to prevent the students from advancing but following
pressure from the students, the steel gate gave way.
The placard-carrying
students surged into the factory in their hundreds and vandalised products and
over a dozen trucks parked within the premises.
Some of the placards
read: “We demand justice for the lost souls”; “OOU mourns, OOU weeps, OOU
cries”; “A future lawyer is gone”; “Fresh graduate gone” ; “We’ve lost our
scientists”; “OOUITES are not chickens. Stop giving us phobia”; “Police, FRSC,
TRACE must be probed.
The Student Union
President, Adegbesan Adenola, told reporters that the students were demanding
N10million for each of the dead students.
Adenola said the money
should be paid to the each of the victims’ families within seven days .
The students demanded
that the policemen, FRSC and TRACE operatives, who were on duty last
Friday, be prosecuted for negligence and dereliction of duty.
The angry students were,
however, placated by some of the lecturers, including the OOU branch chairman
of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Dr Deji Agboola.
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