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The University of Lagos (UNILAG) has finally reduced the mandatory and extra fees paid to students.
Following a marathon discussion with the leadership of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) that lasted more than five hours, the university slashed the tuition on Thursday evening.
The conference was called at the request of UNILAG management, who encouraged NANS’ leadership to work together to find an equitable solution to the problem and ongoing student protests that have accompanied the fee increase since July.
By this development, according to the university’s spokesperson, Mrs Adejoke Alaga-Ibraheem, the university has reduced the obligatory fees for new undergraduates from N126,325 to N116,325 for courses without Lab/Studio and N176,325:00 to N166,325:00 for students with courses that require Lab/Studio while that of the returning students were reduced fromN100,750 to N80,750 and N140,250 to N120,250 as well as from N190,250 to N170,250 for courses without Lab/Studio and with lab\studio as well as for those studying medicine and pharmacy, respectively.
Also, all students will now be paying N15,000 instead of N20,000 for utility(which covers electricity, waste disposal etc. across board and the Convocation fee will now be N27,000 instead of N30,000.
The hostel fee for undergraduates in both Akoka and Yaba campuses of the university is now N43,000 instead of N90,000 while the medical students’ hostel in Idi-Araba campus is now N65,000 instead ofN120,000.
For Sodeinde Hall, the students will now be paying N135,000 instead ofN250,000.
Explaining further, Alaga-Ibraheem, said students who had already paid the entire obligatory fees would now work out the modality with the school to resolve the difference while those on instalmental payment would work on the adjusted fees to pay the rest.
She added that the school had also still put up measures such as instalment payments, scholarship grants, work-study programmes, adopting a student for sponsorship project and so forth to address the concerns of indigent students so as to ensure no student of the university will drop out because of the upward fees adjustment.
Nigerian Tribune reports that the students of the university have been paying an average of N20,000 yearly as obligatory fees for the past 15 years, which the management said is no longer in conformity with the current economic reality which has pushed up inflation in the country.
Meanwhile, in their joint statements made available by the National Public Relations Officer of NANS, who is a student of the university, Giwa Temitope, the students’ body confirmed the fees reduction by the university.