Editorial
Checking Cultism In Nigerian Schools
The Executive Secretary of the National
Universities Commission (NUC), Professor
Julius Okogie, recently raised an alarm over the return of cultism and other violent crimes in Nigeria’s public universities. This came on the heels of shooting and wounding of three students of the Enugu State University of Science and Technology.
Okogie who spoke through a senior official of the commission while declaring open a workshop on security challenges in Calabar, Cross River State, said that students and lecturers now live in fear at the various university campuses. He recounted how a lecturer was shot dead in his office recently.
According to the NUC boss, “cultism is now a major concern in the country because of the kind of weapons the members use to perpetrate their nefarious acts against fellow students and lecturers. The students who belong to these nocturnal groups on campus take hard drugs and carry out very unthinkable and wicked acts.”
Secret cult activities that were brought under control some years ago appear to have returned in full despite internal security networks within the campuses. Stories of arson, rape, robbery and killing have become rampant. But why this barbaric act should find expression in the citadel of learning is something that needs to be identified.
The Tide condemns the resurgence of campus cults and hopes that the government, university administrators and security agencies would quickly come up with ways of stamping out the trend before it destroys the little value in our public institutions of higher learning.
At a time when the standard of education and the quality of degrees awarded by public universities in Nigeria suffer rejection, the issue of cultism should be the last thing to happen in schools. The admission process has once again come to question because qualified candidates no longer find it easy to be admitted into our universities.
The fight against cultism has become imperative becasue the scourge has also crept into secondary and primary schools in parts of the country. The sudden rise in youth cultism needs to be understood and confronted with the same ruthlessness that it understnads. No longers should the lives of other young ones be so wasted by a few elements who should not be in school in the first place.
We are not unaware of government’s hard stance against cultism and some of the measures taken so far to curb the menace. Decree 47 of 1989 stipulated sever jail terms for cultists. In 2000, the Federal Government under President Olusegun Obasanjo issued a three-month ultimatum to Vice Chancellor to rid their campuses of student cultists.
In compliance with this directive, it was reported that some institutions constituted anti-cult vanguards comprising students and security opeartives to monitor and checkmate the activities of cultists on campuses. The result was that the trend abated and the lives of many students saved.
As Education Minister in 2006, Oby Ezekwesili was also said to have initiated a project on students anti-thuggery and cultism aimed at educating students on the dangers of belonging to cult and to encourage those who who were already initiatve s to renounce their membership.
Many states have also established legislations prohibiting secret cult membership. The Rivers State Secret Cult and Similar Activities (Probibition) Law was enacted in 2004. But the rising incidence of cultism even in the campuses can only suggest the extent to which these extant laws are being observation in our universities.
Again, just as members of these sinister gangs have become ready tools for the disruption of the academic calendar, influencing the outcomes of examinations and students union elections, so also have professional politicians found them as worthy agents to be used for violence and rigging of elections.
The Tide suggests that campus security should be seriously upgraded with better equipment for personnel as well as a serious liaison established with the security community. Universities must install close-circuit televisions (CCTV), fence their premises and keep track of suspected cultists as they are well known on all the campuses
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