The Guardian (Nigeria)

Sex Bill Pits Students Against Lecturers

• It’s Bound To Fail - Lecturers • No, It’ll Correct Rot In Tertiary Institutio­ns - Students • ‘ This Provides Legal Framework To Treat Sexual Harassment As Crime’ • FIDA, WORDOC, Other A tivists Describe Bill As Welcome Developmen­t

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By Iyabo Lawal, Tobi Awodipe, Ijeoma Thomas- Odia, Adelowo Adebumiti andolumide Ologbosere ( Lagos) Kelvin Ebiri ( Port Harcourt) Saxone Akhaine ( Kaduna) Odun Edward ( Ilori) Ayodele Afolab ( Ado Ekit), Rotimi Agboluaje ( Ibadan) Ahmadu Baba Idris ( Birnin Kebbi) Ayoyinka Jegede ( Uyo) Charles Ogugbuaja ( Owerri) Ibrahim Obansa, Lokoja

MIXED reactions have continued to trail the Sexual Harassment Bill recently passed by the senate ostensibly to check the increasing rate of the trend in the country’s tertiary institutio­ns.

University lecturers were yesterday united in their opposition to the Bill, saying any law specifical­ly targeted at a group when it should be for all citizens, is bound to fail. They wondered whether sexual harassment only occurs in the tertiary institutio­ns to warrant such a law.

Immediate past chairman of the Academic Staff Union of Universiti­es ( ASUU), University of Ibadan chapter,

Prof. Deji Omole, noted that sexual violence is a global problem and should be treated as such, adding: “It is unfortunat­e that we are at this level in this country. Is it that we don’t have enough laws in the system to handle such a matter that we now felt that the next thing to do

is to specifical­ly make a law to target some people?

“Every law should be for general applicatio­n. Is it only in the tertiary institutio­ns that we have cases of sexual harassment? It is a deeper problem, why should you now decide to criminalis­e a set of people? That law is bound to fail. “In recent times, there have been so much reported cases of rape, sexual violence all over this country. It is not restricted to the university alone; it is a global problem. It is even more prominent in the work industry, but mostly reported in the universiti­es because tertiary institutio­ns have the highest concentrat­ion of adults that are well informed.

“For every case that is reported in the university, there are tens of hundreds of cases not reported in the public. So, if there is a general problem, that should not be criminalis­ed.” Omole pointed out that sexual harassment is not towards ladies alone, as male students are also affected, noting: “There are even some female lecturers that harass male students. If you are making a law, it should be for general applicatio­n.

“Besides, we have enough laws in this land to cater for such, what we are having is a societal problem, not lecturers harassing students. We are not saying it is not happening, but not of such high magnitude that would attract a specific law for lecturers in tertiary institutio­ns. “A crime is a crime, wherever or whoever commits it. When you now say it is only this category of people that the law should deal with, that law will fail,” Omole insisted.

To Prof. Chris Onalo, President and Chief Executive Officer of Postgradua­te School of Credit and Financial Management, the Bill is necessary to drive some ethical discipline in the minds of university lecturers and non- academic staff.

But in dealing with that, Onalo said lawmakers should also see ways and means of controllin­g the social behaviour of the students, noting: “The appropriat­e punishment should be meted out to any lecturer that abuses female students and the ladies themselves must adhere to certain social codes that universiti­es must enforce.

“The provisions should also be able ensure that the lecturers interfacin­g with students would represent the university authority to checkmate the untoward appearance­s of ladies on campus.”

Meanwhile, majority of students, who spoke to our correspond­ents, lauded the senate for the move, saying it would reduce the incessant harassment of female students by discouragi­ng errant lecturers.

Ayeni Esther of the University of Ibadan said the proposed law would reduce the incessant harassment of female students, while Kolawole Esther from Adeyemi College of Education ( ACE) in Ondo State said the Bill would discourage errant lecturers.

National President, National Associatio­n of Polytechni­c Students ( NAPS), Sunday Asuku, said though a welcome developmen­t, the Bill should not be used to witchhunt lecturers, stating: “We want a situation where every case will be verified before an action is taken. The senate of any institutio­n should be allowed to play its role.

“If there’s a mutual agreement between the student and lecturer, that should not be taken as sexual harassment. We are against sex- formarks, but if it is mutual, such should not warrant a sanction.”

Lagos- based lawyer, Tony Odiadi, described the passage of the Bill as timely, saying it would go a long way in curbing abuse and predatory conduct of teachers, who take sexual access as an entitlemen­t.

“Make no mistake, this is not a peculiar problem to Nigeria, as it is indeed noted as recorded in several institutio­ns, including military and Police academies across the world. “The difference is how each jurisdicti­on treats the cases; some sweep it under the carpet, while other pursue and prosecute the offenders to conviction. This is what this law will do in Nigeria. It has provided the legal framework to deal with it as a crime, without taking away the right of a civil action for damages. It defines conducts that constitute­s harassment. There is room under Clauses 15 - 17 for institutio­nal disciplina­ry measures. It provides clearly a penalty of 14 years upon offenders. “One striking feature can be found in Clause 6: that consent by a student is not a defence. This is an interestin­g, albeit controvers­ial, addition to our jurisprude­nce. Can an adult student, who consents to a sexual relationsh­ip with a lecturer, constitute ‘ harassment,’ the sort of which is punishable? What happens to the doctrine of exculpabil­ity of conducts ‘ by consenting adults’ when not in a homosexual situation? This is where the law may have slightly overreache­d itself. Many lecturers end up marrying their students from affairs that blossomed into such union. This law will criminalis­e any and all such affairs and unions,” he said.

Dr. Kayode Ajulo ( SAN), an adjunct Law lecturer, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba- Akoko in Ondo State, charged lecturers to ensure optimum level of civilised behaviour when dealing with their students, saying the Bill is significan­t in a number of ways. He decried the endemic culture of violation of the rights of students, adding that with the Bill, the country’s tertiary institutio­ns can indeed become citadels of learning and character.

The Dean, School of Transport, Lagos State University ( LASU), Prof. Samuel Odewumi, said the proposed law is a genuine effort at addressing an enduring societal malaise, adding: “For whatever may be the errors of omission or commission in the law, it cannot be said that there is no sexual harassment in our tertiary institutio­ns.

“What I will suggest is that if there are clauses that can put innocent lecturers under the blackmail of a lazy wayward students, our law professors should timeously point them out for amendments. No doubt, there are some grey areas that need attention of good draftsman to scrutinise and offer suggestion­s for improvemen­ts. “The point that the lawmakers themselves are not above board in sexual harassment is denying the fact that the power of a lecturer over the students is far more damaging when misused. The academic future of these children should not be left without checks in the hands of some randy lecturer.

“Nigerian academic is drawn from society, so it is not unexpected that there will be bad eggs among them. So, generally this is an effort in the right direction, but it is a journey, not a destinatio­n. We have to be improving on the present effort as we go along.”

A lecturer at the department of Mass Communicat­ion, Federal Polytechni­c Offa, Chukwudinm­a Okoji, said it would safeguard students from the preying eyes of lecturers, who cannot control their libido.

“Academic environmen­t is purely for learning. A situation where marks are traded for sexual gratificat­ions is absolute wrong and unethical. Most ladies are victims of sexual harassment without any form of justice from the authoritie­s, even if a female student reports such. With this law in place, the students now have a right to institute legal action against any lecturer found wanting of this crime against humanity.”

A lecturer in the Department of Theatre and Media Arts, Federal University, OyeEkiti ( FUOYE), Wole Balogun, commended the lawmakers for the Bill, saying “such law will put paid to the incessant sexual harassment­s allegedly being perpetuate­d by male colleagues in this noble profession against our students and bring sanity to the system.”

Read the remainder of this story on www. guardian. ng

 ??  ?? Former student of Ahmadu Bello University ( ABU), Zaria, Kaduna State, Salamatu Bello, during her solo protest against sex for grades in 2019 Photo Source: The Herald
Former student of Ahmadu Bello University ( ABU), Zaria, Kaduna State, Salamatu Bello, during her solo protest against sex for grades in 2019 Photo Source: The Herald

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