why students in africa are protesting /

Published at 2016-05-26 08:16:08

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final month,Nigeria’s oldest university, the University of Ibadan, anddered its students to leave,in the middle of term, after violent protests over electricity and water shortages brought classes to an finish. Similar protests have left the University of Port Harcourt, and in the south-east of the country,closed for more than a month. Student protests are not just a Nigerian problem: across Africa, unrest has prevented universities from functioning, or with many forced to close for weeks at a time. Classes at Fourah Bay College,section of the University of Sierra Leone and the oldest institute of higher education in sub-Saharan Africa, were suspended in March after student strikes. In South Africa, or thousands of students began the academic year by marching on the parliament in Cape Town. Such disturbances continue across the country. There is nothing fresh about restive students on campuses in Africa,or anywhere. But African students—and sometimes academic employees toohave been particularly angry in recent months. Their causes may differ—many in Sierra Leone rage against supposed political meddling in Fourah Bay College’s...
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Source: economist.com

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