WHen Shola, who was a 300 Level
student of Business Administration in University of Ibadan, was
propositioned by one of her core course lecturers, a professor that
students dreaded failing his course, little did she know what fate had
in store for her. Shola said: “I was surprised when he made his
intentions known to me because I was your normal everyday kind of girl
who didn’t dress provocatively. When I rejected his advances, he made
it clear that it was either I gave in to him or spend an extra year in
school.
Intelligentstudents
“I stood my grounds and had made up my mind to spend the extra year
despite being one of the intelligent students in the department. When he
saw that I was adamant and he knew he couldn’t defend failing me in the
exams, he scored me 40 despite my best efforts.”
Today, Shola runs a successful human capacity training business. She
is among the lucky few who escaped the clutches of randy lecturers and
higher institution staff, especially as most students spend extra years
till they give in to these demands.
Who’s at fault? Sexual harassment is bullying or
coercion of a sexual nature, or the unwelcome or inappropriate promise
of rewards in exchange for sexual favours. It is unwelcome sexual
advances, requests for sexual favours and other verbal or physical
harassment of a sexual nature.
Nigerian ivory towers have moulded intellectuals that have shaped the
destiny of this nation and have spawned icons, who are contributing
their quota to national and global development. But these citadels of
academic and moral excellence have, pathetically, become havens for
randy lecturers, who specialize in sexual harassment, sexual
gratification and, in most cases, rape.
That the internet is full of stories and images of how some
lecturers, who were bent on sleeping with students before they would
allow them graduate, were set up by would-be victims and their friends,
have not deterred others from engaging in such acts. The question then
is who is at fault for the rise in this malaise— the female students or
lecturers.
‘The students’: A mother of two undergraduates and a
post-graduate student herself, Mrs. Kate Oragui, emphatically lays the
blame at the doorsteps of female students, who dress scantily and
provocatively, especially those who she describes as ‘academically and
morally bankrupt’.
She said “when I started my post-graduate programme at the University
of Lagos, I was shocked to see female students wearing cloths that
barely covered their nakedness and I wonder how they would not be
sexually harassed or raped by men who can’t control their libido.
“It is boldly written at the school’s entrance that the way you dress
determines how you would be addressed. So I wonder why female students
can’t respect and cover their bodies. A good number of the victims are
either morally or intellectually bankrupt and are willing to do anything
to score high grades.”
Blaming the female students, a Combine Arts student of the University
of Nigeria, Nsukka, who did not want her name in print, said: “The
victims actually play a part in their predicament through their
provocative dressing or manner of approaching the male lecturers.
“In cases where such lecturers make promises of good grades, I don’t
think I would still consider that as rape. Be that as it may, these
‘good grades’ hardly turn out to be an ‘A’. Rather, it’s usually
something less, degrading the self-worth of such a lady that succumbs to
such sexual approaches.”
‘It’s lecturers, students, authorities’
Condemning the act in the strongest terms, a lecturer at the
University of Benin, Dr. Daniel Ekharefo, blamed the lecturers, female
students and school authorities for feeding this monster. He said: “I
wonder the level of perversion of the individuals in such cases. Young
people should avoid short cuts to success as many lecturers, who sleep
with students, ride on the promise to give good grades to students but
end up taking advantage of them.
“Unfortunately, the students, more often than not, are prepared to
offer their bodies for marks. What is required therefore, is for
students to read hard and stand firm. No lecturer can take advantage of a
brilliant and intelligent student. “Lecturers need a moral re-awakening
to the ethics of their profession and their place in nation building,
and school authorities should open channels of communication where
students can ventilate their grievances and report the unethical
behaviour of their tutors.”
Victims speak up
A third year student of UNN (names withheld), who was sexually
harassed by a lecturer, said she did the right and most moral thing by
turning down the lecturer despite being promised a good grade.
She said: “It is just a mechanized way by randy male lecturers to
satisfy their sexual urge. Some of them are just empty promises and
those that go ahead to rape the students should be critically followed
up by law enforcement agencies for appropriate punishment.
“It is a devilish act which should be stopped. I believe that
students have the right to be listened to when such complains come up in
a school environment. And female students should speak to the right
persons about such harassment and avoid such lecturers.”
She suggested that ad hoc committees or councils be set up in every
tertiary institution to specifically protect students and mete out
punishments to offending lecturers or any offender, for that matter.
Another victim of sexual harassment, a National Diploma, ND, II
student of Library and Information Science, Federal Polytechnic, Oko,
Anambra State, who pleaded anonymity, noted that sexual harassment and
rape are not new because they happen everyday in schools.
Recounting her experience, she said: “Most lecturers feel they can
intimidate and threaten female students because, at the end of the day,
they are the ones that would score them. So, they see this as a tool to
achieve their evil plans. I was lucky because the lecturer involved
wasn’t taking us on any core course. So I knew the consequences of
calling his bluff would not be so bad.
“So serious was he about having his way with me that he even gave me
money to go pay for a hotel room and wait for him at an appointed time.
It was like telling the sheep to go wait for the butcher at the
slaughter house. Being a sharp Lagos girl, I disappeared with the money
after giving him false hope that I would be waiting for him.
“When he eventually saw me after some weeks, I gave one lame excuse
and he said I was the first Lagos girl he came across that wasn’t loose
as evident in my decent cloths. I guess he just wanted to try his luck
with me.”
The way forward
In the words of one of the victims, lecturers who indulge in such
acts should be severely punished to serve as a deterrent to others. She
said: “I don’t think it would be too hard a consequence if our schools
can be strict enough to withdraw the employment of anyone engaged in
such act.
“Rape is not a minor issue and any lecturer caught in the act should
be stripped of his position and publicly humiliated so that others would
learn. Most of them go scot free and that is why they continue in those
acts.”
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