Students of the KNUST have reacted to the sanctions imposed by the University authorities.
They are especially not happy with the abolishment of the Junior Common Room system.
Earlier, the University's Council announced various sanctions to avert the recurrence of the clash between students resident in the University and Continental halls.
The riot, which was said to have resulted from attempts by students of Unity Hall to restrain colleagues from University Hall from using their frontage in a procession, took place on August 18, 2022.
A number of cars parked in front of Conti were damaged by the feuding students. The clash left three vehicles damaged.
Three persons are currently in police custody, while 61 others are being sought after.
A statement dated August 26, signed by the Registrar/Secretary to Council of KNUST, Mr. A.K. Boateng said, the sanctions were the outcome of an emergency meeting of the Council held on Friday, 26th August, 2022.
But JoyNews' Erastus Asare Donkor reports that the students disagree with the authorities.
In an interview, the students said the sanction from Management is harsh, adding that it s not the solution to the problem.
"They are rather taking advantage of this issue to finally remove students from the negotiation table so, in the long run, it will be like an autocratic system. They will just come out with their decisions and impose on the students and I don't think it is the fault of the JCR bodies so why are they removing them," a student said.
Another student also noted that the banning of students from participating in the organisation of what is termed as ‘morale’ and/or ‘procession’ was in place. He, however, does not agree with the abolishment of the Junior Common Room system.
"It is going to help calm the students because recently what we have been experiencing is so bad. Some of them throwing stones against each other, causing injury is too much. It is going to help calm this intense."
A student also said, "it is really fair because the other halls don't do morale and those processions so banning hall activities won't be fair .. we need the programmes to release stress."
"The JCR system can't control the student like when it comes to morales and the others," he said.
Latest Stories
-
‘It’s unfortunate we had to protect the public purse from Akufo-Addo’ – Ablakwa on ORAL Team’s mission
30 minutes -
Congo lawyers say Apple’s supply chain statement must be verified
56 minutes -
Stampede in southwestern Nigerian city causes multiple deaths
1 hour -
Tens of thousands without water in Mayotte as curfew brought in
2 hours -
ORAL: We won’t witch-hunt, we’ll focus on transparency, not revenge – Ablakwa
2 hours -
Attempted robbery: Accused claims he carried cutlass for protection
2 hours -
Excavator operator jailed for stealing
2 hours -
African fans age-shame me for putting on some outfits – Tiwa Savage
3 hours -
Tiwa Savage criticised by female fans for stance on cheating in relationships
3 hours -
Bank of England expected to hold interest rates
3 hours -
Congo river boat sinks killing at least 22
3 hours -
Nigeria approves Shell’s $2.4 billion asset sale to Renaissance
4 hours -
Embattled Liberian speaker questioned by police over parliament fire
4 hours -
‘I won’t be a judge in my own court; ORAL is about protecting public purse’ – Ablakwa
5 hours -
Bawumia joins thousands in Kumasi for burial prayers for Ashanti Regional Imam
5 hours