Audio By Carbonatix
A group identified as the Concerned Tertiary Students of GIJ (CTSG) has called on the management of the schools to rescind its decision to increase fees for the 2020/21 academic year.
In a press statement Tuesday, they stated various reasons for the need to ensure this expedite this action.
With regard to their school, Ghana Institute of Journalism, they said the 5% spike in fees was not formally communicated to the student body by any authority hence it should be considered illegal.
“Concerning our school, the Ghana Institute of Journalism, there has not been any official communique from the management to students about the increase in fees. This increment, termed as proposed, has however been circulated on student platforms and equally stated on every student’s academic portal.
"Students of the institute are now to pay the said fees stated on the portal even before they get access to results from the 2019/2020 academic year, an academic year already paid for. It is interesting to note that a deadline i.e. October 9 has been stated on the portal when management has not even communicated officially to students about when the 2020/2021 academic year starts.”
“We state that since there has not been any official notice from the parliament of Ghana substantiating fee increment, it is enough to say that the fee increment is illegal, a subtle form of exploitation, and should be treated as such by all sundry,” the statement read.
They iterated that the ‘inconsiderate decision’ has left a large number of students on the verge of dropping out of school as they cannot afford to pay the extra sum.
CTSG further noted that students across tertiary institutions did not fully benefit from the fees they paid for the previous semester which was abruptly cut short due to the outbreak of Covid-19 and its accompanying developments.
According to them, “several calls from some student bodies for a refund have however not been heeded to”.
They, however, recommended that the management of the school comes forth to explain the structure and schedule of the upcoming semester.
Meanwhile, the group appealed to the government to listen to the plea of tertiary students and respond affirmatively to their call for fee reduction.
The coalition stated that “students are poised and ready to, by any means necessary, seek redress and thus issue an ultimatum of fourteen days after which we will result in using other mechanisms to seek justice due to the increasing number of student agitations.”
The Convener of the group is Mohammed Samira Ibn Moro.
Latest Stories
-
Lupita Nyong’o admits fear as fibroids return, urges better treatment options
3 minutes -
Recreational use of cannabis remains illegal – Interior Minister warns
24 minutes -
Wa West health crisis: District hospital named “best in region” despite running on only 5 midwives and broken theatre table
26 minutes -
Eight out of 10 cardiac hospitalisations in Ghana caused by heart failure
40 minutes -
Fisheries Commission to roll out insurance; Navy training for fishermen after sea attack
1 hour -
Failure to appoint Defence Minister has made Ghana vulnerable to external threats – Ntim Fordjour
1 hour -
Sanction fishermen who go beyond the demarcated fishing zones – Dr Doke
1 hour -
Gov’t seizes 500 excavators, impounds 490 at Tema Port
1 hour -
No ready market, no licence: Gov’t sets strict entry rules for cannabis business
2 hours -
Minority MPs demand solutions on issues confronting Ghanaians ahead of SONA
2 hours -
6,530 Delegates endorse APN’s 12-Point compact, push for visa-free Africa
2 hours -
MahamaCare to embrace natural health solutions backed by science
2 hours -
Gov’t approves payment plan for nurses and midwives’ salary arrears
2 hours -
No arrangement to send DVLA staff abroad – Foreign Affairs Ministry contradicts DVLA boss
3 hours -
US and Iran hold talks seen as crucial to prevent conflict
3 hours
