The administration of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State, has clarified a circulated announcement on a dress code for university students.
The Students’ Union leadership of the university had in a statement late Sunday also kicked against the proposal of a dress code for the students.
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“As a union, we differ with the plan of the management to regulate students’ mode of dressing which is a violation of their rights to freedom of expression as guaranteed in all known laws.
“We must state unequivocally that the university campus is not a prison and that the use of uniform is really backward and archaic as it does not in any way contribute to the learning process,” the statement jointly signed by the President, Secretary-General and the PRO of the union, Abbas Ojo, Opeyemi Akinboni and Omisore Elijah, respectively, partly read.
However, in a chat with the media on Monday, the university’s public relations officer, Abiodun Olarewaju, stated that the trending circular was not from the administration of the university.
Olarewaju said that even though the management was debating the choice, it would not want to trample on anyone’s toes.
In the circular that has been trending since Sunday, rustication for one semester was highlighted as punishment for students that commit misconduct such as putting on “sexually provocative dresses, backless clothes, transparent wears, off-shoulder clothes, bomb shorts’, etc.
Another misconduct contained in the circular includes “unwelcome touching, kissing, and hugging of the opposite sex, massaging or sitting on the laps by the opposite sex,” all liable to rustication for two semesters.
Male students were warned against “Hair plaiting or weaving,” among others.
But Olarewaju said, “It (the circular) is not from the university administration. Although we’re working on our own, I think those who brought that out are just being mischievous. Maybe they’re trying to gauge the minds of the people and the students, but definitely, this is a university and we cannot accept any kind of dress, we have decency.”
Reiterating that the university was considering a dress code policy, the school PRO said, “Of course, we’re on that but we want to be sure we are not stepping on toes.”