Data Price Hike in Nigeria Sparks Anger in Top Kwara University

Data Price Hike in Nigeria Sparks Anger in Top Kwara University

  • Students of Ahman Pategi University have protested the school’s shift to virtual lectures, citing high data costs and poor internet as major barriers
  • They also raised concerns over the lack of accreditation for their academic programs, leaving many final-year students uncertain about their future
  • The unrest comes amid broader telecom tariff hikes in Nigeria and a leadership vacuum following the founder’s death

Students of Ahman Pategi University in Patigi, Kwara State, have kicked against the institution’s decision to adopt virtual lectures, citing rising data costs and poor internet connectivity as significant challenges.

Legit.ng learned that the students staged a protest on Monday to voice their grievances, accusing the university management of transforming the school into a virtual institution without proper consultation or adequate infrastructure to support online learning.

Ahman Pategi University students
Ahman Pategi University students have bemoaned the shift in the mode of learning in school. Image: Ahman Pategi University/FB
Source: Facebook
“We carried out the protests to express our grievances over the management of Ahman Pategi University this week, ” Usman, a 300-level student of the university, told Legit.ng.

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Usman added:

“We are rejecting virtual lectures. We are practically not having physical classes now. The management is indirectly turning the school into a virtual school. This is not a NOUN university. This is not what we were promised when we were offered admission. We started with physical classes.”

Students cannot afford cost of data

He noted that many students can no longer afford the high cost of data following the recent price hikes by telecom companies.

“Everyone knows how expensive data is now in Nigeria due to the recent hike. It is not what we can sustain again. A lot of us are complaining. We don’t want virtual classes again,” he said.
“Not only data, the network issues too. The network is not reliable. There are times bad network will even make the classes frustrating. The lecturers will be talking and you will barely hear and understand anything. And the university was not approved as an e-learning centre. It was approved as a regular school like others. The management are just overburdening us with the introduction of these virtual classes,” he added.

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NCC approves 50% tariff hike

The students’ complaints come at a time when Nigerian telecom users are grappling with increased data tariffs following a regulatory green light from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).

Telecos
All teleco companies have increased the cost of both data and call rates. Image: Getty
Source: Getty Images

The NCC had earlier approved a 50% increase in tariffs, prompting telecom giants like MTN Nigeria to hike prices by up to 200% in some cases. Although MTN later reversed the increase after a public outcry, many networks still maintain significantly higher rates, with large data plans costing up to N70,000.

Gbenga Adebayo, Chairman of the Association of Licensed Telecommunication Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), had said during a February forum with telco executives that the price hike was necessary due to the high operational costs faced by telecom companies.

Despite the justification from telcos, the new tariff regime has sparked intense debate across the country, with many Nigerians complaining about the burden it places on households already struggling with inflation and economic hardship.

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Accreditation Issues

President of the Students Representative Council in the school, Aliyu Dangbana, a final-year student, also raised concerns over the lack of accreditation of the institution’s academic programmes.

“Nigerian University Commission offered our school 14 courses. This made us have two faculties. None of these courses have been accredited. The NUC even invited our management to come and do the accreditation, but they refused,” Aliyu said.

He explained that the school management was invited for the accreditation process multiple times but failed to honour the invitations.

“Presently, we (the 400-level students), our lives are uncertain because the school appears not to be ready to carry proper accreditation of our courses as suggested by NUC. Fourteen courses were affected,” he lamented.
“Even in last October, the students went to the management about this issue, when we heard that they turned down the NUC offer to begin accreditation visitation in our school. The management appealed to us that the school was currently not ready because of finances. And they told us that they will write a postponement to NUC and scheduled another date, January 19, 2025, for the accreditation visitation. But nothing was done again.”

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Aliyu added that the students had earlier staged a protest in January 2025 to press home their demands.

“They resolved it and begged the students that the accreditation has been fixed first week of March 2025. During this time, we expected that accreditation will take place. And the time came, no signs of accreditation. It was at this time the VC confessed to the students that his hands are tied on the accreditation.”

Death of Founder

Amid the turmoil, students at Ahman Pategi University say the late founder’s death may have contributed to the current challenges facing the school.

The founder, Ahman Patigi, a former lawmaker who represented Edu/Moro/Patigi Federal Constituency of Kwara State in the 6th, 7th, and 8th Assemblies, passed away in October 2024 at the age of 59 after a brief illness.

During his time in the House of Representatives, Patigi served as the Chairman of the House Committee on Water Resources. Students of the university believe his demise has left a leadership vacuum that is now affecting the school’s progress.

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Ahman Pategi University is one of the twenty private institutions approved for establishment by the Federal Executive Council in February 2021.

Residents flee Kwara homes

Similarly, Legit.ng reported that a deadly communal clash over a disputed cashew farm had left at least two people dead and several others injured in Ekiti Local Government Area of Kwara State.

The violent confrontation, which erupted on Friday between residents of Osi and Ẹpẹ-Opin communities, has forced many locals to flee their homes.

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Source: Legit.ng

Authors:
Ibrahim Sofiyullaha avatar

Ibrahim Sofiyullaha (Editorial Assistant) Ibrahim Sofiyullaha is a graduate of First Technical University, Ibadan. He was the founder and pioneer Editor-in-Chief of a fast-rising campus journalism outfit at his university. Ibrahim is a coauthor of the book Julie, or Sylvia, written in collaboration with two prominent Western authors. He was ranked as the 9th best young writer in Africa by the International Sports Press Association. Ibrahim has contributed insightful articles for major platforms, including Sportskeeda in the UK and Motherly in the United States. Email: ibrahim.sofiyullaha@corp.legit.ng

Atanda Omobolaji avatar

Atanda Omobolaji (Kwara State Correspondent)

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