Students of the Olabisi Onabanjo 
University, Ago Iwoye, Ogun State, on Monday protested over the death of
 eight of their colleagues in an auto crash on Friday.
Their action resulted in heavy traffic on the Sagamu-Benin Expressway for over an hour.
The accident occurred at Ilishan 
Junction along Sagamu-Benin Expressway, Ogun State, when a truck laden 
with a container, whose driver allegedly drove against the traffic, 
rammed into a commercial bus in which the students and other passengers 
were travelling to Lagos.
It killed 12 of them, with only one person surviving.
The students, who stormed the accident 
scene on Monday in two luxury buses and two Mazda buses, wore black 
T-shirts and trousers.
Many
 of them broke down in tears when they saw the wreckage of the 
commercial bus, strewn with some clothes and torn notebooks of the 
victims.
They, thereafter, became angry and 
started hurling stones and other objects on drivers of articulated 
vehicles on the expressway.
Some of their lecturers, including the 
Chairman, Academic Staff Union of Universities, Dr. Deji Agboola, 
stopped the students, who wanted to set the “offending container” 
ablaze.
“The content may explode and cause havoc,” Agboola warned them.
The protesting students carried 
placards, which variously read, ‘We say no to broad day movement of long
 vehicles,’ ‘We demand justice for the lost souls’, and ‘We say no to 
bad roads’, among others.
The students, who offered prayers in 
honour of their departed colleagues, later marched to the premises of 
the plastic manufacturing company, where the truck headed for and 
vandalised some of the articulated vehicles parked there.
Meanwhile, the South-West wing of the 
National Association of Nigerian Students has demanded N10m each 
compensation for the students who lost their lives in the auto crash.
They gave the plastic manufacturing company a seven-day ultimatum to pay the ‘compensation.’
In a statement by the President, Student
 Union Government, OOU, Adegbesan Adenola, Ogun State NANS Chairman, 
Okikiola Ogunsola, and Zone D Coordinator, NANS, Sunday Ashefon, the 
students urged the security agencies to apprehend the driver of the 
truck and commence his prosecution immediately.
They also called on the government to 
investigate the men of the Federal Road Safety Corps and the police on 
duty on that axis last Friday.
The statement read in part, “The state 
and federal law prohibiting articulated vehicles from plying the 
highways in the daytime should be enacted and rigorously supervised to 
ensure compliance, where such already exists.
“The necessary security agencies should be alert to their duties to monitor the movement of vehicles on the highway.”
  
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