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Saturday, March 1, 2014

Campus where tin-sheets serve for bathrooms


Mrs Merilyn Kimori, the dean of students at Rongo University College on Feb 28, 2014 COURTESY PHOTO. 
By ELVIS ONDIEKI
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The fourth line of the institution’s anthem proclaims that it is a world-class university. Five lines down, the ninth one goes: “We nature (sic) innovative graduates.”


 
Then finally the 16-line anthem, posted on its website, signs off with: “We give the best in learning and practice/ Rongo University.”

Welcome to Rongo University College (whose mother institution is Moi University), where some students prefer having their lunch under trees, while others like their meals spruced up with foodstuff bought from an open-air market ‘The Black Market’.

Our attention was drawn to the university after the death of one of its students on February 16, a day after he collapsed while queuing at the administration block.

According to dean of students Merilyn Kimori, 22-year-old Simon Kamau collapsed as he awaited clearance to enable him get an examination card.

“He was then rushed to the university dispensary where a nurse tried to stabilise him, but his condition didn’t improve and he was eventually admitted to Tabaka Mission Hospital, where died the next morning,” she said. The death of the First Year biochemistry student ignited protests that Saturday and the following Monday.

Among the rioting students’ complaints was that Mr Kamau could not have died if the dispensary was better equipped.

The claim that Mr Kamau’s brother had to come with a police vehicle from the nearby Rongo police post to transport him to hospital is another matter that the students were not happy about, as is communicated through a post in one of the Facebook pages run by the students.

But Mr James Maina, the student’s uncle, absolved the institution of any blame.
“A doctor explained to us that Kamau had brain haemorrhage; that it can strike anywhere, any time. I believe my nephew’s death was just a case of bad luck. The institution, I believe, did the best it could do to save him,” he said.

That Saturday, there appeared a not-so-flattering Facebook post by one of the students. It made reference to the wanting state of facilities in the institution, among them that students are forced to go to a nearby river to fetch water whenever the commodity is in short supply.

Saturday Nation was at the institution’s main dining hall on the evening of February 17. It was anything but orderly as each student scrambled to get their supper ration.

Demoralising thing
A First Year student, who requested anonymity for fear of victimisation, said it is a demoralising thing to live under such conditions despite the prestige that is associated with scoring high grades and getting a university admission.

The dean of students admitted that the dining hall is small, but not to a level where students are forced to eat from outside.

“We have plans of building a bigger cafeteria that will solve the problem once and for all,” Mrs Kimori said. She, however, denied reports that students are sometimes forced to go to the river, asserting that the institution is always on top of its game whenever there is a water shortage.
At the Nyayo Hostel, students take showers in makeshift iron sheet bathrooms with no doors.

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