University Ilorin |
In a meeting with some security agencies in Kwara State, Sule said the university had met its commitment towards the herdsmen but the issue of insecurity within its premises still persist.
Sule said the herdsmen posed serious threats to the university farms, dam site, hostels, academic environment and staff residence.
Sule also accused some herdsmen of stealing farm products and building materials belonging to the university.
The deputy vice-chancellor said the university authorities would not fail to take legal action against herdsmen and farmers trespassing on its land.
The institution had plans to use its land but could not do so due to security challenges, urging the security personnel to be proactive in carrying out their duties, said Sule.
An official of the faculty of agriculture, Kameeludeen Azeez, expressed worry over the "illegal activities of herdsmen" in the university in spite of efforts to appease them.
"It is rather so pathetic that the university has spent so much money on relocating the herders, given them all they requested and we are still encountering this," he said.
He further iterate that the security agencies had been mandated to arrest trespassers in the university and to curb the threat, which some "unruly herdsmen posed to the institution."
Yunus Alade-Saliu, a representative of the Department of State Services (DSS), assured the university of maximum security of staff and students in the area.
Alade-Saliu said illegal farming in the campus would no longer be treated with kids gloves.
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