A university don, Prof. Elizabeth Balogun, on Wednesday in Abeokuta,
Ogun State, expressed her concern over the prevalence of prostitution
among female undergraduates in the country.
Balogun said the
sex trade had become rampant on Nigerian campuses to such an extent that
80 percent of prostitutes that patronise night clubs, hotels and
tourist centres in Ogun State are students of tertiary institutions.
Prof. Balogun,a Biochemistry lecturer at the University of Ilorin, said
this at a seminar organised by the National Association of Nigerian
Students to mark its 31st anniversary where she delivered a lecture
titled “Prostitution on our campuses: Effects and solutions.” Click to
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The guest speaker, who expressed regret said,
“It is absurd to the level that young undergraduate lady would leave
normal academic chores of attending lectures and visiting libraries for
further studies during the day, only to metamorphose in the evening into
a call-girl or pimp.
“There is no doubt that prostitution in
the long run corrupts the quality of the nation’s future leaders and
affects their values. Understanding that
young females constitute
appreciable percentage of the nation’s population, little could be
expected from them productively if they had been turned into cheap
sexual machines, with warped self-esteem and self- actualisation.
“Inordinate desire for affluence and desperation by many Nigerians,
especially ladies lure them to engage in immoral and illicit activities,
despite high level of religiousness which Nigerians overtly
demonstrate. Even the present scourge of HIV/AIDS and the menace of
ritual killers that find easy prey among prostitutes, have not been
strong enough to curb the rising trend of the practice.”
She
urged the government to improve funding on education in order to
drastically reduce cost of attaining higher education which will curb
the rising trend of the practice.
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