During the
Olusegun Obasanjo-led military regime, Dr.
Jibril Aminu, the secretary of the Nigerian University Commission, announced that due to the high cost of living in the country, students would begin to pay extra fees. According to the Nigerian University Commission, tuition fee was to remain free for all undergraduates, sub-degree diploma as well as students of teacher education. Hostel accommodation, however, would be increased to ₦90 per student per session of 36 weeks or ₦30 per student in a session of three terms. The increment also meant that the cost of meal tickets rose from ₦1.50 to ₦2.00 i.e. increased by 50 kobo. The president of the
National Union of Nigerian Students (NUNS) at the time,
Segun Okeowo, who was a student at the
University of Lagos, made attempts to rectify the changes as it was unsatisfactory for the students. The students held meetings in
Ilorin,
Maiduguri, and
Calabar before deciding to take the bold step of challenging the military government on the increment. Apart from the fees, another agitation of the students was that tertiary education was suffering because there were very few federal government-owned universities and no private or state-owned universities. Tertiary education was therefore seen as a privilege and that the federal government could not cope with the number of people seeking admission. This agitation as well as the increase in fees led to the protests. The then minister of education,
Ahmadu Ali, was believed to be at the center of the uprising but he tried to shift responsibility to the
Supreme Military Council citing that the increment was made by the Supreme Military Council and not the Ministry of Education. The protest chant 'Ali Must Go' was coined as a result. == Protests ==