The Nigerian Senate has approved a landmark bill prescribing up to 14 years imprisonment for any educator convicted of sexually harassing a student in a tertiary institution.
The move was widely hailed as a decisive step toward cleansing the nation’s campuses of academic exploitation and abuse.
The legislation, titled Sexual Harassment of Students (Prevention and Prohibition) Bill, 2025 (HB.1597), was presented for concurrence on Wednesday by Deputy Senate Leader, Senator Oyelola Ashiru, during plenary.
The bill seeks to establish a robust legal framework for protecting students from sexual misconduct by lecturers, supervisors, and other academic officials.
Ashiru said the law was crafted to “safeguard students from any form of sexual abuse and ensure accountability within the educational system,” while maintaining ethical standards in academic institutions.
He explained that the bill reinforces the sanctity of the student-teacher relationship, which must be founded on authority, trust, and respect for human dignity.
