The students were allegedly killed by the police during a protest at the college’s Omu-Ijebu campus on Tuesday.
The lawmakers also ordered the Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Mr. Segun Odubela, to appear before them to explain the circumstances surrounding the students’ protest.
The summon on the police chief and the education commissioner was sequel to a motion moved by the Chairman, House Committee on Education, Mafe Adeyinka.
The lawmaker, representing Sagamu I State Constitutency while putting forward the motion, observed that no fewer than 190 TASCE students had been arrested and detained by the the police over the matter.
He noted that there was the need for the police chief to explain, who authorised police to fire live bullets at the students.
The Assembly Speaker, Suraj Adekunbi, argued that in view of urgency of the matter, the police commissioner, Area Commander for Ijebu- Ode, the Divisional Police Officer of the area as well as the Education Commissioner should appear before the Assembly to throw light on the incident at the college.
Meanwhile, 29 suspected student cultists expelled by the authorities of TASCE have appealed to the state government to reverse their sacking from the college.
The expelled students, in a statement by the President of the dissolved Students’ Union, Rotimi Segun, and the other executive members as well as the Students’ Representative Council, pleaded with Governor Ibikunle Amosun to set up a machinery to look into the circumstances that led to their expulsion.
They said contrary to the claim by the school’s authorities that they were expelled for cult related offences, they were only protesting the decision of the management to prevent some 200-level students from sitting for the ongoing first semester examination due to their inability to pay tuition fees.
