Category: Campus Life

  • Campus Journalists honour Otufodunrin, Oguntola

    Union of Campus Journalists (UCJ), University of Ibadan chapter, at the weekend honoured three veteran journalists ­­— the Publisher, Premium Times, Mr Dapo Olorunyomi; former Managing Editor (Online), The Nation Newspapers, Mr. Lekan Otufodunrin and his successor, Mr. Sunday Oguntola, Online Editor, among others.

    Union of Campus Journalists is the umbrella body of student journalists nationwide.

    The event with theme: Digital media, networking & ICT: Prospects & challenges for individuals and national development, had in attendance prominent media practitioners and personalities including: Edmund Obilo, Mr. Chude Jidenowo, Nurudeen Bakare, Prof. Keye Abiona, Dr Demola Lewis, Prof. Francis Egbokhare, Dr Bayo Ajala and others.

    Otunfodunrin and Oguntola were appointed Editorial advisers by UCJ, in recognition of their journalistic acumen, while Olorunyomi who was represented by Ben Ezemalu, was installed the Grand Patron of the association.

    Read Also: Campus journalists launch UNIZIK chapter

    UCJ President Martins Isaac hopes the installation would inspire the trio, to further champion the cause of UCJ in terms of grooming campus Journalists for better performance.

    The high point of the event was the induction of over 100 campus journalists into UCJ.

    Charging the 164 campus journalists-inductees, Isaac urged them to be steadfast in their pursuit of news story and be critical in their write-ups.

    “With the installation of the two editorial advisers and the grand patron with sterling profiles in the media space, it’s our belief that they will help expand the frontiers of excellence in UCJ UI,” he said,

    Pioneer UCJ UI President Dr. Bayo Ajala, who decorated the editorial advisers, expressed his utmost delight with what the union has recorded so far. He noted that most of the special posts and honor currently in existence weren’t in use at the time of his membership.

    Otunfodunrin and Oguntola thanked the union for the honour conferred on them.

    Oguntola promised to help UCJ members grow in the profession.

  • Christian corps member gets traditional title for mosque donations

    Ohimegye-Igu of Koton- Karfe Kingdom and Chairman, Kogi/Lokoja Area Traditional Council, HRM Abdulrazaq Sani Isa Koto, has turbaned a National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) member, Alexander Etini Gideon, for constructing five partitioned toilet and a bathroom for the use of Muslim faithful at Kotonkarfe Central Mosque.

    Etini’s generous donation earned him praises by the host Koton-Kafe Kingdom, especially from King Sanni, who inaugurated the project.

    “Mr Etini’s initiative, despite being a Christian, is an epic demonstration of a patriotic bridge-builder committed to promoting religious tolerance, understanding and unity among varying faiths in Nigeria which is in line with one of the objectives of the founding fathers of NYSC scheme,” the monarch said during the commissioning.

    He continued: “Considering your enormous contribution, hardwork, dedication and unwavering commitment to issues that affect Kotonkarfe in addition to the facility you provided at the Kotonkarfe Central Mosque, I am elated to confer on you the traditional tittle of Onkyara Obuta Igu, Kotonkarfe (the youth that facilitates development), in exercise of the power conferred on me as the Ohimegye Igu, Kotonkarfe and Chairman Kogi/Lokoja Area Traditional Council. You are by this appointment, a member of Igu, Kotonkarfe Traditional Tittle Holders Council. Henceforth your traditional official greetings shall be Wodi.”

    Speaking before inaugurating the project, the Administrator of Kogi Local Government, Muhammed Tanko Musa, described Etini as a personality who, via his kind gesture, has distinguished himself in the national service. Musa added that for a Christian to build such facility in a mosque is a true demonstration of religious tolerance.

    Etini thanked the monarch for the title, adding that it’s a challenge to do more.

    “Not long ago, I came to this local government as a corps member, I noticed there was a problem in the community that needed to be solved; a menace that has to be collectively handled,” Etini began while expressing his appreciation.

    ‘I took up the charge to tackle open defecation, water pollution, especially in the place of worship, and I never allowed ethnicity or religion to be a barrier towards achieving the purpose of which NYSC was created.

    “Mark this day on your calendar that one Alexander Gideon Etini once told us that if we could live together as one body, following the principles of meritocracy and not nepotism, and respecting each other’s religious beliefs, Nigeria would be great again.”

    State Coordinator of NYSC in Kogi State Mr Lasaki Olayiwola, who was represented by the zonal inspector, Lokoja, Etsu Muazu Idris, encouraged other corps members to emulate Etini by touching the lives of the people in their host communities with beautiful projects.

    Similarly, on behalf of muslim faithful in the town, Chairman of Kotonkarfe Jumat Mosque, Prof Ibrahim Aguye, thanked the donor. He promised that the mosque would make judicious use of it.

  • ‘We want to partner with varsities, others on entrepreneurship’

    The need to make youths and young graduates in Nigeria entrepreneurial-minded has been repeatedly underscored, no thanks to the economic recession that hit the world. Federal Government swiftly responded by directing management of tertiary institutions to set up entrepreneurial centres at their various institutions. Nonetheless, how far are these centres applying their knowledge andhow acceptable are they by the private sector? Mr Arinle Adekunle Ahmed MD/CEO Rinllandded Nigerian Limited, a business development company, says his outfit is extending a handshake to interested tertiary institutions nationwide with respect to water production. He spoke with them. ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA

    Virtually all tertiary institutions nationwide have entepreneural centre, yet unemployment is still on the rise. How do you think this could be addressed?

    It’s unfortunate that, every year, Nigeria produces thousands of graduates but with no commensurable employment opportunities. This simply shows that we are building an army of youths  with nowhere to place them. Thankfully, the Federal Government mandated institutions of higher learning nationwide to set up entrepreneurial centres.

    However, this is never enough. It is not about giving these students the theoretical framework without  the practical opportunity; and that is where we (Rinllandded) come in.

    What actually inspired the involvement of your firm in higher institutions?

    We believe you cannot give what you don’t have. If schools claim they are giving entrepreneurial skills to the students, can they also beat their chest that those students can also practicalise these things when they eventually graduate? These are areas our students are lacking. If we want to entrench in them entrepreneurial skills, they should be involved and encouraged right from school because it is through that process some of them will be determined to become job creators after graduation.

    So this seems a major concern for you, right?

    Yes, and this is one area we are hoping to partner with some universities so as to inculcate practical skills in them. We have been doing that with the Lagos State University (LASU) over the last four years now.

    So what exactly do you do with LASU?

    As  it  is the tradition every year, all the 300-Level students of LASU must take up a vocation at the school’s Centre for Entrepreneurial Studies. On our own, we handle a course under LASU enteprenurship programme tagged: ENT 307 which is “Water treatment and production.’ During the course, we take the students through water treatment, packaging, production, distribution, and even management which is the business side of water production. We ensure each student is being attached to one water production company or another which eventually stimulates their interest. Fortunately, some of the students we had trained are today proud owners of water production factories.

    What does it take for interested schools to be part of the programme?

    As I said earlier, we are a business development company. We don’t require any money from any of these tertiary institutions because the market is already there.  We are the one that will deploy our money, equipment and logistics. We will also build the factory for them. All we just need is their consent, a piece of land for the factory, as well as the name of the school which will be ideal for branding.  After this, we can then work out a percentage with the institution which will also be on a win-win basis.

    So what is the aim?

    Aside the profit the factory makes for these institutions, these factories, shall over time, become like a laboratory for interested students to acquire more knowledge in water production. I can beat my chest that any serious student who shows enough commitment in water production could earn as far as N500,000 within the first year of operation.

  • KSU Mass Comm. to feature in Igala Cultural Festival

    The annual African Communication festival by the Department of Mass Communication, Kogi State University (KSU), will be incorporated into the forthcoming Igala Cultural Festival.

    This was announced by the Administrator of Idah Local Government Hilary Edime Amoduwho.

    The exercise is a practical extension of the course-African Communication Systems, offered by 100-Level students of Theatre Arts, Library and Information Science and Mass Communication. The course tagged: ‘MAC 109’introduces students to the African’s modus operandi of communication in the pre- radio, television and newspapers era.

    This years’ event was therefore not different; as participants displayed African values and culture such as child birth and naming; attires and a folk tale session, among others

    “I had been enthused by the performance of the students’ troupes so far. I’m using this medium to invite you for a live performance during the Igala Cultural Festival, which I’ll be hosting shortly,” said Idah who was the special guest at this year’s edition.

    Vice Chancellor of KSUState Prof Muhammed Abdulkadir, praised the Head of the Department, Dr Gabriel Ottah, for not just teaching the course but ensuring that students participate in the practical aspect. This, he noted, would further entrench in them the love for African culture and communication.

    Abdulkadir who was represented by his Deputy (Administration), Prof Taiye Oluwagbemi,  said other universities had begun to adopt the approach already being used in KSU’s Mass Communication department.

    Said Abdulkadir: “Based on our assessment, it is debatable to say that other universities have begun to adopt the approach already being used in the Department of Mass Communication. We’ll continue to take the lead role in ensuring that all tertiary institutions within and outside Kogi are fully impacted by our positive vibes in this regards.

    Chairman of the occasion Prof Dave Menegbe, expressed joy that African culture was being revived through the programme.

    He said: “There is a big difference between culture and fetish practices. It’s high time we started seeing African culture as the decent and morally upright exhibitions of the typical African as against evil practices like killing of twins, female genital mutilation and dangerous widowhood rites we have been fed with overtime. I therefore, called on other universities in Nigeria and Africa to key into the celebration of African Communication Systems so as to revive the rather obscure values of our culture.

    Earlier in his welcome address, Head of the Department of Mass Communication, Dr Gabriel Ottah thanked the students and the guests for the attendance and support.

  • The scapegoat narrative

    We weighed the options together pondering if the trip would be worth the risk. Is life not of more value than ambition, we reasoned. You cannot be ambitious if you’re not alive, we concluded! This was the dilemma that confronted three members of my ‘circle of intellectual friends,’ a group of young adults that I often rub minds with. They got admission into the universities of Cape Town, Pretoria and Witwatersrand for their masters’ degrees. All the universities are in South Africa.

    Stories about the unfortunate xenophobic violence in South Africa are no longer news. What most Africans are trying to grapple with is the whys. Why vent your anger on your fellow blacks and leave other nationals alone? While debating the options for my friends we veered into why South Africans took up arms against fellow blacks in an endless orgy of senseless killings. It might sound strange for them, but not to me.

    In trying to analyse the situation for them I coined the phrase ‘scapegoat narrative’ under which I’m writing today. What point was I trying to make? When leadership in any nation fails there’s always the temptation to look for who or what to hang the failure upon. A scapegoat must be identified and a narrative wring round its neck. For the underperforming South African government that scapegoat is other Africans who are “stealing” jobs meant for South African nationals! Like it or not, that is the official narrative there.

    But I told my friends to immediately discount that dubious and weak narrative. To start with, South Africans, their psyche still weighed down by the trauma of apartheid, are whipping themselves into a frenzy and looking for foes where they should be building coalitions and allies. They have been holding anti-immigrant marches and their claim that they are cleaning their streets of drug dealers is a dog whistle to mobilise others to unleash violence which they have been carrying out. Unfortunately, those tantrums cannot solve their problems. Fundamentally, their major problem is not the Nigerian immigrant or small business owner who is trying to build dignity along with a business; it is that they have been asked to subsist in an economic and political system and structure that was not created for them to thrive in the first place.

    The economy is still firmly and effectively in the hands of the whites and Asians; however, some blacks cashed in during the early post-apartheid period and made inroads by building successful business but the majority is still downtrodden. There have been talks recently about confiscating white lands and giving it to blacks – Zimbabwean style – in other to empower them. But they are scared of this option for good reasons: they only have to open their curtain and peep toward Zimbabwe and they know that is not a route to follow. That is their dilemma and that is why they are fiercely pushing the scapegoat narrative.

    Decades after apartheid ended, over 52% of blacks still live below the poverty line. Effective leadership gradually fizzled out with Thabo Mbeki after the foundation laid by the late Nelson Mandela. The Jacob Zuma years were marred by allegations of corruption and abuse of office. During that era we all saw on live television how the South African police gunned down hundreds of protesting black platinum mine workers in broad daylight. They were protesting for better working conditions and improved pay.

    It was this misrule that forced Julius Malema out of the ANC to form the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party. Alongside the Democratic Alliance (AD) led by Mmusi Maimane, they have been telling their compatriots’ that the ANC has lost its way and there is need for an urgent change. But the ANC’s grip on the people is quite strong, especially in the area of emotion. They often remind the people that they fought and triumphed over apartheid together so the people should stick to them no matter what. This is a very strong and effective narrative.

    But this emotional narrative will not put food on the table especially as the people are getting tired of hearing it years on end; a new narrative had to be conceived: other African immigrants are the reason why we can’t create jobs!

    Narratives are central in how we humans organise our society. Gossiping about others allows us to exchange reliable information about who can be trusted, whose behaviour is acceptable and who is behaving in a ‘bad’ way. Talking about metaphors, legends and myths gives us a common framework of meaning. Weaving life-lessons into stories that get repeated again and again helps us to learn how to behave and become accepted members of a society. If used in a negative way – like the South Africans are doing – it becomes toxic.

    In his book “Sapiens,” Yuval Noah Harari writes: “The new linguistic skills that modern Sapiens acquired about seventy millennia ago enabled them to gossip for hours on end. Reliable information about who could be trusted meant that small bands could expand into larger bands, and Sapiens could develop tighter and more sophisticated types of cooperation. Yet the truly unique feature of our language is not its ability to transmit information about men and lions (i.e. about observations). Rather, it’s the ability to transmit information about things that do not exist at all. As far as we know, only Sapiens can talk about entire kinds of entities that they have never seen, touched or smelled.” This “ability to transmit information about things that do not exist at all” is what is happening in South Africa.

    A video of a South African woman that went viral on social media is quite instructive. She appealed to her people to look inwards for the solution to their problems. Singling out Nigerian men, she said some even married South African women who have given birth to several children for different fathers and teach them “how to be women” in the process!

    Dave Snowden in “Think trope not meme” writes: “Common use of metaphors and habitual practice over time create assemblages that act as downwards constraints on behaviour and which escape the bounds of their creators to have independent existence. Metaphors carry associative meaning that emerges from use over time, not from an individual. It is interactive use and application which allows them to act as enabling constraints.”

    The main point Snowden makes here is that metaphors and habitual practice over time create a scaffolding of ‘how one should behave’. This scaffolding is independent from each individual; it is an emergent property of continuous interactions in society. The ambiguity that is inherent to metaphors allows their meaning to fit different contexts and different times. The scaffolding creates an overall disposition of a system, a system’s character, and a propensity for certain behaviours to be more probable than others.

    This means that if we can identify these common metaphors and practices, we can understand how they influence the behaviour of individuals who adhere to these narratives, i.e. who are part of that social group. If we want to nudge a social system, we should nudge in a direction of what is possible within the given disposition. This aptly captures the point I’m making.

    As Barbara Czarniawska writes in “Narratives in Social Science Research”: “To understand a society or some part of a society it is important to discover its repertoire of legitimate stories and find out how they evolved. These two initial points are so important that the two following points might be mere corollaries of them, but still worth pointing out distinctively.”

    To this end, narratives are central to sense making and the attribution of meaning to events occurring in everyday life. The attribution of meaning to situations and observations as part of everyday sense making is central to human life. To quote Barbara Czarniawska again: “Whole communities as well as individual persons are engaged in a quest for meaning in ‘their life’, which will bestow meaning on particular actions.”

    The South African ruling elite are treading on slippery slopes. Now that Nigerians are coming home, the monster they have succeeded in creating may consume them in future if there are no immigrants left to “steal the jobs.”

  • Extend TP to one year, former minister tells colleges, varsities

    Former Minister of Education Prof. Ruqayyah Ahmed Rufai’ has thrown her weight behind the extension of teaching practice (TP) beyond the usual six or 12 weeks, to at least a year at colleges of education and universities nationwide.

    This will afford students to be more grounded in their subjects of specialisation, as well as boost their self confidence, Prof. Rufai argued.

    Prof. Rufai delivered the Lagos State University (LASU) Faculty of Education annual distinguished lecture Tuesday with the theme: Teachers preparation for Nigerian schools: Adequacy, effectiveness and impact.

    She said: “The usual six or 12 weeks students in colleges of education and universities use as teaching practice is not enough as it does not make them well grounded. I am therefore suggesting at least a year period for their TP.

    “In addition, these students should oftentimes be subjected to class demonstration. They should be given as many opportunities as possible to demonstrate in class the knowledge that has been imparted in them as this will further enhance their self confidence.”

    According to Prof. Rufai, the greatest challenge in teacher education in Nigeria is poor quality teachers. Prof. Rufai laid the blame at the doorstep of public office holders who are often fond of recruiting family members and bootlickers into the teaching profession.

    “We got it wrong from the recruitment (exercise),” she continued.

    “Majority (of teachers) found their way into education today through the help of public office holders that recruited their family members and children of their bootlickers. These people fraudulently get into the system, with little or no knowledge of education and they become pollutants.

    “Henceforth, there has to be thorough screening and cross checking of would-be teachers during recruitment to ensure the very best are recruited. The culture of bringing quacks into the system through lopsided methods must stop.”

    She lamented that while other climes are already using technology to revolutionise education, Nigeria is still grappling with problems such as poor funding, dearth of infrastructures, quacks in the system, and policy somersault among others, for more than three decades.

    Due to the development, average or low JAMB score benchmarked for candidates desirous of studying education might continue to discourage best brains from studying education programmes as it is symptomatic of government’s negligence of the sector over the years.

    To address many of the challenges bedeviling the sector, Prof. Rufai called on the Federal Government and stakeholders to come up with a roadmap that spells out the problems, one after the other, while seeking comprehensive solutions to them.

    Corroborating Prof. Rufai, former Executive Secretary, National Universities Commission, Prof Peter Okebukola, noted that quality teacher cannot be over-emphasised, describing it as one of the variables to quality education delivery.

  • ‘Students are strategic to SDGs implementation’

    Vice-chancellor of the Kano State University of Science and Technology (KUST), Wudil, Prof. Shehu Musa, has underscored the importance of having young people as drivers of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN-SDGs).

    Prof. Shehu addressed no fewer than 65 students during the SDGs4Universities workshop hosted by the institution.

    The SDGs4Universities workshop is a project by the International Climate Change Development Initiative (ICCDI) which has been taking the knowledge of the SDGs to various tertiary institutions across the country

    Shehu said: “You (students) have the strategic position to make a contribution. You don’t need to have a million naira or be a politician before you start making a difference. In one way or the other, you all are connected to at least one of these 17 goals; and you must know that the realisation of this is largely dependent on you.”

    Reiterating the university’s commitment to achieving SDGs, Shehu expressed his delight to ICCDI, for considering Kano State University of Science and Technology and for training the students on how they can practically take actions towards driving SDGs in their local communities.

    “We are fully receptive to collaborate with stakeholders to see the realisation of the SDGs. I hope that students of this institution will put into practice the lessons from this SDGs4Universities workshop,” Shehu added.

    Project Coordinator of ICCDI, Seyifunmi Adebote, said of the workshop: “This workshop is part of our continued efforts to localise the knowledge and application of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals among university students, as well as, position them to solve some of the world’s most pressing problems.”

    The high point of the event was the establishment of KUST-SDGs club.

    The event had in attendance Prof Musa; his two deputies (Academic and Administration) Prof Aminu Umar Fagge; and Prof Tijjani Saleh Bich respectively; Dean of Student Affairs Prof A. S. Ma’aji and the Dean Faculty of Agriculture, among others.

  • Workers, students mourn lecturer

    The entire staff and students of the Fati Lami Abubakar Institute of Legal and Administrative Studies (FLAILAS), in Minna, Niger State, have been thrown into mourning following the death of the Dean, School of Administration, Hajiya Fatima Idris Kuta.

    Hajiya Kuta died from complications while giving birth at a private hospital in Minna, last week Wednesdayk.

    The remains of Kuta, who until her death, was the immediate past Head of Department (HoD) of Public Administration, have since been buried according to Islamic rites.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the late Hajiya Kuta, who was an indigene of the state, was  a doctoral student at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN).

    Tributes have continued to pour in from colleagues and students who described the deceased as  friendly, diligent, hardworking, caring and dutiful.

    Provost of the institute Dr Muhammad Aliyu Busa, described the deceased as highly cerebral, considering her academic profile.

    “The news of the exit of our amiable colleague, and dedicated staff was a thunderbolt. Hajiya Fatima Kuta was an unassuming colleague, virtuous woman and an erudite academic with exceptional intellectual pedigree. She was a committed mother at the home front. She was different things to many people who had an acquaintance with her. She was one staff that contributed immensely to the development of Public Administration department, the School of Administration and the institute, at large,” Busa noted while paying a condolence visit to the family.

    “Her humility, simplicity and piety were unrivalled. Most of us, and in fact, all her students have always described her in glowing terms. We have all eulogised her sterling moral virtues even before she answered her creator’s call. I can only urge her beloved husband, and family members to take solace in the fact that she lived a fulfilled and unblemished life,” Busa added.

    In a tribute posted on her Facebook page, a colleague in the Department of Mass Communication, Mrs Maimuna Babangida, described Hajiya Kuta’s death as a colossal loss to her colleagues, friends and students.

    “We will forever live to remember you with genuine fondness,” Babangida began.

    She continued: “You are a disciplined mother to your children, a loving friend to your colleagues, and a principled lecturer to your students. May your soul find tranquil rest in the Lord’s bossom. We may mourn you just for a while, but we can never stop missing you. We can never stop remembering you for the sterling ideals you always stood for, and also exhorted us to imbibe. Adieu my lovely, caring and adorable sister.”

    As for Abubakar Isah, a 200-Level student of the Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University Lapai (IBBUL), the reality of Hajiya Kuta’s death only dawned on him after he placed several calls to his friends who all confirmed news of her death.

    Isah, who was a student of the late Dean and graduated from the institute in 2016, said Hajiya Kuta was a teacher who usually inspired them towards success whenever she was in class.

    Isah said: “Mrs Fatima was a caring mentor, and also soft-hearted. She was simple, but a highly-disciplined teacher. Generosity is another virtue she truly personified. The late Dean offered financial assistance to some of her students who were indigents.”

  • Education is key to world peace, says UN

    The 74th President of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly Prof Tijjani Muhammad Bande, has urged Nigeria to work with other countries  to ensure world peace by prioritising access to qualitative education.

    He made the call at a public lecture held in his honour by students of Political Science, Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUS) to celebrate his new designations as well as immense contributions to the department.

    Bande, a former vice-chancellor of the institution, likened education to a tool for fighting insecurity anywhere.

    He noted that the spate of killings in the country is as a result of inequitable access to education.He therefore charged the government to prioritise education to ensure world peace.

    “We all have a duty to build this country. What we are doing is to project Nigeria in the best light and also for the country to contribute to world peace,”Bande said.

    “Education is one of the elements of the presidency of the 74th session. It is the key to world peace and development. Nigeria should work with other nations to bring quality and accessible education to all in order to ensure world peace,” he added.

    Bande, Nigeria’s permanent representative to the UN, was on June 4, elected the President of the upcoming 74th session of the Assembly. Bande succeeds María Fernanda Espinosa, whose term would end later this month.

  • Insecurity hangs over ABU

    Although the three final year students of Law at the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, who were abducted last week have been freed, the campus is still enveloped in fear. There are accusations and counter-accusations between the management and students over insecurity on the campus. Students are sad that bandits, who ply the Abuja-Kaduna Road, have extended their dragnet to them. ABIODUN JAMIU, 200-Level Political Science student, Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUS) reports:

    For students of the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, it was sweet relief when the news of the release of their abducted colleagues filtered in. Their joy knew no bounds.

    Despite the euphoria that greeted the release, there is papable fear of insecurity in the air.

    Though the management said it has put a new system in place to tackle insecurity, some students, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, said there are still unreported cases of petty theft, robbery and sexual harassments, among others, on campus.

    Maryam Bello, Umar Sagir, and Fatima Jalingo – all final year students of Law – were kidnapped alongside others on their way to Zaria from Abuja, where they had gone to raise funds for a dinner to be hosted by their colleagues.

    Painfully, families of the abductees admitted that they paid hefty ransom, contrary to a police report that no amount was paid and that the release was due to their effort.

    Though the management claimed to have provided some logistics support in rescuing them, it blamed the trio for not obtaining approval from the authority before embarking on the ill-fated journey.

    The management’s position was supported by ABU Students’ Representative Council (SRC), which said students were supposed to get permits before stepping out of the campus.

    Students of ABU, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, said it was about time the management improved the university’s security. They called on the government to rise up to the challenge posed by insecurity which has made them easy targets for bandits on the Abuja-Kaduna Road, almost daily.

    Will this ever end? ABU students ask

    Contrary to the management’s claim, a 200-Level student of Social Studies, Alade Jamiu (not real name), argued that security on campus was not tight during the late hours compared to daytime. More worrisome, according to Jamiu, is that students caught committing atrocities are  given a slap on the wrist.

    He said: “There are petty thefts in the hostels. There is no regard for place of worship. Management treats with kid gloves students  who have committed one infraction or another.  The next moment, you see such students back on campus and having a swell time.’’

    Jamiu chided some security officials for going out of their way to harass female students, in the guise of conducting security checks.

    “At night, they (security) don’t do their work as they should. Imagine a security official putting on mufti and chasing girls all over the place,” he said

    A student of Chemistry Education, who simply identified himself as Bola, supported Jamiu.

    “Security on campus is still porous to some extent,” Bola argued.

    “Most students may think that the security (on campus) is fit, but there are cases of petty theft here and there. There is no strict measure against theft in hostels. Moreover, there is no strict law on whosoever enters the school by foot; there are elements that can easily bypass the security and unleash mayhem on students.”

    Muhammad Yahaya, a third year Political Science student, also agreed with the duo, albeit with a little digression.

    “Security in ABU is fairly good. They (management) just need to recruit more security officials”.

    He continued: “Although I have never lived off campus, I hear cases of phone snatching, robbery and sexual harassment.”

    Yahaya noted that students who live in houses around the school, especially in Samaru, where the institution is located, appear most vulnerable.

    Olayemi Sulaiman, 300-Level student of Economics, lamented that kidnapping in ABU have become a recurring decimal, with the Abuja-Kaduna Highway as a major hideout for criminals.

    According to him, many of his colleagues have escaped kidnapping, robberies and other forms of atrocities on that route by a hair’s breath.

    “Here in Ahmadu Bello University, threats of kidnapping and armed robbery have become a major fear among students who travel to or from school. It is quite shameful to hear that students are at the receiving end of the failure of the authorities to tame insecurity.

    A final year Mass Communication undergraduate Tijani Hassan, noted that the security situation on Kaduna-Abuja Highway has became more complicated in recent times, putting the lives and properties of students and workers at stake.

    He said: “The security situation along Kaduna-Abuja highway has become alarming in the past one year. However, sadly, we (students) have also become the latest victims. Our parents will have to desperately look for money as ransom for criminals that have now turned their attention on us.”

    He continued: “If not that the parents of the abducted students were able to get money, who knows what might have happened to them? These are students preparing to leave for Law School. It would have been a total disaster not only for ABU, but the whole country.”

    For Uthman Isa, a final-year student of Law, the rising wave of killing and kidnappings must have political undertones; the more reason it has become difficult to tame.

    “The scourge of insecurity ravaging the country is, to a very large extent, coloured with politics that one would wonder why it has become very difficult for the government to find solutions.”

    Isa pleaded for government’s openness in the fight against insecurity. He urged a reform of the country’s security apparatus, asking the masses to continue to challenge the authorities that hold the nation’s security in trust for them.

    Umar Aisha, another 200-Level student of Political Science, called on the authorities to tackle the hostility along Kaduna-Abuja highway head on.

    She said: “The security situation in the country is very scary. I call on the authorities concerned to take a serious measure on this Kaduna-Abuja highway because things are getting out of hand. The volume of crimes being committed on that route is quite unfortunate.”

    Olayemi said the scourge is aided by the unstable economy, coupled with high rate of unemployed youths.

    Vigilance, the watchword, says management

    The university’s Director, Public Affair Dr Ismai’la Shehu, has reiterated management’s unending battle against insecurity on and off the school’s campuses.

    Shehu recalled how the management rose to the occasion, despite that the three kidnapped ABU students ‘ trip was illegal.

    “Ours is to reassure ourselves as parents that the security of our students is key,” Shehu noted.

    “When they (students) are going on any official trip, we always ensure they are given adequate protection. For instance, if they are going on excursion or to any other place that has to do with their academics, we provide them with security.

    “Those who were kidnapped went on their own volition. I’m sure you  know the (insecurity) situation in the country; and the university is also a part of the larger society. Despite that they went on their own, the university played a major role in securing their freedom. We could not have disowned them simply because of their action. Management had to join hands with the stakeholders and the efforts yielded their freedom.”

    Shehu said aside the school having a competent security unit, students should be vigilant.

    “There is a security unit that works 24/7 to ensure security of lives and properties in the university campuses. That on a routine.

    “We have a reasonable number of security personnel, well trained to combat insecurity. But the general thing is to be watchful and security conscious. The dean, students’ affairs and university management always enlighten the students on the need to be security conscious.”

     Official permission a must, says SRC

    Corroborating the management, SRC President, Usman Waziri, noted that the permission from the school is a must, if students must embark on an official journey.

    Waziri said: “There are students who travel from school for excursions, competitions and all that. There are also students who travel from their parents’homes to visit siblings, friends or for mere partying.

    “For those in the second category, the Students’ Union and the university will not be held responsible. However, for those travelling from school, they need to apply for approval letters from the management. Once this is done, the university will direct one or two security officials to accompany them all through the journey.‘’

    Waziri added that both management and SRC offer security tips to students at the beginning of every session.

    He continued: ‘’At the beginning of every session, we usually have what we call a Central University Orientation. It is a forum where management educate students in every area of their lives, including how to safeguard their personal effects in and off campus.

    “Generally, the security situation on campus is quite impressive. We have a security unit that is up to the task. We also have local hunters  who monitor the periphery of the university. Management has also mounted a police post in ABU Phase 2, all to complement security.

    “For an individual to come into the campus, you must show evidence of your studentship.’’