Category: Campus Life

  • ‘How languages can promote country’s dignity

    Nigerians have been urged to promote the country’s dignity through languages and cultural diversity.

    The head of Department of Foreign Languages and Literary Studies of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), Prof Matthew Iwuchukwu, gave the admonition at an event tagged “alumni homecoming” and remembrance held for the late Prof Edith Ihekweazu – one time lecturer at the department.

    The event with the theme: The impact of languages and cultural diversity in the age of globalisation, took place at Princess Alexandra Hall.

    Declaring the event open, the Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Academics, Prof James Ogbonna, who spoke on behalf of the Vice-Chancellor (VC), Prof Benjamin Ozumba, applauded the department on achievements recorded since inception, urging members of staff to prioritise research and activities that will contribute to creating best practice in Foreign Languages discipline.

    Prof Iwuckwu highlighted the department’s achievements under his tenure, saying the department had trained manpower for the country’s internal and external affairs relations agencies and ministry.

    He noted that the full accreditation achieved by the department in 2016 was a key success for the school, adding that it was the first time the school got accredited for three foreign languages of French, German and Russian.

    Prof Raufu Adebisi, Director of French Language Village in Badagry, Lagos State, praised the department for the quality of graduate produced, describing it as “good achievement”.

    He said: “Establishing contacts with the former students across the globe is best way to engage the alumni in the school development. Wherever they are, if your school can reach you to contribute to development, it is good. I believe this is what the Department of Foreign Languages and Literary Studies in UNN is trying to achieve.”

    Prof Adebisi implored the department to sustain the tempo of producing high calibre graduates who will have national and international relevance.

    In her closing remarks, the local organising committee chairperson, Dr Ngozi Ogbodo, appealed to the alumni to put their alma mater in of their minds in order to achieve the best for the department.

  • Rancour-free election at FUT MINNA

    For three weeks, politics suffused the atmosphere of the Federal University of Technology, Minna (FUT MINNA) in Niger State. The campus witnessed moments of intense political permutations and intrigues, culminating into presentations of manifestoes and screening of aspirants. The electioneering ended with a period of high-wire politicking, where candidates moved from one lecture room to the other to canvass votes.

    Then the students went to the poll to elect a new set of leaders into all levels of the Students’ Union Government (SUG). After the keenly contest election through electronic means, 12 candidates were elected to fill the position in the union’s executive arm; 28 students were elected into Student Representatives’ Assembly (SRA).

    The e-voting started at 9am at the school’s Electronic Test Centre (I) in Gidan Kwano campus, amid tight security provided by Man O’ War cadets. The election ended at 5pm.

    On the election day, students trooped out en masse to exercise their franchise. Agents of the candidates engaged in a last-minute moves to convince students on voting their candidates. Students at the Bosso campus of the school left for Gidan Kwano campus in shattered buses and cabs to vote.

    In drumming support for their friends, some students displayed big campaign posters, banners and distributed flyers to prospective voters on the election ground.

    CAMPUSLIFE learnt that the candidates took their campaigns to the social media platforms, such as Facebook, Whatsapp, Instagram and Twitter to sell their programmes to students. Some of the contestants shared customized items, such as books, t-shirts, fez caps and mufflers.

    The Students’ Union Independent Electoral Commission (SUIEC) chairman, Prof Salawu Sadiku, explained that the school’s Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Unit, explained that the commission designed a unique login pin for each student, which they supplied together with their matriculation numbers before they were allowed to vote. The move, he said, was to prevent irregularities in the process.

    He said: “We have succeeded in conducting a transparent, fair and credible SUG election. All the contestants were part of the process and all agreed with the outcomes. We had no technical hitch, logistics concern, controversies, and malpractice during the exercise. No ballot was hijacked or stolen. Those who won were the popular choice of students. The electoral body allowed the wills of the voters to prevail by conducting the SUG election through e-voting method.”

    A 400-Level Crop Production student, Mathew Fajoye, was elected the union president, having polled 3,510 votes to defeat his two rivals, Adeiza Saidu, a 400-Level Civil Engineering student, and Abdulbasit Yusuf, an Electrical Electronics Engineering student, who garnered 1,734 votes and 571 votes.

    Also elected were Vice President 1, Nurisat Abisola, Vice President II, Isaac Adariku, General Secretary, Zachariah Olaore, Assistant General Secretary, Joyce Nomigo, Financial Secretary, Yewande Rafat, and Public Relations Officer (PRO), Ismail Abdulrasheed.

    Others are Director of Sport, Moshood Abdulquadri, Director of Social, Jonathan Anyanwu, Treasurer, Faruq Muritala, Welfare Director 1, Damilola Adejube, and Welfare Director II, Toyeeb Abioye.

    Students, who spoke with CAMPUSLIFE, praised the electoral committee for the peaceful conduct of the exercise and the innovation introduced to make the process rancour-free.

    Greg Adeniyi, a final year student, advised the successful contestants to run an all-inclusive, transparent, accountable and service-oriented administration.

    He said: “The incoming students’ leaders have had their work cut out for them. We have lingering issues of burglary in students’ lodges off-campus, transportation challenges, and inadequate accommodation to mention a few. These issues need to be addressed urgently by the incoming union executive members.”

    Aisha Suleiman, a Building Technology student, charged the elected leaders to build on the achievements recorded by their predecessors. She also advised those who lost during the election to join hand in support of the elected executive members.

    Abdulazeez Lawal, a 300-Level Geology student, observed that victory usually comes with responsibility, urging the successful candidates in the election to offer selfless and exemplary leadership. He also urged them to be disciplined.

    A female student, who simply gave her name as Rejoice, appealed to the SUG to revive social activities on the campus, saying such would relieve students of academic tension. She said money accrued to the union should be utilised judiciously on legacy projects that will outlive the union leaders.

    The president-elect, Mathew, promised to initiate reforms that will address the welfare of students and improve their academic performance.

    He extended a hand of fellowship to his opponent, assuring that his administration would be proactive in addressing the challenges faced by students in their academic pursuits. He said he would prioritise actions that would harness students’ creativity and innovation.

  • ‘Students’ victimisation threat to campus journalism’

    The future is not looking bright for campus journalism if the spate of victimisation of student-writers continues, a seasoned media practitioner and The Nation’s Managing Editor (Online), Mr Lekan Otufundurin, expressed the fear during a chat with officials of the National Association of Nigerian Campus Editors (NANCE).

    The NANCE officials, led by their President, Isaac Omole, visited The Nation’s corporate headquarters in Lagos on a working tour.

    Otufodunrin stressed the need for media practitioners and accomplished journalists who are products of campus journalism to stand up and defend the rights of young writers on campuses vulnerable to victimisation by management.

    He said if mainstream journalists speak against ongoing victimisation of campus journalists, the tendency of highhandedness by school authorities would be checked. He added that such measure would help guarantee students’ right to write and expose injustice, maladministration and other negative vices in the tertiary institution environments.

    Otufundurin advised the managements of tertiary schools to stop the “arbitrary suspension and expulsion” being meted out to student-writers. He admonished campus journalists to abide by the ethical code of journalism when writing on campus issues.

    Responding, Isaac stated the visit was to learn the rudimentary skills of news editing and other newspaper production activities.

    Omole expressed delight over the mentorship they received from their host, saying: “This auspicious homage to a veteran journalist has further broadened our horizon. We know now, what it demands to become prolific journalists and editors.”

  • Ex-CAMPUSLIFE man among 100 Most Influential Young Africans

    Chemistry graduate of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) and Executive Director of Brain Builders International, Abideen Olasupo, was last Tuesday listed among 100 most influential young Africans for 2018 by Africa Youth Awards.

    The list, which was compiled in partnership with Avance Media, mynaijanaira.com and Made Marketing Group, was published on www.africayouthawards.com.

    Olasupo, an ex-CAMPUSLIFE reporter, was picked in Personal Development and Academia category.

    The award, which was launched in 2016, features young politicians, activists, entrepreneurs, entertainers, digital influencers, philanthropists and athletes across 10 distinct categories, who are making waves in their respective fields and promoting the positive image of Africa across the globe.

    Speaking about the publication, Prince Akpah, founding president of Africa Youth Awards, said the 2018 list featured 90 new entrants, among who were 43 young women in Nigeria, South Africa, Ghana and Tanzania.

    According to Akpah, this year’s honorees were listed for their individual and collective contributions towards creating good image of Africa in their respective fields. He also urged young people to emulate the awardees and join them to make Africa a better and safer place.

    Notable among the 2018 honorees are Uganda’s Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu (Bobi Wine), Farida Bemba Nabourema of Togo, Egypt’s Mohamed Sallah, and Davido.

    Others are Super Eagles winger Ahmed Musa, ABD Traore of Guinea, Christian Dela of Kenya, Cassper Nyovest of South Africa and Tanzania’s Alikiba.

    Reacting, Abideen thanked the organisers of the awards for finding him worthy to make the list, reiterating his commitment to working hard to impact more young people.

    Abideen, a native of Osun State, is a former Google Student Ambassador at UNILORIN. His non-governmental organisation (NGO), Brain Builders International, is making impacts in the areas of education and literacy, youth inclusion and the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Brain Builders partners with local and international organisations to organise events, advocacy projects, competitions, mentoring programmes and conferences to change the orientation of the youth.

    Abideen is also the Kwara State coordinator for Not-Too-Young-To-Run Movement. Through his NGO, which was established four years ago, Abideen has impacted the lives of thousands of young Nigerians.

    In 2017, he reached out to over 40,000 youths through the free Google Digital Skills project empowering them with entrepreneurial skills.

  • UNN student dies in auto crash

    Students of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka ( UNN ) Enugu state were thrown into mourning on Thursday morning following the death of a second year student of Mass Communication.

    Judith Okeke died in a road accident on her way to Lagos from the Institution.

    Details about the accident were sketchy at press time, but it was learnt that the late Judith was traveling in a passenger bus.

    Read Also: OAU suspends six students for cultism

    Her course mates were shocked on learning about her death.

    It was gathered that the remains of the late Judith were still being prepared for burial at the time of this report.

  • Resume or lose your jobs, Council warns Ogun Poly workers

    The governing council of Oke-Ogun Polytechnic, located in Saki area of Oyo State, on Thursday in Ibadan called on academic staff of the institution to resume work immediately or lose their jobs.

    This is according to a communique jointly signed by its Chairman, Prof. Moshood Tijani; the Secretary and Registrar, Mr A.O Ojewole; and the Chairman, Council Negotiation Committee, Mr Musbau Ayinla.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the communiqué was issued after an emergency meeting of the council held at the conference room of the State Ministry of Education, Science and Technology in Ibadan.

    Recall that the academic staff of the institution embarked on industrial action in conjunction with their counterparts across the state-owned institutions on Aug. 28.

    The union based their agitation on poor welfare and non-payment of their salary arrears of several months.

    The governing council, while directing the academic staff of the institution to resume work immediately, said recalcitrant workers should consider losing their jobs.

    It called on the management to open a central register for academic staff to sign as from Monday, Sept. 10 and said the register should close by 4 p.m.

    “We empower the management to maintain peace, law and order.

    “We also stand on our earlier Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the unions which took effect with payment of July 2016 net arrears,” the council said.

    It also suspended the activities of Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) in the institution

  • Black Saturday at Bida

    •      ‘How students, drivers clash started’

    One of those involved in the dispute that led to Saturday’s bloody clash between commercial bus drivers and students of the Federal Polytechnic, Bida (BIDA POLY) in Niger State, Sadiq Ahmad, has relived how it all started. He blamed the destruction in the town on hoodlums, who, he said, hijacked the students’ protest. MAHMUD ABDULSALAM reports.

    Bida is a quiet Nupe province in Niger State. But last Saturday, it was the epicentre of bloodshed when students of the Federal Polytechnic, Bida (BIDA Poly) and some members of the school’s host community clashed. Three persons, including a student died; many others were injured.

    The fracas, CAMPUSLIFE gathered, started following an argument between some students and a commercial bus driver at the Etsu Yahaya Abubakar Motor Park. The students, it was learnt, travelled to Bida from Minna, the Niger State capital, on Saturday evening. The argument degenerated into a skirmish, with  some drivers wounding the students.

    When others on campus heard what happened, they trooped out, smashing vehicles’windscreens and destroying shops and properties at the motor park. The protesters barricaded all access roads to the institution.

    The drivers’union fought back, with clubs, iron rods, machetes and daggers.

    Sadiq Ahmad, one of the five students involved in the dispute with the drivers, blamed it all on the drivers.

    Sadiq, who sustained a fracture on his leg, denied that students were responsible for the destruction of properties. He said some motor park thugs hijacked the protest to unleash mayhem in the town.

    He said: “We went to the park peacefully to demand the money we had paid as fare from Minna to Bida, since the driver did not take us to our hostels as agreed before we left Minna. Mid-way into the negotiation, an argument ensued. A member of the transport workers’ union at the park slapped a student, saying he was rude. We reacted and they pounced on the rest of us. Some of our colleagues were injured. This is what led to the fight.

    “The fight spilled over to the town and students quickly fled for safety when the drivers brought out deadly weapons. We did not destroy anything in the town. Touts around the motor park used the opportunity to loot shops and vandalise property.”

    A worker at the park, Zakari Yanda, confirmed that the dispute started when the driver broke his agreement with the students.

    Yanda said: “The quarrel was between a driver of a Sharon Bus and five students. We learnt that the driver asked the students to disembark from the bus against the agreement reached with them. Then, an argument ensued.The students were adamant, insisting that bus driver must convey them to their off-campus hostels as agreed before departing Minna.

    “When the driver refused to do so, the students demanded the refund of their fare since the driver breached the agreement. But, colleagues of the driver and some youths in the town asked the driver not to refund their fare. The students were assaulted on the spot and they left.”

    It was gathered that students mobilised themselves to the park on Sunday morning to fight back.

    A woman-trader at the park, Mrs Rebecca Salisu, who witnessed the skirmish, said: “We were frightened how the warring parties pounced on one another. When they started to exchange punches and hit one another with dangerous items, we fled. Some properties were vandalised. Several persons were injured during the fight. For hours, the entire town was enveloped in chaos.”

    She said the fracas could have been prevented if some drivers did not support their colleagues to assult the students.

    A Students Union Government (SUG) official, who spoke with CAMPUSLIFE, rejected the claim that the president and some students, led the  protest to the motor park.

    He said the drivers had, on many occasions, dealt with students, noting that the students could no longer tolerate the drivers’ brutality.

    The union official accused the drivers of causing the violence, noting that the students who visited the park went for settlement, but were attacked by the drivers.

    A student said the protesters “boldly challenged” the drivers to send a “strong message”to those who attack students at will.

    He said: “It beggars belief that harmless students will be treated cruelly by people of Bida town. We reacted violently because we were pushed to the wall. I was among the students manhandled and thoroughly beaten at the park. If nobody came to our defence, then nobody should blame us for the revenge we sought.”

    The deployment of a team of soldiers, riot policemen and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) forestalled further bloodshed and destruction of properties.

    A student, Mubarak Alhassan, with a bandaged face, was stabbed multiple times in the head. He said he could have been lynched by the drivers, if not for some elders in the town who rescued him. He said the drivers used planks, clubs and iron rods on him and other students who were fleeing for safety.

    The security operatives arrested some people. It was learnt that students fled their off-campus hostels for fear of being arrested. The injured are at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) in Bida.

    CAMPUSLIFE spoke with the Rector, Dr Abubakar Dzukugi, who expressed concern over the destruction.

    He praised the security agencies for their intervention, saying: “Efforts will be intensified to calm frayed nerves. I appeal to students and the commercial drivers to allow peace to return. Violence must not be used to settle simple disagreement. It only escalates tension. Students and members of their host community should learn to co-habit and live harmoniously.”

    Dzukugi said a seven-man committee had been constituted to investigate the violence, noting that it would determine how to prevent a reoccurence.

    The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Abubakar Muhammad, said investigation was on to unravel the cause of the mayhem. Culprits would face the law, he said.

    He said security personnel would remain in the town for now, appealing to residents and students to eschew violence.

    At the time of this report, charred motorcycles, bonfire ashes and vandalised vehicles littered some strategic places in the town.

  • Ajasin varsity Law graduate is Oxford’s best

    A first Class Law graduate of the Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA) in Ondo State, Akeem Longe, has recorded another feat, graduating with distinctions in Masters of Law (LLM) from the Oxford University, United Kingdom (UK).

    Akeem emerged as Overall Best Student in the Nigerian Law School Final Bar Examinations in 2014, bagging eight prizes.

    Speaking during the Oxford University graduation, Akeem said he was delighted to attain his dream.

    He said: “This marks the fulfillment of a dream. A great delight to have completed my BCL journey here at the University of Oxford after rigorous intellectual exercise. I am thrilled to have obtained a Distinction Mark on all modules and to have been awarded the Winter Williams Prize for the best student in International Economic Law. It is exhilarating to have received this global stamp of excellence.

    “Oxford University offers me a remarkable opportunity to meet, dine and interact with the best brains across the globe and, in the process, form long lasting bonds of friendship. In all of these, I have enjoyed the great grace of the Almighty God, the love and support of family and friends.”

  • How do we rejig our varsities?

    Thad series of discussions with a parent who has three children in different universities across the country recently. He lamented that he spends millions of naira annually in fees and upkeep of his children and was wondering what jobs they would get in present day Nigeria to compensate for the huge funds he will, in the end, expend on their education. One of our discussions veered into the area of course contents/relevance and the challenges of the 21st century where change is quite rapid.

    “I discover that most of the content of courses offered in our universities today is not in tune with current realities, I even learnt that some lectures still use notes developed years ago to teach students in this age and time. I also painfully discovered that a good percentage of them have stopped researching for various reasons,” he told me.

    He’s not the only one with these concerns. Without mincing words, our varsities need reform if we are to effectively key into the knowledge era. In their essay: “Learning for a World of Constant Change: Homo Sapiens, Home Faber & Homo Ludens revisited,” Douglas Thomas and John Seely Brown argued that for much of the 20th  century, learning had focused on the acquisition of skills or transmission of information “or what we define as ‘learning about.”’

    They added that near the end of the 20th century learning theorists started to recognise the value of “learning to be,” of putting learning into a situated context that deals with systems and identity as well as the transmission of knowledge. “We want to suggest that now even that is not enough. Although learning about and learning to be worked well in a relatively stable world, in a world of constant flux, we need to embrace a theory of learning to become. Where most theories of learning see becoming as a transitional state toward becoming something, we want to suggest that the 21st century requires us to think of learning as a practice of becoming over and over again…to embrace change and focus on becoming as central and persistent elements of learning.”

    Why should we be bothered about overhauling our varsities? The answer is simple. Knowledge has become the most important factor for economic development in the 21st century. Through its capacity to augment productivity, it increasingly constitutes the foundation of a country’s competitive advantage.

    This change, as expected, is most evident in developed countries, where investments in the intangibles that makes up the knowledge base of a country (e.g., research and development, higher education, computer software, patents etc) equals, or even exceeds investments in physical equipment. Nigeria and other developing economies, while affected by these transformations, are not yet reaping their benefits because they’ve not effectively invested in it.

    When the “Asian tigers” burst forth industrially in the 1990s, their ‘economic miracle’ was linked to substantial prior investment in human resources. These strategic investments were deliberate. Their university systems were overhauled; extant intellectual property protection laws were reviewed. As expected, this led to the historical evolution of industrial Research and Development (R&D) and the mutually beneficial partnership between private industries, universities and government in R&D.

    Research suggests that public policy plays an important role in shaping national innovative capacity by determining human capital investments and creating incentives for innovation.  Countries that have increased their innovative capacities have invested heavily in science and engineering education in addition to arts and humanities. This often leads to the promotion of competition as the basis for innovation.

    Does Nigeria possess the necessary elements to develop a national innovation system?  We have, but the facts are not encouraging. Where data is available, it indicates low levels of investment in research capacity and education. This explains why our non-oil economy has remained consistently sluggish over the years.

    On the research side, Nigeria’s number of scientific publications is negligible. For instance, from 1,062 scientific publications in 1981, it fell to a mere 711 in 1995. In contrast, scientific publications were 3,413 for South Africa, 14,883 for India, and 5,440 for Brazil. Nigeria’s low research output reflects the low priority accorded R&D by government decision-makers. This is not only applicable in the sciences alone, it cuts across all disciplines.

    As we are on the threshold of a new dispensation, innovative thinking and new strategies are seriously needed to serve as essential guides to future educational provision and practice. Such strategies should include improvement of evaluation and accreditation systems, review of programs to make them more responsive to societal needs, informed management of higher education, promotion of university linkages with the private sector, and involvement in policy analysis through research.

    In addition, improvement of higher education will require more effective utilisation of new information and communication technologies. Our varsities will need to review their missions and come up with specific strategic plans based on each university’s unique situation, as well as national and global issues affecting universities.

    A number of programs already address the issue of 21st century skills. For example, the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21), a U.S. advocacy organisation formed in 2002, developed a vision of the broader set of skills required for success in the 21st century. These include core skills covered by the existing curriculum in most countries – language, mathematics, science, and arts – combined with 21st century themes such as environmental awareness and the impacts of globalization. These are complemented by learning and innovation skills, information media and technology skills, and life and career skills.

    Additionally, effective economic and social operation in the 21st century demands adaptability, cultural awareness and advanced critical thinking and information literacy skills, demanding continuing learning opportunities in vital areas of the arts and humanities. The constant herdsmen/farmers clash in some parts of the country readily comes to mind which further points to the fact that we need new sets of skills. Our varsities can play a key role in this regard.

    While we are sleeping, many 21st century skills are already supported by curricula around the world. For example, the U.K. science curriculum is designed to enable students to develop a number of skills such as teamwork and creative problem solving. Efforts are also made to translate theory into practice.

    The transformation of skills and technology use cannot take place without a new approach to system reform. There has been a revolutionary change in nearly every dimension of society, with the exception of our lecture halls where we continue to reinforce traditional approaches to teaching. Changing this will require leaders to develop a compelling vision of 21st century learning, communicate it with passion, and ensure that it is translated into action at all levels of the system.

    The factors responsible for the poor quality of university programs (and graduates) appear to be both internal and external to the universities.  Internal factors include strikes, lack of employee motivation, and weak accountability for educational performance. External factors comprise lecturer shortages, corruption, inconsistent funding efforts by government, and admissions based on quotas rather than merit.

    It is about time we take a look again at the Higher Education Policy Reforms which was formulated years ago to infuse quality into the university system in order to bring back its old glory in line with international standards. As things stand now there is a mismatch between teaching in our tertiary institutions and the needs of the labour markets. In essence, graduates from our institutions have acquired skills which are not demanded by the labour market. This, no doubt, is the major reason for the soaring unemployment rate in the country.

    Knowledge, as a 21st century currency, is necessary but not sufficient for today’s success because Students need skills to be able to apply their knowledge. This is today’s critical challenge.

  • Restoring the glory of public health inspection

    The need to revive environmental health inspection to guarantee public safety and well-being was the focus at a symposium organised by the Department of Environmental Health of the New Gate College of Health Technology (NGCHT) in Minna, the Niger State capital. MAHMUD ABDULSALAM reports.

    There was a time Environmental and Public Health Officers would go from house to house to monitor residents’ compliance with environmental and public hygiene regulations. Local government authorities would deploy inspectors for regular checks to safeguard public safety.

    That era seems gone, but speakers at a symposium organised by the Department of Environmental Health of the New Gate College of Health Technology (NGCHT) in Minna, the Niger State capital, raised hope in the practice, saying if done efficiently, it could revive the nation’s environmental health system.

    The optimism was expressed at the symposium marking the grand finale of the department’s Health Week with the theme: Nigeria’s environmental health officers: Their glorious past, tragic present and potential future.

    Hajiya Ramatu Umar, who was the keynote speaker on the occasion, said Environmental Health Officers (EHOs) not only advised and educated the public on health issues, she said they also helped the country to improve environmental health, using their skills to enforce health policies in line with best practices and regulatory mechanisms.

    Hajiya Umar, who is the Permanent Secretary of the Niger State Ministry of Environment and Forestry, said: “The EHOs are expected to work with other health professionals to design programmes for improving public health and safety. They also have duty to protect the public from environmental hazards by investigating complaints from communities. They have duty to investigate the level of cleanliness and health standards of business premises, and give advice to individuals and communities on environmental health matters.

    “In line with best practice, they are expected to advise employers and employees on occupational health risks, monitor the fluoridation of public water supplies, measure and control air pollution from commercial and industrial sources, and ensure that defective privately-rented houses are fit for habitation. It is their task to inspect pre-school services to ensure that specific health standards are achieved, while also providing and giving evidence in court cases involving environmental issues.”

    She recalled that the inspectors, in the 1950s and 1960s, were referred to as Wole-Wole among the Yoruba, Nwaole-ala by the Igbo and Duba-Gari among the Hausa, before their name was changed in 1988 to Environmental Health Officers in line with best practice.

    “The present day EHO is a professional whose title had changed over the years from the then nuisance inspector of the 1930s to the sanitary inspectors of the 1950s and 1960s, the public health superintendent in the 1970s and finally to Environmental Health Officer,” she said.

    Hajiya Umar, however, listed the obstacles hindering the efficient service delivery by EHOs to include lack of equipment, ineffective laws, quackery, shortage of personnel and low morale, among others.

    She added that the lack of operational funds threatened the efficiency of the environmental and public health inspection.

    She said the nation needed to restore the lost glories of the profession, urging the EHOs to be disciplined, committed and innovative as they discharge their duties. He advised them to play their roles with professionalism and in line with best standards.

    “The training and deployment of adequate number of EHOs must be prioritised and pursued as a development agenda by all level of governmentsm,” she stated.

    The General Manager (GM) of the Niger State Environmental Protection Agency (NISEPA), Mr Lucky Jagaba, said efforts should be intensified in creating awareness about the dangers of environmental degradation, which, he said, led to global warming, drought and other anthropogenic hazards.

    He charged the EHOs to be committed and acquire communication skills to propagate the message of safety in their communities of assignment.

    He said: “The mission to redeem the fortune of environmental health practice is divine. The practitioners should to acquire persuasive communication skills, exercise patience and engage with tact. They must have the ability to enforce the law where necessary, possess good organisational skills to prepare cases using own evidence and chemical analyses. They also need to display calmness when faced with potential confrontations.”

    Another speaker, Mr Lakpene Yusuf, a Special Assistant to Governor Sani Bello, appealed to health practitioners to abide by the ethics of the profession.

    He said: “EHOs upholding professional ethics is paramount. The ethics mandate inspectors to be disciplined and uphold dignity of labour, social justice, accountability, integrity and patriotism. They must also show respect for diverse cultural beliefs.”

    Contributing, Mr. Jameel Abdulkareem, stressed the need to establish environmental health units in ministries, agencies, industries, housing estates, abbatoirs and markets.

    Students presented drama and participated in quiz featured in the event. Also, there was award presentation to some of the guests for their contribution towards the development of the profession.

    At the end of the symposium, the guests were taken on a tour of the college by the Registrar, Mr Samuel Olatunbosun, to show them infrastructure in the school.