Category: Campus Life

  • JAMB lauds UNIBEN for beating admission deadline

    JAMB lauds UNIBEN for beating admission deadline

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has praised the University of Benin (UNIBEN) for completing its admission for the 2013/2014 academic session ahead of the October deadline.

    A statment by the board’s Public Relations Officer, Fabian Benjamin, noted that the university submitted its list of admitted students during the first Technical Committee meeting on 2013/2014 Admissions to most Preferred (Degree Awarding) institutions held at University of Uyo, Akwa Ibom State recently.

    The statement reads: “The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) wishes to congratulate University of Benin on the successful completion of 2013/2014 Admission Exercise.

    “University of Benin completed its admissions at the First Technical Committee meeting on 2013/2014 Admissions to most Preferred (Degree Awarding) institutions held at University of Uyo, Akwa Ibom, State.

    “The meeting had 109 degree awarding institutions in attendance and 76 out of these made submission and out of this, University of Benin was the first to make conclusive submission to the Board.

    “The Board was particularly impressed and pleased with the university for this display of patriotism, commitment and its compliance to the Minister of Education directive to complete 2013/2014 on a record time.”

    The JAMB Registrar, Prof Dibu Ojerinde noted that by submitting on time, UNIBEN complied with the desires of the board expressed at an interactive forum with the Committee of Vice-Chancellors of Nigerian Universities held at the auditorium of National Universities Commission (NUC) prior to the Uyo meeting.

    Ojerinde had complained about admission irregularities, late submission and non-compliance with agreed time-table on admissions, urging the vice-chancellors to make changes.

    The Registrar also praised the Federal University, Lokoja in Kogi State for concluding its admission on time and enjoined others to keep the October deadline.

     

  • Journalism students visit Togo

    Journalism students visit Togo

    Students of the Nigerian Institute of Journalism (NIJ) will this weekend embark on a one-week trip to Togo for a French course.

    The Togo trip is organized by the school, in partnership with the French Village in order to help the students enhance their ability in French language.

    Most of those going for the trip are National Diploma 1 students currently on industrial training. They would, however, be joined by their Higher National Diploma counterparts who could not make last year’s trip due to cancellation of the exercise.

    This trip was initially planned for last Sunday, but was postponed due to reasons best known to the school authorities.

  • The beauty of literature

    The beauty of literature

    It was George Bernard Shaw, an American writer, who observed: “Imagination is the beginning of creativity.” Indeed, literature is a mirror through which we see the realities of life. This is considered to be true because life is creatively embellished in any piece of literary work, be it prose, drama, or poetry.

    The aesthetics of literary works lie in the artistry of the artist, especially in relation to the work’s delivery and presentation. Doing this involves the use of language and culture.

    Relating literature as a branch of art, Prof Jasper Onuekwusi of the Imo State University (IMSU), defines literature in his book titled: The prose in literature as “any imaginative and beautiful creation in words, whether oral or written, which explores man as he struggles to survive in his existential position and which provides entertainment, information, education and excitement to its audience.”

    Literature belongs to the same category as other forms of art such as music, sculpture, film, painting, dance, photography and the like. This, therefore, explains the nexus between literature and beauty. In other words, art is any beautiful creation whether in words, wood, sound, plastic, stone, or any other medium, which has the ultimate objective of entertaining and granting relaxation by creating beauty as well as expressing truth as perceived by an artist, and provides pleasure. Literature is art and art speaks remote truth.

    It is important for us to see literature as a slice of life that provides curious man with vivid knowledge of aspects of life, which he could not have known and, to subsequently imbibe the lesson to live a more fulfilled life. Little wonder then that early African writers such as the late Chinua Achebe, Ngugi Wa’thiong, Prof Wole Soyinka, Chris Okigbo, Ayi Kwei Armah and Laye Camara, among others, manifested literary aesthetics and sensibilities in their writing.

    The first time I read Things Fall Apart, the popular work of Achebe, I was surprised to see my culture in a story. I was to confirm those oral stories told by my grandmother, which vividly described the life of my people in the East. For instance, how the elders in my village sat and discussed the affairs of village; how the maidens used to sing at the marriage of one of their own; how the children used to gather around a bonfire to listen to stories by elders; and how the masqueraders entertained villagers during festivals and ceremonies.

    All these underscore the aesthetics, value and beauty of literature. Then, I came to the understanding that literature is, no doubt, a reflection of the socio-culture, economic, political and religious sensibilities of a people. It recreates people’s way of life as well as projects their yearnings and aspirations. Being a mirror of the society, literature responds effectively by promoting the dialect of the people.

    Literature also responds effectively to cultures as portrayed in Achebe’s novel, Arrow of God. It is in this regard that we should view literature as a means of social engineering. The society cannot do without literature and vice versa.

    As Denise Escarpit, a French critic of children literature, argued, “literature is a product of social funding; its subject changes according to changes in society and literature usually has no meaning outside society.

    Prof Onuekwusi, during his inaugural lecture last June titled: A nation and her stories: Milestones in the growth of Nigeria, fiction and their implication for national development, observes: “A people who neglect the story, especially those that came from their cultural lives and backgrounds ultimately get into avoidable courtship of instability, rootlessness and indeed personal and community disaster.”

    This evidently illustrates the facts why our nation is suffering from diverse moral decadence. The writer choice of words, techniques, devices, inventions, images and other literary paraphernalia which is creatively embellished into the beautiful piece of any literary work is certainly the artist’s effort to reach a certain distinction and excellence expression.

    Longinus in Critical theory since Plato (1970) notes: “A work survives a first hearing or reading disposes the soul of high thoughts and leaves the mind more food for reflection than the words communication.”

    Wole Soyinka, a literary icon enunciated the beauty of literature in his poetic engagement. This is explored in his poem Abiku, a powerful poem that brings out the beauty of African imagery and promotes the black culture. It is full of aphorism, paradoxical expression and also enriched with the aesthetics of metaphors.

    In fact, the poem explained a primitive belief that a child is possessed by evil spirit, which can torment the mother with a painful experience of persistent death at birth. The line such as: “In vain your bangles cast charmed circle at my feet I am Abiku, calling for the first and repeated times” demonstrated this.

    The poem explores the Abiku myth, which has occupied the centre stage in traditional African belief. Soyinka, through his creative ingenuity as a poet, recreates life with words in a written form. There is no doubt that a certain distinction and excellence in expression were achieved through the poem, invention of images and metaphors through which he presented a picturesque and description of an Abiku in the poem.

    It is indisputable that literature is the mother of all human endeavours. Literature is perhaps God’s greatest gift to man for his peaceful and harmonious relationship with his fellow men. In other words, it is God’s means of presenting pleasantly an enduring roadmap for all manners of development of man. Indeed, literature is beautiful because it shares with other arts the quality of being beautiful.

     

    Chidiebere, 300-Level English and Literary Studies, IMSU

     

     

  • More varsities secure Veterinary Council approval

    More varsities secure Veterinary Council approval

    The Veterinary Council of Nigeria (VCN) says two more universities are being considered for the establishment of faculties of Veterinary Medicine, bringing the total number of universities offering the course to 10.

    Dr Markus Avong, the Registrar of the council, said this at a Forum of the News agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Thursday.

    He said the board had concluded the first accreditation exercise for the University of Ilorin, in Kwara, and was still discussing with the University of Jos, Plateau.

    Avong said that due to the peculiar nature of the course, only five universities were initially approved to run the  programme.

    They are: Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria; University of Maiduguri; University of Ibadan; University of Nigeria Nsukka, and Usman Danfodio University,  Sokoto.

    However, later,  the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, and the Federal  University of Agriculture, Makurdi, began to offer the course, followed by the Federal University of Agriculture, Umudike.

    “Apart from those five, we have the Federal University of Abeokuta;  it came on board I think in 2008; we have the Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi,

    “And of course, the eighth one I am talking of right now is the Federal University of Agriculture, Umudike; they too have come on board.

    “In fact, just last week, I issued certificate of registration to them; there are  two others that have applied.

    “University of Ilorin applied and we visited them for the first accreditation and I know that University of Jos was also talking with us.

    “They were talking with us and of course these are the two that I know that have officially approached us.”

    The registrar  also said that the council had streamlined the admission quota of  the various universities in consideration of the nation’s economic absorptive capacity.

    He said that the council would expand the quota  as soon as the country was able to fully develop the potential of the veterinary sector.

    He stressed that the council’s policies with regard to admission quota, and the number of universities running Veterinary Medicine, was to maintain quality and standard in line with global best practice.

    “That is why we have pegged the admission quota, we have pegged it. The first generation universities will admit 80 students while the second generation will  admit 60 and then the last ones, 30.

    “We don’t want to go beyond that; we are watching; if the potential is fully developed to absorb more, we will increase the quota ; otherwise ,you will end up with a glut of veterinarians and that can even water down the quality of those who  are registered.

    “So, we are watching very closely to ensure that the absorptive capacity matches what we turnout.” (NAN)

  • ‘We are on strike to save education’

    ‘We are on strike to save education’

    For several hours last Friday in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, members of unions in the education sector, the Joint Action Front (JAF), a civil society organisation, protested what it called the rot in the education sector. They were joined by some civil society, human rights and non-governmental organisations. EMMANUEL AHANONU (Political Science) and PRINCESS ANN OTUDOR (100-Level Theatre Arts, University of Calabar) report.

    Their anger showed as they converged on the Botanical Garden Park on Mary Slessor Avenue in Calabar the Cross River State capital. It was 8:30am and the presence of these placard-bearing men and women startled passers-by.

    That early Friday morning, their solidarity songs rent the air. “Education must be funded! Education must be funded!! Education, Education, Education must be funded!!!” They sang. The song continued till 9:30am when they were set for the grand march against what they called the government’s insensitivity to the development of education.

    The demonstrators are members of unions in the education sector under the aegis of the Joint Action Front (JAF). Joined by civil society, human rights and non-governmental organisations, lecturers, non-teaching staff and students of public universities in the Southsouth zone, they took to the streets to draw attention to the plight of education.

    The protesting unions included the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU), Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) and Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Polytechnics (SSANIP).

    Others were the Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU), Nigeria Union Teachers (NUT), Education Rights Campaign (ERC), National Union of Campus Journalists (NUCJ) and Students Rights Movements.

    Displaying placards with inscriptions such as: “Nigeria is not broke; where is the N2.6 trillion paid as subsidy for undelivered fuel?”; “Nigeria government show concern; Education is a right for all citizens”; “Save education in Nigeria, do what is right”; “Public schools are dying”; “Federal Government must stop deceiving the public, implement agreement with ASUU now” and “They must stop looting and fund education”, the protesters marched on major roads, paralysing vehicular movement.

    Leaving the Botanical Garden, the protesters marched through Target Street to Nelson Mandela Street and gathered at the Watt Market – the biggest market in Calabar. For 20 minutes, the protesters addressed traders, telling them of the government’s careless policies to “kill education”.

    At Etim Edem Motor Park, JAF Secretary Comrade Abiodun Aremu addressed the crowd in pidgin English, on why the people must stand by the striking lecturers. He listed what he called government’s iniquities against quality education, saying the country’s leaders were looting public funds to establish private school at the expense of public institutions.

    A lecturer at the Faculty of Law of the University of Calabar (UNICAL), Prof Israel Wuruji, while addressing the protesters, said: “We are out today to let Nigerians know that the public education system is collapsing or has collapsed absolutely. If nothing is done to address the situation, our children would suffer. All of us here benefited from the public education system. But, today, our children can no longer have quality education at their door step. Why must we send our children to private schools built by corrupt politicians?

    “Universities have been closed down for two months now, but the government is not concerned to address the issue. We were told that the government would release N130 billion to fund education. When the government realised that what is needed to make our schools provide quality education is N1.3 trillion, which they want to provide within the next three years, they agreed that they will release N400 billion every year. But they have brought it down to N130 billion. The question is: if you have a child who has been diagnosed of a disease that needs surgical operation and you are giving that child Panadol and telling him ‘don’t die’, can we say you care for the child? So, what the government is doing today is paying lip service to quality education.”

    Prof Wuruji noted that the ongoing ASUU strike had nothing to do with lecturers’ salary, saying the union is on strike to force the government to improve poor facilities in schools.

    To ensure that their message got to the ordinary people on the street, the protesters addressed the public in different languages, including Hausa, Igbo, Efik and pidgin English. At Gbogo-Biri Street, the message was communicated to members of the Hausa-Fulani Muslim Community by Alhaji Abubakar Abdulahi, the group’s secretary.

    Leaving U. J. Esuene Stadium, the protesters proceeded to the Cross River Government House. As they approached the gate of the Government House, a drama ensued. Some armed policemen and soldiers drafted to the scene ordered them to leave the area, saying the governor was not around.

    It took about 10 minutes for the professors among the protesters to convince the security operatives that the demonstration was not against the governor. After the explanation, the policemen escorted the protesters with four vans till they dispersed hours later.

    Other areas visited by the demonstrators included Diamond Hill and Murtala Mohammed Highway, from where they dispersed.

    In a statement, its chairman, Dr Dipo Fashina, and Secretary Aremu, said the rally was to identify with ASUU and the public towards improving education.

    “Each time the union goes on strike, it is because the federal and state governments have failed to implement agreements they freely entered into and signed with the lecturers’ unions. Central to saving public education is that the government must fund education in line with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) standard of 26 per cent and make education free for all,”said the statement.

    Students, who participated in the rally, urged the government to accede to their lecturers’ demands.

  • The emerging gay revolution (2)

    The emerging gay revolution (2)

    I recollect vividly when the same Sex Marriage Bill was being debated at the National Assembly some months ago. I thought then: of all things that could be debated to bring succour to the lives of Nigerians who stood in the sun and rain during election and have been at the receiving end of mismanagement -and corruption- for a long time, so homosexuality law is the only thing that the sponsors of the bill could think of. I felt it was a non-issue until the call I wrote about last week changed my thinking.

    We tend to see corruption from the one sided perspective of political office holders lining their pockets with public fund.

    But homosexuality is also part of corruption – moral corruption – which is more real now than ever.

    I received calls and messages from students and the public following last week’s article, which points to the fact that it is an issue we have to look seriously into. One caller even said it was a “pandemic.” I find this hard to believe though – and advised parents not to be naïve, but take closer look at their children. Some said I was “set up” to write about the gay community in Nigeria so that people can be sympathetic to their cause. Another caller said I should beam the searchlight on the entertainment industry and “see the amazing things happening there, but gay is no big deal, it is ‘cool.’”

    When I took a closer look at the issue, I discovered that Africa appears to be the last vestige that is keeping its feet on the ground to say no to gay lifestyle. The West fell a long time ago. Asia’s hardline stance is softening and even the Church – the spiritual and moral bastion of the society is gradually caving in to the well-coordinated propaganda from the gay community.

    Let’s take a look at these statistics to buttress this point further and follow the trajectory of events. I want to use the United States as an example because we simply love everything American. The trajectory of events show how some people’s views have changed over the years.

    In 1971, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously dismissed a same-sex marriage case brought before it during an era when many states still criminalised homosexual sex. However, three decades later, even some of the Court’s most conservative judges endorsed gay marriage. Why did they do this and what changed their perspective?

    The changed tone reflects a dramatic evolution in U.S. popular opinion: Support for gay marriage has doubled since 1996, reaching 53 per cent in 2011. Compared with a number of other countries, in Europe and Latin America in particular, the U.S. is even hard when it comes to attitudes toward gay rights. What this means is that there is a gradual decline of homophobia in these areas.

    In the mid-1980s, no European country provided legal recognition to gay and lesbian couples. A quarter-century later, 16 countries in the region had same-sex marriage or legal partnership laws in place. Eleven other countries, including Argentina and South Africa, have legalised same-sex marriage. In Mexico and Brazil, gay marriage is legal in at least some states. The countries with larger majorities in favour of gay marriage than the U.S. include Uruguay, Argentina, the Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark, Belgium, Luxembourg and Spain.

    All this reflects rapidly changing global attitudes toward same-sex relationships more broadly. According to a World Values Survey data – concerned about values and cultural changes in societies all over the world – from 1993 to 2006, the proportion of people who thought homosexuality was never justifiable dropped from an average of 59 per cent to 34 per cent. The U.S. matched the global pattern, with a decline from 54 per cent to 33 percent. Among the 27 countries asked about the moral status of homosexuality in both 1993 and 2006, the U.S. dropped from 12th most gay-friendly in 1993 to 17th most friendly in 2006.

    The World Values Survey data do suggest that Asia and Africa remain more homophobic than the Americas and Europe, but change has been rapid nonetheless. In the 2006 wave of surveys, the majority of Indians and Chinese remained firmly against homosexuality. But the proportion of people who thought homosexuality was never justifiable fell from 93 per cent to 64 per cent in India from 1993 to 2006 and from 92 per cent to 74 per cent in China.

    From this survey, we can see that people in the West have become more accepting of differences in sexual orientation than of differences in religious belief. For example, more than a quarter of Americans and 22 percent of Brazilians suggest they wouldn’t want neighbours who practised a different religion. But only two per cent of Americans and six percent of Brazilians volunteer that they wouldn’t want to live next door to a homosexual. Across surveyed countries in 2006, 44 per cent of people said they wouldn’t want to live next to someone of a different religion, compared with 16 per cent who mentioned homosexuals.

    In the 20th century, American churches opposition to gay rights was rock solid so much so that when it came to gay rights, religion was “enemy number one” and that is where gay activists took the next fight to.

    A decade into the 21st century, the story is very different. Congregations across the U.S now increasingly accept, nurture, and even marry their gay brethren. Polls show majorities of major Christian denominations – including American Catholics, despite their church’s staunch opposition – support legal gay marriage.

    Leaders of some of the most conservative sects, like the Southern Baptists, have moved away from the vitriolic rhetoric of decades ago toward a more compassionate tone. Mormons even march in gay-pride parades.

    A report quoted a sitting Republican senator, a Methodist from the heartland state of Ohio, saying the question was settled for him by “the Bible’s overarching themes of love and compassion and my belief that we are all children of God”. Pope Francis was widely quoted during his recent trip to Brazil that “If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?”

    Why did perception changed so rapidly in the West? In my opinion the answer is simple: The media and the internet. The globalization of media has made it possible for us to know what is happening around the world instantly, and gay activists know this and they are exploiting it perfectly. Suddenly, high profile gay individuals have come out of the closet to make public their sexual orientation. These high profile individuals in the entertainment, sports, business, politics and media industry are role models to millions of young people around the world who may not be well grounded to make informed positive choices. They may be swayed to believe that that is the best way to live.

    Being at the receiving end of global content development and dissemination, I strongly believe we should be concerned because we simply swallow hook, line and sinker whatever thrash is thrown at us. Carry out a survey on what our youths watch on television today and your guess would be as good as mine. So we should not live in denial that we cannot have gay people in our midst because of our “strong culture” which abhors such behaviour. The youths – who form close to 70 per cent of our population – know so little about our culture but more about the current pop culture which incorporates and encourages gay lifestyle.

    All said, where are God and His Word in all of this?

  • ‘No regret for my disability’

    ‘No regret for my disability’

    When he was two years old, Stephan Abge lost his legs to polio. But he did not allow his disability to prevent him from getting a degree. Stephan bagged a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science at the Cross River State University of Technology (CRUTECH). He is one of the youths who participated in the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) orientation in Cross River State. He relived his experience in the camp to JOHNPAUL NNAMDI (his mate).

    How did you become physically-challenged?

    I was not born disabled. My birth was normal, just like every other person’s. My mother told me I had normal, legs until about two years, when I was attacked by polio. This has kept me in the wheel chair.

    You acquired higher education, despite your challenge. How did you cope?

    It is the will of God that I will be educated. I had my primary education in a special school for the physically- challenged. While in school, I had a bad experience; I was discriminated against. I paid the fees myself, so it was not so easy for me. At the university, I had friends who carried me and helped me in getting certain things done. At a point, when I was not financially capable of continuing with my study, I got a scholarship from the management, which saw me through until I graduated. This really helped me because I could not have been able to see myself through school.

    How did you cope with the stress of the orientation?

    For me, it was fun and I tried my best to enjoy myself. I did not encounter many problems. Although it was always difficult for me to make my way to the bathroom or to the toilet, I made sure I was comfortable and behaved like everybody else. I got all the kits I needed. But I could not participate in activities, such as morning parade, sports and Man ‘O’ War drills. However, I did not miss out on lectures and social activities.

    Did you receive a warm welcome from your colleagues?

    Yes. In fact, I made as many friends as possible. I befriended male and female and our relationship is cordial because they were always there for me. I tried as much as possible to be useful to them, too. We interacted and helped one another when the need arose.

    What would you have loved to be if you were not disabled?

    I would have loved to be a doctor. Nevertheless, I am not regretting this because I am already a graduate of Computer Science and I believe I still have the chance to go further in my education.

    How do you think the quality of education can be improved on?

    The system is not 100 per cent excellent, I think the government and the private sector can do more to make education attractive to the youths. Government must solve the issue of strike in public schools by increasing funding and provide infrastructure. There should also be a regulation of private universities, where students pay exorbitant fees. When building schools, government or private owners should consider disabled people by providing special tools to aid their learning. I must add that people with disability should also be given equal opportunity on employment issues.

    What is the advice you have for people in such situation like you?

    I want to let them see themselves as normal human being. They should not see their disability as a barrier to their destiny or happiness. Most disabled people have low self-esteem and present themselves as an object of pity. To such people, I think they should have a change of mindset because there is a reason why we find ourselves in every situation. Above all, every human being on earth has one challenge or the other but we have to forge ahead, struggle and look beyond our limitation. People should not do things for us out of pity, rather they should give a helping hand when they notice we need help.

  • Engaging youths for peace

    Engaging youths for peace

    For five days, youths from various parts of the country were hosted in Rivers State by the Peace Initiative in the Niger Delta (PIND), a non- governmental organisation, in its continued promotion of peace in the oil-rich region. UCHE ANICHEBE (500-Level Law, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka) ADEBAYO CALEB (400-Level Law, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife), NKIRUKA CALISTA (500-Level Engineering), and ANIE OSITA (Corps member, NYSC, Port Harcourt) were there.

    For five days, the Peace Initiative in the Niger Delta (PIND) hosted youths to a seminar on peace, economic growth and development in the Niger Delta region.

    The event was held at The Adolescent Project (TAP) Centre in Oyigbo, Rivers State. PIND is a non-governmental organisation (NGO) harnessing youth energy to foster peace and promote development.

    According to the organisers, the aim of the workshop was to form a youth network and map out strategy for the sustenance of peace and economic development in the region.

    Addressing participants, who are students of higher institutions, the guest speaker, Reverend Edward Obi, said peace was a prerequisite for development in any society, saying: “Peace is a quintessential public good, which in the simplest conception, can mean the absence of war.”

    The participants underwent training on conflict resolution, Information Communications Technology (ICT) and project management. The training sessions were facilitated by Mr Ifeanyi Ogechuckwu, co-ordinator of the West African Network for Peace Building (WANPB); Mrs Mercy Abang, a journalist and blogger, and Mr Mike Utaha, Acting Director of the Kukah Centre.

    In a lecture titled: “Peace: foundation for better livelihood”, Prof Mark Anikpo of the Centre for Ethnic and Conflict Studies spoke on the relationship between war and underdevelopment, noting that youth empowerment remained one of the potent tools to foster peace.

    “When there is peace, productive activities, especially among the rural population, flourish without hindrance,” he said, urging the participants to always stand up for conflict resolution.

    Executive Director of PIND Mr. Sam Daibo advised participants not to relent in peace advocacy.

    He said: “We all are stakeholders of peace, because violence affects our lives in different ways. We are the key drivers of peace in our communities. PIND only facilitates the activities. We are the real actors.”

    Dennis Flemming, programme director at Niger Delta Partnership Initiative (NDPI), said: “There are a few nations which are not experiencing one form of violence or the other. But peace is something every nation should strive for. We found out that one of the reasons for restiveness in the Niger Delta is unemployment. So, to tackle this, we focused on providing means of livelihood to youths in the region to achieve peace.”

    Utaha lauded the initiative, noting that the Kukah Centre partnered with PIND because it was interested in making the nation peaceful by engaging the youth in the North and Niger Delta with the aim of promoting religious harmony.

    “I will say that PIND is making progress in curbing violence instigated by youth unemployment,” he noted.

    Toward the end of the five-day event, chapters were established across the Niger Delta states. The organisers charged the youth to network and uphold the cause of peace.

    Aniebet Ubong, a Law graduate from the University of Calabar (UNICAL), said he was elated to be involved in activities promoting peace.

    “The workshop afforded me the opportunity to interact with youths from different backgrounds and gained knowledge from them,” he said.

    Onyekachi Onuoha, another participant, noted that solving societal problems through youth initiative enticed her. “I am the author of four books and my works represent what I term the reflection of the ideal society. I write to bridge the gap between morality and society, and to advocate for peace, justice and equity. I have learnt another way to promote peace in the course of the workshop,” she stated.

    In attendance were Mr. Noble Pepple, Executive Director of the Rivers State Sustainable Development Agency (RSSDA); Mr Joseph Adoga of the Department of Civil Societies and NGOs, Morgan Keay, a guest from the US Department of State and Dr Dara Akara, Programme Director of PIND.

    Others were Hon Eloah Akee, Special Adviser to the Rivers State Governor on Good Governance and Ethics, and Tunde Fajinbola, Chief Press Secretary to Ondo State Deputy Governor.

    PIND was established in 2010 and it is funded by Chevron, an oil firm. Its objectives include the advancement of economic sustainability in the Niger Delta by engaging youths in the region.

     

  • When comrades meet

    When comrades meet

    How can unionism be used for the benefit of students? Members of the Students’ Union Government (SUG) of the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) learnt the know-how during a visit to the chairman of Amuwo Odofin Local Government Area of Lagos State, Comrade Ayodele Adewale. TOLULOPE OGUNLEYE (HND II Computer Science) reports.

    ALL was quiet at the secretariat of Amuwo Odofin Local Government Area of Lagos State last Wednesday during a visit by some students union leaders. About 10:30pm, members of the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) Students’ Union Government (SUG) arrived at the council to keep an appointment with the chairman, Comrade Ayodele Adewale.

    As he relaxed in his modest office after a busy day, the students knocked on the door. As they filed in, Adewale jumped up from his swivel chair and extended his hand to receive the visitors.

    With a broad smile, the council chairman told his guests to sit; then, the conversation began. Fondly called Mayor, Adewale is one of the youthful council chairmen in the state.

    Being a former students’ union president, Adewale is seen as a mentor and source of wisdom by the visiting union leaders who came learn ways to deploy unionism towards improving the welfare of students and staff of their institution.

    On why the union chose Amuwo Odofin council chairman to mentor its members, the SUG President, Olanrewaju Balogun, said Adewale had impacted on the lives of the people of the council and engendered positive values since his days as a students’ union president at the Lagos State University (LASU).

    Olanrewaju said the council chief was the students’ choice because he is experienced in students’ movement and national politics.

    Speaking on how to lead people, Adewale noted that he remained a leftist ideologue, saying that the only way to liberate the people was to advocate for positive change. He said the best way to liberate the masses from the shackles of poverty was to contest for an elective post in government to acquire the power to bring the change needed in the society.

    On how to cope with distraction and complaints from people being led, Adewale said human beings are insatiable, adding: “The best you can do in such situation is to pursue the agenda of the majority and satisfy your conscience.”

    Explaining the challenges of students’ unionism, he said therwe were little resources at union leaders’ disposal to work with, noting that the best way to succeed was to engage people of like minds to achieve the change students wanted.

    Dwelling on challenges facing unionism, Adewale said the use of protest to call attention of the authorities to students’ plight was outdated, saying protest is the last stage of negotiation.

    He emphasised the use of propaganda to promote students’ opinion, adding: “You must envision your mind because with propaganda you can gain people’s mind.”

    He advised the students’ leaders to be focused, saying challenges surface at every level of life, “but if you remain focused, you will achieve your aim.”

    Given his demanding job, one of the students asked how Adewale relaxed. The council chairman responded: “Relaxation is relative; some people relax with a bottle of beer, some do it with ladies while others go to clubs to unwind. As for me, I like spending my time with people like you.”

    Admonishing the youth to dream for greatness, Adewale said if anyone wanted to be great in life, he must make a sacrifice.

    “You must have a good vision to be a good leader, because no one sees the vision better than the visioner. Strive to be successful in life and you must know that success has many fathers while failure has none,” he told his guests.

  • Group celebrates anniversary

    Group celebrates anniversary

    A students group, Act It, at the Lagos State University (LASU) has held its first anniversary.

    The president of the group, Hamzat Bakare, 300-Level Medicine, said the initiative was borne out of the need to serve humanity.

    He said: “Act It is committed to supporting youths and women through campaigns on health, gender equality, education and environmental sustainability.”

    In a chat with CAMPUSLIFE, Hamzat called on governments, private organisations and non-governmental bodies to invest in the health sector of the country, adding that Nigeria cannot afford to pay lip service to the health of her citizens.