Category: Southwest

  • How college’s closure tore  Oyo community apart

    How college’s closure tore Oyo community apart

    In 2014, the National Universities Commission (NUC) published the names of over 50 degree awarding institutions it claimed were being run illegally. It also shut down some of the illegal schools, including  the Borough College London, Igboho Study Campus. Seun Akioye visited Igboho and writes about how the closure has polarised the sleepy community.

    The day prophetess Foluke Jacob received her letter of admission to Borough College London (BCL), Igboho Study Centre to study Public Administration was the happiest day of her life. The letter indicated that she would undergo a one-year foundational course. But this meant little to her, her admission into the college was enough satisfaction.

    There were other interesting details about the admission. At the completion of her study at the BCL, she would be able to travel to the United Kingdom for her graduation ceremony and she would also be awarded a British certificate.

    “I was glad when the school came, I am a prophetess and a Bible school graduate, but I always wanted to further my education. So, this was the opportunity to do so,” Jacob said.

    Jacob was not the only enthusiastic student in Igboho who received the life changing letters of admission. About 600 others also joined in the rally held in August 2014 to signify the commencement of academic studies that would catapult the sleepy and poor community into a university town. Businesses also opened up in the town. Restaurants, hostels and transport business boomed.

    As the news of the new college spread, students came from other cities, such as Ibadan, Lagos, Rivers and Abuja. They all found a common fulfillment in their desire for a university degree which had been so unexpectedly fulfilled by the BCL.

    Then, in March 2015, after just a semester into the one-year foundation course, things fell apart.

    That day the Chairman, National Universities Commission (NUC), committee on closure of illegal universities, Prof. Adebisi Balogun  told the media in Ibadan that BCL Igboho had been closed down. The closure was done by members of the (NUC) committee, officers of the Department of State Security (DSS), and the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission, ICPC.

    Balogun said the school which had been running since October 2014 did not have NUC approval having only written to the body for permission. But the founder, Prof. James Ogunleye, who resides in London, has been telling the students a different story. one of the letters of admission

    The news of the closure of BCL hit the Igboho community like a thunderbolt; it threw the plans of Jacobs and hundreds of other students into jeopardy. The indigenes, who had viewed the school as the propeller for development; were left disappointed.  But more worrisome is the allegation that BCL was an illegal institution, running unapproved courses which would lead the students nowhere.

    “We were shown the certificate for the approval of the school, we were told the school has also been approved by the Federal Government and Oyo State government. They showed us all the papers. I do not think from all we saw that the school could be illegal. Borough College is not an illegal school,” Jacob said, her eyes expressing  strong disapproval.

    A quest for education

    Igboho, a town of about 150,000 inhabitants, has a rich history and a pride of place in Oyo traditional history. It is the home and the resting place of the original Alaafin of Oyo. There is a historic site called the Igbo Oba where at least four of the ancient Oyo kings were buried.

    The town is also the food basket of Oyo State. It is known for its agricultural produce, especially yam, but for all its traditional and agricultural achievements, it is also a town crippled by unemployment and poverty.

    The people found a way out in education and this would have helped but for the location of the town which is far away from the centre of business and commerce in Ibadan. This has also affected the location of higher institutions in the area. Many of the indigenes desirous of a higher degree would have to go far up in the northern parts of Nigeria, such as Sokoto and Abuja. In the whole of Oke Ogun, (comprising about 10 local governments) there is only one affiliate of the Polytechnic Ibadan.

    “That was our dilemma,” Jaiyeola Olatunde, chairman of Ifelodun Association of Igboho indigenes worldwide,  said. He has been one of the forces behind the establishment of Borough College in the town and with the closure of the institution, life seemed to have dealt him a fatal blow.

    “We saw there is no development in this town. Our people are poor and there is no higher institution that can serve our people. We have a son who lives abroad; Otunba Abdulsalami Mustafa and we told him of the need to have a school here. He was the one who introduced us to Prof. James Ogunleye in April 2014 who told us of a school in London called the Borough College,” Olatunde told The Nation.

    The story of the setting up of Borough College could be likened to an idea whose time had come. Prof. Ogunleye came to Igboho for the initial discussions and discovered a goldmine of educational opportunities. He was taken to the Alepata of Igboho and all the prominent chiefs in the town and his idea of establishing a “study center” of Borough College was accepted.

    It was not clear if the people of Igboho understood the exact nature of the study centre but a promise that a degree certificate issued from a foreign university at the end of the course was enough to sway the indigenes.

    Ogunleye reportedly told the people that his school  would be running a Higher National Diploma programme, but the people wanted a degree-awarding institution. The deal was struck and the school began with an entrance examination in Irepo Grammar School, Akitipa.

    Jacobs remembered that day. “I was told about the school in May 2014 and obtained the application form for N5,000. On September 18 of the same year, we had the entrance examination; there were about 600 students who sat for that exam.”

    Almost all of them were successful and in October, the Borough College London began operation in Igboho. The opening was celebrated with much funfair and a rally around the town. The school began operation in a refurbished compound formerly housing a nursery and primary school-the Shining Light Schools.

    “We found a land for the school and they started operation. In the few months that the school was here, we saw a lot of development in this town because students came from as far as Lagos and Ibadan,” Olatunde said.

    But trouble began almost immediately for the school as a team from the DSS soon visited and demanded to examine the books of the school. After a thorough scrutiny, they seemed impressed and left the college to continue operations.

    But a terrible story was already going around that the school was unaccredited. The source of this story was traced to an illustrious son of the town and Registrar, Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Dibu Ojerinde. At a town hall meeting in Oke Ogun, he was said to have told the people that BCL had no accreditation to run the courses and was therefore illegal.

    Four indigenes interviewed by The Nation, who claimed to have been at the meeting, confirmed this story. The indigenes who do not want to be named said the JAMB boss never wanted the school in Igboho.

    “We understand Prof. Ojerinde wanted to bring his own university to Igboho and was determined to run down the BCL.  We know he was the one who brought the people from Abuja to seal the school, the police who came confirmed it,’ the sources said.

    The closure of BCL seemed to have divided the town of Igboho more than ever, while there are those who believed that the presence of the college has brought development to the community, others believe the school if it cannot fulfill the requirements of the NUC should remain closed.

    “A lot of things were wrong with the college,” Kabir, an indigene,  told The Nation. As an unemployed graduate, he had watched with great concern the publicity for the school and how many of the indigenes fell for it. Personally, he tried to convince many of the students to jettison the idea.

    “We checked with the NUC and we did not see the name of the school, . It is not even in Jamb brochure, that was when we started telling people that it is a fake school. To operate a university, there is a certain amount of money you must have and this school has none of it. Also, we looked at the admission requirements and discovered people who didn’t have the required credits are also admitted as long as they can pay the school fees. If you ask my opinion, the school is fake and the closure has polarised this community” he said.

    The school fights back

    On April 29 about 50 students of the college gathered in front of the school to register their protest against the continued closure of the institution by the NUC. Led by the governors of each department, the students demanded from the NUC and the school management, the immediate reopening of the college.

    The Dean of the school, Dr. Ayodele Ayeni, and the administrator, Solomon Durojaiye, appealed to the students to show understanding with the school. Ayeni said the management has gone to the ICPC in Abuja and shown all the accreditation and approvals from relevant bodies.

    “We have gone to Abuja and they have seen all our approvals, what they requested are that the paramount ruler and the community leadership should write to them before they can reopen the school and we have done all this,” Ayeni said. However, his assurances did little to assuage the students who seemed determined to resume academic activities as soon as possible. Samuel Ezekiel, who said he was a Biology student said: “We have come here today in the belief that the school will be open, we cannot be expressing joy when we are in grief.”

    Olawo Solomon, another student said, “ What is our hope and what is the future, when exactly do we open?”

    But that was a question too difficult for anyone to answer. The school solicitor, Ade Asudemade, pleaded for time for the ICPC to open the school.

    “We have done all that they required of us and we want them to come and reopen it. If you forcefully reopen the school they will come and lock it up for a longer time, so the best is for us to be patient and wait for the ICPC to reopen it,” he said. He also declared that the NUC erred in tagging the school “illegal” and closing it down in a commando style without proper verification of its accreditations.

    The accreditation the management spoke about include: A Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), certificate of incorporation given on February 24, 2015, Oyo  State Ministry of Education Provisional Approval to Study/Continuing Education Center, with Ref number EDU/A/41/22/23/130 given on January 30, 2015, approval for Borough College London to offer BTEC Qualifications by edexcel and approval as a branch campus by the Universidad Azteca.

    But the arguments of BCL management did not impress the NUC. According to the Head of Legal Department and the Secretary of the NUC Committee on schools closure, Moses Awe, the NUC has the rights to regulate and approve BCL.

    Awe told The Nation:  “We saw all of these documents. We have a whole department DDE at the NUC with a Director which is responsible for Open/Distant Learning. Under this arrangement, there are three models of running open distant learning. If you look at the Educational Act, CAP E3, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004, it clearly spelt it out the conditions that applies to Open Universities domiciled in Nigeria.  Now, that is to tell you that we have the authority to regulate not just conventional universities but Open and Distant Learning.”

    Awe listed the three models of Distant Learning as Branch System, Twinning and Open/Distant Learning which BCL falls under. He said as long as the school is training Nigerians and developing manpower for Nigerians in Nigeria, it must be regulated by the NUC.

    “Can the University of Ibadan as popular as it is just go and open a distant learning centre in London without submitting itself to the authorities in that country, with due respect some of these professors are just parading illiteracy, Awe said.

    The NUC also said mere registration with the CAC is not enough to run a study centre unless it is backed up with an approval from the NIUC. “ We have standards for all these, if you check the Educational Act, we have set minimum standards and BCL must follow that procedure. Let me tell you how bad it is, you can operate with NUC license without the CAC but you cannot use CAC to operate without the NUC license,” Awe said.

    This is more bad news for the longsuffering management of the BCL and the continued closure  of the college is one of the issues that gives the paramount ruler, the Alepata of IgbohoDr. Johnson Olaide Oyeyiola, much cause for worry.

    “I do not want the government to lock the college, after secondary school, there is no higher institution here, we have just one polytechnic in Oke Ogun, so if a branch of a university is here, it is good,” the Alepata told The Nation. He said he has written to the ICPC to plead for the reopening of the school.

    He urged the management to also do the needful.  “If need be, Prof. Ogunleye should come and rectify all that is wrong, we need the school here because students come from all over Oke Ogun and they have spent money which is non refundable. So the best thing is for the school to do the needful and government should let the academic exercise continue,” he concluded.

    The Nation was able to contact Prof. Ogunleye in London who said in a telephone interview that he never claimed Borough College was a university but a study centre.

    “There is nothing like a degree course, what we are running is foundation course. The idea of a degree was something that was fronted by a particular man at Igboho, I am sure you would have heard about the man, he is the one saying we are running degree there, it is a foundation course.”

    Ogunleye said the students were admitted for a foundation course after which they will be eligible to proceed for the full university course.  He claimed that Borough College in London is affiliate with a Universidad Azteca in Mexico which awards the degree for the programme of the college.

    According to him, students of the study center in Igboho who passed the foundation course will be enrolled at the Universidad Azteca.  “Borough College does not award degree, the students we have there are foundational students and at the end of their course we register them on our own degree programme from the University that is accredited to do that and the degree is recognized all over the world including Nigeria,” he said.

    The Nation did a search on Universidad Azteca.  According to its Wikipedia page, “Universidad Azteca is a private university with recognition of the Official Validity of Studies awarded by the Federal Secretary of Education, RVOE, accredited by the Federal Ministry of Education of the Republic and recognized by the Federal Government] to provide higher education and award graduate and postgraduate university degrees.

    According to the Mexican Higher Education laws Universidad Azteca is authorized to offer study programmes and award degrees with RVOE and offer autonomous programmes and award academic degrees of the university”

    Also, The Nation found out that the university has international accreditation to run courses in Europe. “-Universidad Azteca in 2013 is the first Mexican University to ever achieve institutional accreditation by ASIC the  Accreditation Service for International Colleges, a leading UK accreditation agency, recognised by the Home Office, UK Border Agency, and listed by CHEA as a recognised accreditation body in the UK and internationally. ASIC is a national UK Affiliate of the European Association for Quality Assurance in Higher Education”. But while the Universidad Azteca has credible accreditation to run courses for European students like those of BCL, does it mean that its accreditation also extends to Nigeria without proper and due accreditation with the relevant authorities?

    While the NUC does not think so, the Ayeni said the NUC has no rights to close down an institution with British accreditations.  “The NUC has no rights over a British accredited programme. They say Borough College students don’t do Jamb, they cannot because it is a British programme and all the papers have been sent to the Ministry of Education, Corporate Affairs Commission and other education sectors in Oyo state and Abuja, that is the truth,” Ayeni said.

    He also accused the JAMB registrar of being behind the travails of the institution.

    “If Nigerians in Diaspora can bring projects to Nigeria to support the country in any sector,  I don’t see any problem in that, that is what professor James Ogunleye did by bringing the study centre from London to Nigeria. Any lie they tell you don’t listen to them; the truth of the matter is that since we started the school, there is one big man in this town who has been victimizing the school. Anybody has rights in this country to bring any project to any part of this country so far as you are Nigerian.”

    Ayeni insisted the school must be reopened. “The school must be reopened for the sakes of the students, this man has been victimizing the school since it started ,we tried to get him to see reason but he has been insisting that we cannot stay here, what is the meaning of that?”

    For about two weeks, The Nation made several attempts to contact Prof. Ojerinde but was unsuccessful. Many telephone calls  and text messages to his mobile number went unanswered as well. But sources close to him in Igboho denied that the registrar had anything to do with the travails of the college.

    “ I have spoken to the Professor and he said he has nothing to do with the closure of the college, he denied any involvement in the closure of the school,” Alepata said.

    A search of Borough College London indicates it is situated at Victoria Lodge, Chartwell Business Park, 61-65, Paulet road, Camberwell, SE5 9HW London. It also indicated it offered varying courses including English, Computing and IT, Accountancy and Management. There was nothing about affiliation with Universidad Azteca and no announcement of the opening of a study centre in Nigeria. A statement on the page of the school website reads: “Borough College London is a relatively new and modern institution.”

    The Nation wrote to the school asking for clarifications about its relationship with the study center in Nigeria.  On April 21, 2015 , a reply came saying the request will be looked into and a detailed response supplied; it was signed by Prof. James Ogunleye as the Director of BCL.

    Another email from BCL arrived from the college on April 30, 2015 and signed by Prof. Ogunleye but this time as the Proprietor of BCL.

    Jacob and other students still hold out hope for the continuation of their studies. Bridget Amoni, a student of Mass Communications and Mercy Tamunobarasin, a Bio-Chemistry student, both came from Rivers State. After years of battling with JAMB examination, the BCL offered attractive incentives for them.

    “We are disappointed this is happening because we have so much hope for the school, we hope that it will be open this week so we can continue our studies,” they said.

    Some other students who spoke to The Nation   expressed similar sentiments. “Academically the BCL is okay, I have gained a lot by being here. But I am not satisfied until the school is reopened and if it is not done soon, I will have to go on a rally around the town, “ Adeoti Grace from Niger State said.

    For Busayo Ayoade, a former student of Federal Polytechnic Offa,, the desire for a university degree and the affordable fees drew her to BCL. “All we want is for the school to stay, we just want the school reopened because the academic classes are really superior to what you find in many schools,” she said.

    Jacob was one of the leaders of the rally as she constantly interfaced between students and management. A few months after her enrolment, she was honored with the award of “Mother of Borough” because of her passion and unequal contributions to the school.

    In a neat pouch, she had kept all the documents relating to her study at BCL waiting for the day she will resume her studies. Her course registration form indicated her student number as BCL/14/105/001. Already, she had paid the N70,000 school fees and other levies, so she has a lot to lose if the school does not reopen.

    “If there is anything the school can do to rectify whatever is wrong, the government should allow the management to do it, so we can reopen our school and continue with our studies,” she said in a subdued voice. On her television, her award plaque from the school occupied a prominent position, it was a reminder of the time she attempted to get a university education.

    This investigation was supported by the International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR)and Ford Foundation Nigeria.

  • We may seek legal  action against NUC,  says BCL founder

    We may seek legal action against NUC, says BCL founder

    our school, Borough College, in Igboho has been shut down by the NUC because it is an illegal institution. What do you have to say and why were you operating an illegal university?

    It is just an allegation made by a particular Igboho man who didn’t want that institution in that place and we never pretended to be running a university and Borough College did not apply to the NUC as any university. We have these students who are doing what we call a Foundation Course that will allow them to apply to the university if they finish the foundation course,  that is what is happening at Igboho.

    I can confirm that acting on the invitation of the traditional ruler and the community of Igboho, that I have established Borough College London Ltd (RC1244411) registered by Corporate Affairs Commission in Nigeria, to operate as a Study Centre of Borough College London. Prior to registration in Nigeria, the College obtained a ‘no objection’ approval from Federal Ministry of Education; as part of our application for approval by the Accreditation and Evaluation Division of the Ministry.

    But I saw a couple of Letters of Admission which indicated that the students have been admitted for either a Law or Public Administration degree

    If you look at the letters you will never see it is a degree…

    I saw one that indicated a degree course

    No there is nothing like a degree course, it is foundation course. The idea of a degree was something that was fronted by a particular man at Igboho, I am sure you would have heard about the man, he is the one saying we are running Degree there, it is a foundation course.

    I wish to stress that the approved articles and memorandum of association of the Study Centre never described it as a degree awarding ‘university’; as such, the Study Centre never applied to NUC for any approval or operating license. It is not true (as some may suggest, that the Study Centre picked up a form from NUC, and abandoned processing the form for NUC approval or license. It is, indeed, not true that the College is an ‘illegal university’ operating without approval or license as some may wish to suggest.

    How long is the foundation course?

    It is a year.

    So if it is a Foundation course, how are the students supposed to proceed after that?

    Those who succeed will register on a degree course. These students are international students and they are at the study centre of Borough College based in Nigeria, the Borough College is registered in Nigeria by the Corporate Affairs Commission, it is also approved by the Oyo state government. Our students who finished the foundation course will be qualified to register as Degree students; we have our courses validated by the University called Universidad Azteca.

    Where is this university?

    It is in Mexico,  that is the university that validated Borough College London. Those who finished the foundation course will register on their degree programme.

    Will they do the programme in Igboho too?

    Yes, because they study at our study centre. The degree programme we do at Borough College London is accredited by the university that is all I can say to you.

    Don’t you think you should also register with the NUC because if your students get a degree from this university, will they be qualified to do the mandatory National Youth Service?

    That is the question that is common, the Federal Ministry of Education will evaluate each person’s degree and their degree is accepted anywhere in the world. The university is on the list of UNESCO accredited list of universities.

    The National Universities Commission  acted in concert with ICPC to shut down the Study Centre without due process. The NUC, regrettably, never made any effort to write, email or telephone to invited or transmit any message or to give any notice to the College, but chose to express their concerns by a punitive action; followed by speaking to the press without checking their facts. Had they checked with us, they would have discovered that the College is pursuing a non-NUC Federal Ministry of Education (Accreditation and Evaluation Division) under the Nigerian education law. We chose this track because it is the appropriate channel to secure a Government approval for the Study Centre without the need for applying to become a university with approval from the NUC. We take the view that we already work with an international university with degree awarding powers.

    You made allusions to Prof. Dibu Ojerinde as being the one behind the travails of your college, do you have any proof?

    He has done it before.

    Really, tell me exactly what he did?

    I just don’t want to get involved in the local [politics there, but he is the one who tried to shut it since September last year. He organized the second attack on the college. I think it has to do with their local politics and not on the legality of the college, we are registered in Nigeria. It is a government approved school although it is not a university, we don’t pretend to operate a university, that is why we called it a study centre because the students could not come to London to run this study. As a matter of fact, it was the town that invited me to come and establish that study centre.

    I was invited by their town union and I came to Nigeria, they invited me and they told me that had tried to get this man to do something but he wouldn’t and that is why they pushed for this. It was one indigene of Igboho that came to London to come and organize this programme.

    The school is big and registered by the Nigerian government as a corporate entity, we didn’t just start, we got approval from Oyo state government and the international programmes we are running there will lead to certificates from the Universidad Azteca.

    Before the shutdown of the school, how many student were there?

    The proper person to answer that is Dr. Ayeni or Mr. Solomon.

    What is the next step for you and the students?

    What we intend to do, the local management there will decide what to do. As far as we are concerned; the school is not an illegal school. International programmes are not illegal. You rightly mentioned Prof Dibu Ojerinde, he is the one who did not want the school, initially he went to the State Security Services (SSS), they came and tried to do the same thing but when they saw the paperwork, they encouraged the school to continue. He wasn’t happy with that  and that is why he has done this second. What we are doing is perfectly legal, Borough College does not award degree. The students we have there are foundational students and at the end of their course we register them on our own degree programme from the University that is accredited to do that and the degree is recognised all over the world including Nigeria.

    Unfortunately, the NUC has brought about a situation whereby the supremacy of two Nigerian laws and the two organs of government; thereby instigating a possible court case that is already being considered by the Study Centre’s barristers who are authorised to take it up with the appropriate Nigerian Authorities.

     

  • Why I’m inviting diabetes, epilepsy, fibroid  patients for free treatment, by trado-medical specialist

    Why I’m inviting diabetes, epilepsy, fibroid patients for free treatment, by trado-medical specialist

    Mr. Adeyinka Adebayo is a trado-medical practitioner. In this interview with SIKIRU AKINOLA, he speaks on his 17-year research into natural healing of some ailments, including diabetes, fibroid and epilepsy for which he invites patients for free treatment

    Tell us about your foray into traditional medicine

    I started this trado-medical practice 17 years ago. I’m a specialist in treatment of  diabetes, hypertension, female infertility, fibroid, epilepsy, Hepatitis B, liver problem and other diseases that affect human beings.I inherited the practice from my late grandfather who was a trado-medical doctor.

    What led you into traditional medicine?

    I just discovered that people are dying because of ailments which I believe I can cure but people don’t know how to get somebody who can treat the ailments. I inherited this from my grandfather and seeing people die needless circumstances makes me feel guilty. I cannot just watch while people die and I have the cure. And that was why I vowed that I was going to use whatever I have for humanity to cure people’s ailments.

    Many people are in this business purposely to make money. Why do you want to treat people free-of-charge?

    I discovered that most patients die because they cannot meet the financial obligation to treat themselves when they get to hospitals. So, I think it will be a sin for me to have this great privilege and not use it to help humanity. At times, some people will just die in hospital because they cannot afford small amount of money. It is disheartening. Our health sector should be one that permits free treatment for patients without money.

    But it is widely believed that epilepsy has no cure. Is this not true?

    See, it is not everybody that has the knowledge to treat people in the traditional way. God blessed some people with knowledge about healing. While some people will accept to treat it without collecting a kobo, others can’t do that. They will demand for money. But as for me, I believe epilepsy is natural though some people hold contrary views. I am very confident that I have the cure for leprosy. The epilepsy patient will be completely healed. ý I can also cure cancer and liver problem.

    Apart from Ibadan, where else can patients reach you?

    I am in Oyo, Iperu-Remo, Lagos and Port-Harcourt.

  • Lions Club urges Nigerians to help needy

    The chairman of the Council of Governors, Lions Club International, Mr Samuel Ekpuk, has urged Nigerians to help the needy. He spoke at a news conference to herald the  31st convention of the Lions Clubs International, in Ibadan. He said that the club has helped the less privileged in the society.

    “The Lions Club, understanding  its roles in the society, has sent helping hands to the people of Nepal whose country experienced earthquake recently. There are always our members to help people. Our members in Nigeria have started raising funds as the first helped. In Nigeria, we have helped of flood disasters and internally displaced persons,” he said.

    He listed the largest motherless home in Nigeria which  was built by the club in Lekki, the Lions Accident Clinic on the Benin-Ore Interchange and the diabetes centre in Calabar as part of the club’s successes, adding that “we have a pilot programmes for children where they are taught about the effect of drug abuse and other social vices”.

    Ekpuk hailed President Goodluck Jonathan for the peaceful poll which, he said, have put the nation on a higher pedestal, expressing optimism that the country is on its way to achieving firsts in all areas of governance.

    He assured President-elect Muhammadu Buhari of the club’s support. He observed that “we are not partisan but we would work for the betterment of the society. We would fashion programmes that will be in line with the aspirations of the incoming administration”.

    Ekpuk said the club would continue to collaborate with the National Emergency Management Authority (NEMA) by providing relief materials for victims of the insurgency.

  • Firm opens Lagos office

    Firm opens Lagos office

    Having sustained its leadership in digital printing in the South-south and Southeast for almost two decades, KEL Technologies has made a foray into the Lagos market. It aims to raise the bar of quality printing and set pace for a competition among digital printing professionals.

    Last weekend, businessmen and professional printers from different parts of the country gathered for the opening of KEL Technologies’ Lagos office located on Kodesho Street in Ikeja.

    In the three-hour event, the management of the firm conducted reporters round the facility to showcase some of its newly-acquired machinery installed to raise the bar of quality in digital printing.

    The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the firm, Mr Solomon Martins, said the company’s investment in Lagos would offer a unique and international quality printing service to clients at affordable rates. He said KEL Technologies had acquired Direct Imaging Press, a latest digital printer, whose quality of output could be compared to best printing anywhere in the world.

    With the installation of the machine, Martins said there was no need for Nigerians to go abroad for quality printing, saying the firm could adequately satisfy the expectations of clients in any form of printing.

    He said: “With our experience in Port Harcourt, Yenagoa and Onitsha markets in terms of international printing perspective, we are opening the Lagos branch to offer Lagosians advanced quality printing such as 3D Varnish, thereby discouraging Nigerians to travel abroad for quality printing service that is now readily available in Lagos.”

    Assuring that the firm’s machinery would offer seamless printing solutions to Lagos clients, Martins said the investment would add values and contribute to the economic development of the state.

    Jolly Amiolemen, the firm’s Lagos Office Commissioning Committee’s chairman, said KEL Technologies plunged into Lagos’ printing market out of passion to satisfy the demand for world-class printing needs of the people.

    He said: “We are aware that some printing works are still being taken to countries like China and United States in a bid to get the best. This poses its own challenges, given the time and resources committed to such undertaking. With the opening of our Lagos office, we are sending a message to people that, what they travelling abroad to do can now be done in Lagos.”

    Amiolemen praised the firm’s CEO for his vision and entrepreneurial wisdom to open the office, saying the firm would continue to maintain its quality and leadership in the printing industry.

    Some of the guests at the event made sweet testimonies about the quality of services offered by KEL Technologies, saying the firm’s Lagos investment indicated its resolve to deliver excellent services to its clients.

    The highpoint of the event was the formal opening of the four-storey building acquired by the firm in Ikeja, the Lagos State capital.

     

  • Ex-Warrant Officer sues Army, COAS for unpaid benefits

    Ex-Warrant Officer sues Army, COAS for unpaid benefits

    HE was a Master Warrant Officer of the Nigerian Army. Mr Stephen Aigbe detained for ten years for alleged mutiny.

    Aigbe has been estranged from his family since 1996 when he was detained and thought dead.

    Aigbe was accused of attempting to kill the former late Head of State, Gen Sanni Abacha. The offence was ‘slammed’ against him in 1996 by the authorities of the 2 Division of the Nigeria Army. He was subsequently arraigned before a camp commandant panel. Though he was not found guilty, he was denied a court martial and access to get a lawyer.

    Aigbe said: “Following a conspiracy, I was accused of writing an anonymous letter against a certain Col. H. A David after which a board of Inquiry was set up to investigate the matter.

    “I was in confinement on mutiny trial for ten years having written several unreplied redress letters to relevant authorities that are verifiable and I kept wondering about the way the military system has been used to work extreme injustice and hardship on me and family. I have served the Nigeria Army for 36 years and I deserve the best.

    “Lawyers also contributed largely to my plight. I have had experiences with different lawyers. It is painful. I had one Barrister Toyin Okebukola, who having received professional fees refused to show up in court and refused to make available to me judgment proceedings.I wrote to the Nigeria Bar Association, Oyo State as her conduct is a breach of contract.

    Recounting his experience in detention for ten years he said, “ It is only by the grace of God that I still exist. During that period, I could not see my wife and six children because they had told them that because of the offence I had committed they should not expect me back. I was alienated from my whole family. To eat was a problem, only people who felt sympathetic gave me something with which I was feeding.

    “During the time I was in detention, they went to my apartment at Odogbo Barracks, they burgled and shared everything I had. When I was released, I had nothing to start another life. I have not been able to see my family since. I am indigene of Edo State, I cannot even go home.

    “ I was framed up during Abacha’s regime; they said I wanted to kill Abacha. I was charged with a mutiny case, and within ten years, the mutiny case dragged on and I was in detention from 1996 to 2006. When they discovered my date of discharge had lapsed, I was taken to Oshodi. It was there I discovered the army had erased my record.”

    He said after the Oshodi experience, he was taken back to Ibadan, but he was threatened that he would be locked up by a Lieutenant Colonel. This prompted him to seek legal redress.

    “I took the case to the Federal High Court, Ibadan but it was not given prompt attention. After five years of stalling the case, which I view as a conspiracy, it was transferred to the National Industrial Court. From 2009 to 2013, there were only adjournments as the defendants lawyer failed to show up in court.

    “ I want justice, I thought the Industrial Court will give justice to a man who has worked for 36 years in the army. I want justice to get my entitlements, I have not been given my gratuity, I am not even on pension, I have been ejected from the one room apartment I had in the barracks. I was not allowed to take any of my property out of barracks, without any redress.”

    Although his case with the National Industrial Court has been withdrawn, Aigbe said he has filed another case at the Federal High Court on his forceful ejection from his apartment despite the fact that he was not paid his gratuity nor pension.

  • How Citizen Eniola died,  by NURTW chief Oluomo

    How Citizen Eniola died, by NURTW chief Oluomo

    The Oshodi zonal Chairman and State Treasurer of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Alhaji Musiliu Akinsanya (a.k.a. Mc Oluomo) has  explained how the late  Olayemi Eniola (a.k.a  Easy Oluwo), died on April  9.

    Oluomo said Eniola died after the campaign train was disrupted by some hoodlums suspected to be members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) towards the end of Oshodi road.

    He added that the hoodlums accosted members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) while conducting a peaceful rally at Mafoluku, Lagos State and shot  sporadically.

    He said  in the ensuing  melee, many cars and other valuables were damaged by the thugs, while several people sustained injuries. It took the intervention of the Rapid Response Squad (RRS), who were at the campaign ground to restore peace.

    “The man “Essy Oluwo”, who was a core supporter to the PDP, was mistakenly shot dead by his members. They were the people shooting and breaking bottles, I was surprised by the allegation that I am the mastermind of his death”, Oluomo said.

    The Secretary to Oshodi 1 arm of the union,  Comrade Taiwo Bankole, said the man was killed by the PDP thugs.

    He said Oluomo instructed the campaign team to remain calm on  that day,  urging them to hide in a particular spot as the police were chasing the thugs away, even with a considerable distance between where the rally temporarily stop for the police to take their full responsibility of dispersing the hoodlums that were shooting to stop the rally, he added.

    Comrade Bankole, urged people to stop alleging Oluomo, is innocent of the death of the the late Eniola. He said henceforth, the union will not hesitate to take a legal action against any individual, organisation or media house publishing any falsehood against Oluomo.

  • Babalakin: Caring in the face of ‘persecution’

    Babalakin: Caring in the face of ‘persecution’

    Then I heard that Dr B. O. Babalakin, fondly referred to by his colleagues in the office and friends as BOB, sponsored an eye treatment programme in Zaria, Kaduna State, on the platform of the Ramotu Ibironke Foundation (a foundation named after his late mother) to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the reign of the Emir of Zaria, Alhaji Dr Shehu Idris, I was touched and a lot of things came to my mind. First I was compelled to go down memory lane. I met BOB fortuitously. I was undertaking my youth corps service at a hotel in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State. He came to Uyo frequently then. What I found most attractive about him was his humility. He spoke very kindly to us at the reception. That was a marked contrast to other prominent visitors to the hotel. He never checked out of the hotel without asking how we were doing, with emphasis on what our plans were for the future. His conduct surprised me. How could a man who was clearly very busy have time to think about the plight of the lowly staff of the hotel?

    After my youth service, I lost touch with him, but a friend of mine kept in touch with him. The last time I saw my friend, who incidentally is Wale by name, he told me about certain events in his life, which sounded like a fairy tale. He told me that after our youth service, Dr Babalakin sponsored him to the University of Leeds in England for a postgraduate programme in Business Administration. On completing the programme, he offered him employment in Bi-Courtney Aviation Services Limited. Interestingly he did not insist that Wale had to work for him.

    What Dr Babalakin did for Wale was a tip of the iceberg, as I later found out that BOB was, at a stage, sponsoring 47 students in schools abroad and only about seven of them were well-known to him. The remaining40 were simply fortunate like my friend, Wale. Dr Babalakin was also sponsoring over 200 students in various Nigerian universities.

    Dr Babalakin has done similar eye programmes in his hometown of Gbongan in Osun State and Owo in Ondo State, where his maternal grandparents were born before they migrated to Zaria. BOB’s mother was born in Zaria. She met and married his father there.

    In recent times, Dr Babalakin has made significant contributions to the education sector. BOB built an 80-bed hostel at the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) in honour of his father, Justice B.O.Babalakin, a retired Supreme Court judge. He also built a 500-capacity auditorium at the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, in the memory of his mother.

    Dr Babalakin’s days as the pro-chancellor of the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID)  and the chairman of the Committee of Pro-chancellors remain indelible. His exceptional contributions to education during his four-year tenure are quite numerous. There is no doubt in my mind that he changed the perception that the appointment of pro-chancellors is purely political and is meant to massage the ego of prominent citizens. Dr Babalakin showed that a pro-chancellor must have vision and genuine commitment to the development of education.

    During his tenure, over 50 major projects were inaugurated at UNIMAID.

    Dr Babalakin’s ingenuity providedelectricity to UNIMAID and ensured an average of 20 hours supply daily without recourse to generator. UNIMAID is the first university in the country to enjoy this. To BOB’s credit, the university’s library was upgraded. He provided counterpart funding for the project. Dr Babalakin also contributed to the development of the university’s College of Medicine.

    Other projects actualised during his tenure include the building of new faculties of Pharmacy, Clinical Sciences, Fine Arts and Dentistry; two 500-seater auditoriums, 1,000-capacity auditorium, the development of an e-library, a new campus radio station, the dualisation of the university’s entry gate and the provision of solar-powered street lights.

    To boost UNIMAID’s IGR, a 53-bed hotel was built in Abuja on land that was allocated to the university in 1978. The university had had over 15 pro-chancellors before him, but it took the vision and determination of BOB to implement the project.

    He built more structures in the university during his tenure than was achieved since the establishment of the institution.Dr Babalakin did all these without collecting a dime of the allowances due to him. For him, Nigerians need to make sacrifices to reposition the education sector. And that was exactly what he did.

    It is worthy of note that during his four-year tenure as the chairman of the Committee of Pro-Chancellors and that of the Implementation Monitoring Committee (IMC) of the 2009 Agreement between the Federal Government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), ASUU never went on strike. That was the first time in the history of the Nigerian education system that the universities were free of strike. Dr Babalakin maintained an open communications channel and put his negotiating skills to good use.

    His love for expanding the country’s knowledge base can be better understood if juxtaposed with his personal story: At 26, the chairman of Bi-Courtney Limited already had a doctorate degree in law from the University of Cambridge. For his sacrifices, the university community and the citizens of Borno State hold him in high esteem.

    For a man who has done this much to better the society, I am at a loss as to why he was the target of so much persecution.Also, I find it intriguing that while he was undergoing personal and financial crises, he still found it in his heart to assist others. The fact that he was charged to court by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on allegations that have been proved to be baseless did not deter him from the path he is convinced is the right one. He was declared wanted by EFCC 30 minutes after speaking with the commission’s agents. This could only have been designed to embarrass him and was certainly an abuse of state power.

    In addition to the blows from the EFCC, the Assets Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) also waged a callous war against him under the guise that his companies were indebted to some banks. In a desperate move, AMCON tried to take over his assets in a manner that the courts have described as an abuse of the judicial process. As it turns out, it is AMCON that is indebted to Dr Babalakin and his companies, not vice-versa.

    I salute Dr Babalakin’s rare courage, brilliance, conviction and charity. Most men in his shoes would be cowed by these events and won’t contemplate assisting the less-privileged. But not Babalakin. Instead the fire of compassion in him rages on.

    For people like me who he has made a tremendous impression on, we will forever pray for him and wish him well. He is the sort of man our country needs. If more rich people toe his path, we will all be better for it.

    What more can I say? More power to your elbow!

    Adeyeye, an I.T. engineer, sent this piece from Port Harcourt.

  • Prolonged depression major cause of suicide, says psychologist

    A Clinical Psychologist with the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital, Ado Ekiti, Mr Ajiboye Adedotun,has advised families of those living with depression to encourage them to always go for test.

    Adedotun, who spoke in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said depression, if not properly managed, could lead to suicide.

    He said that depression test was a tool that could help to determine symptoms, as well as when to help anyone suffering it.

    According to him, depression is a mood disorder that causes a persistent feeling of sadness and loss of interest.

    Adedotun said depressive disorder affected feeling, thinking and behaviour of a person and could lead to a variety of emotional and physical problems.

    “When you are depressed, you may have feelings of extreme sadness that are severe enough to interfere with your daily life for weeks or months, rather than days.

    “Depression affects people in many ways and can cause a wide variety of symptoms.

    “There is no single cause, though common triggers include traumatic or stressful life events, such as bereavement, illness or redundancy,’’ Adedotun said.

    He said that only a professional doctor could determine whether a patient had “major depression, mild, chronic depression, seasonal affective disorder, bipolar disorder or some other type of clinical depression’’.

    Adedotun said depression might require long-term treatment, adding that most people with depression feel better with medication, psychological counselling or both.

    According to him, if one takes poisonous substances or tries to take his or her life in the presence of people, such a person is seeking for attention and not to commit suicide.

    “The risk factors for suicide vary by age, gender and ethnic group, and risk factors often occur in combinations.

    “Suicide does not just happen as a result of a sudden issue but it must have been accumulated and thought of which could probably lead to depression,’’ Adedotun said.

    He said mental disorder could also be a primary factor that could lead to suicide.

    Adedotun also said alcohol was a depressant, so it could make depression worse.

    “Drug use alone or in combination with alcohol use for someone suffering with depression can be lethal.

    “Too often people attempt to alleviate the symptoms of depression by drinking or using drugs, which can increase the risk of suicide by impairing judgment and increasing impulsivity,’’ he said.

    Adedotun said most depressed people could not see the symptoms but people around them could be of help by giving words of comfort.

    He said that being friendly to a depressed person could reduce suicidal tendencies, adding failing to treat or mistreatment depression could put a person at increased risk of suicide.

    “In some cases, well-supported psychotherapies, such as cognitive behavioural therapy or interpersonal therapy can considerably alleviate the symptoms of depression.

    “However, a medical doctor, should supervise any course of treatment,’’ Adedotun said.

    He said other therapies had the goals of changing negative ways of thinking, or overcoming isolation by developing interpersonal skills.

    Adedotun said that group therapy had been shown to be effective in helping those who had difficulty forming relationships.

     

  • Promoting compulsory teaching of  indigenous language in Osun schools

    Promoting compulsory teaching of indigenous language in Osun schools

    Renowned African author, Prof. Ngugi wa Thiong’o, recently urged African countries to promote their indigenous languages for meaningful social and economic development.

    He spoke in Lagos at the second edition of the “Read Africa’’ initiative of the United Bank for Africa Foundation to promote reading culture among pupils.

    The Kenyan writer and author of  “Weep Not Child’’, expressed concern about the rate at which African nations abandoned their languages for foreign languages.

    According to him, people are enslaved if they are proficient in other languages but are not interested in understanding their indigenous languages very well.

    “I stopped writing in English language 10 years ago because Africa is our base and we must not lose our base and our indigenous languages.

    “Since then, I have been writing in Nkiyu language and I later do translation myself or I look for somebody to do it for me,’’ he said.

    Wa Thiong’o, nonetheless, argued that people who acquired other languages had additional advantages, insisting that such people would be able to appreciate the values of their indigenous languages better.

    Observers, therefore note that such advocacy from a reputable African author, perhaps, inspires most societies to protect and give priority to the teaching of their indigenous languages in schools.

    They cite the development in Osun, where the state House of Assembly passed a bill to an act to enforce compulsory teaching of Yoruba language as a subject in public and private schools in the state.

    The house, having examined the importance of the bill entitled: “Osun State Education Amendment bill 2014’’, passed the bill to an act on September 15.

    Mr Afolabi Atolagbe, the Deputy Leader of the House, representing Ifedayo Constituency, moved a motion for its passage while a member of the house, Mr Abiodun Awolola, representing Egbedore Constituency, seconded it.

    Highlighting the importance of compulsory teaching of Yoruba language as a subject in schools, Atolagbe said the law would prevent the language from extinction and preserve the cultural values and tradition of the Yoruba.

    Mr Najeem Salaam, the Speaker of the House, said the house would also set aside a day in a week to conduct its proceedings in Yoruba Language.

    Salaam said a section of the act stated that: “Any person, being the proprietor of a public or private school, who contravenes any provision of the bill, shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable to a fine of not less than N10,000, if convicted.’’

    Irrespective of the provisions of the act, residents of the state have commended the lawmakers in the state for their courage to pass the bill.

    In his view, Mr Femi Adegboye, a civil servant in the state, commended the lawmakers, urging the appropriate authorities to ensure that schools enforce the provisions of the act.

    According to him, authorities should make pragmatic efforts at ensuring the teaching of Yoruba language as a subject in schools to prevent it from extinction.

    “Policy makers in education should take urgent steps to revive and improve the language by teaching it among the schools across the states, especially where it is spoken’’ he said.

    Sharing similar sentiments, Mr Oluwasegun Ayanda, a historian, said the compulsory teaching of the language would go a long way in enriching the vocabulary of the language.

    He decried the rate at which Nigerians switched from their indigenous languages to other languages, especially English language, warning that such practice would alienate them from their immediate environment.

    Ayanda commended the lawmakers for passing the bill, noting that such step would stimulate pupils and students to use the language in public activities.

    He recalled that the People’s Republic of China was able to achieve the present level of development because the people used their mother tongue for education and other transactions.

    He, therefore, urged the state government to ensure that all schools in the state teach Yoruba language as a subject.

    “Those who have the mastery of other people’s languages at the expense of their own indigenous languages have subjected themselves to second slavery.

    “We should promote our languages and we should encourage our children to speak our own language,’’ Ayanda said.

    Commending the state assembly members, Mr Oluwaseun Adeniran, a secondary school teacher in the state, said the law would correct the impression that English language was superior to Yoruba language.

    He observed that some school authorities had relegated Yoruba language to the background, observing that with the passage of the bill, the situation would change.

    Observers, nonetheless, urge the relevant stakeholders to ensure that necessary mechanism is put in place to enforce the provision of the law.

    Mr Ibidapo Ojekunle, an educationist, observed that some members of the society had considered their languages as inferior to English language and preferred to use the latter in most interactions even with their family members.

    He commended the state lawmakers for the passage of the bill, noting that it would change the views of the young about the language and expose them to its vocabulary.

    Skeptics, nonetheless, express concern that although the courage of the lawmakers in passing the bill is laudable, the law may not be effective as most observers hope.

    They insist that except the state government and stakeholders in education take appropriate steps to enforce the law, it may not be different from previous ineffective laws.

    According to them, the state government must convince the public that it has plans to ensure that the schools in the state adhere to the provisions of the act.

     Adeoti is of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)