Tag: Addressing

  • Addressing the challenges of girl-child education

    Halima Musa is 11 years old with a desire to go to school. That desire, she fears, would soon be taken away not because of her own doing but because of factors that are far out of her hands. She feared she would soon be forced into marriage like her older sisters who have been made to abandon school for an early marriage.

    “My father has three wives, my mother is the first wife and she has seven children, we are a poor family and though we do not starve, education is for the boys while we girls are meant to marry, once we come of age,” she in an emotion laden voice.

    “The girls in the family hawk groundnuts and any other thing that is in season that our mothers give us to sell, so I use the opportunity to tag along my friends when they go to school and listen to all their complains and experiences in school. I really envy them, but who will change my life”.

    Like Halima, Umma Aliyu’s (not real name) chances of becoming a doctor is also in doubt. Like Halima, Aliyu’s desire for a university education would not be possible.

    She told this reporter at a programme organized by a Nongovernmental organisation on sexual violence perpetuated against children in schools at the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) of her desire to become a medical doctor.

    Aliyu begged guests and her secondary school mates who attended the programme to prevail on her parents to allow her achieve her dreams.

    “Please am begging you to do something to stop our parents from pulling us out of school and marrying us off.

    “I want to be a doctor, but I know my parents will never allow me to go to the university to read medicine and fulfill my dreams.”

    Halima and Aliyu’s case is one of many prevailing cases of neglect of girl-child education in the North. Despite various interventions by the Federal Government to see that both boys and girls get equal opportunities in schools, the percentage of boys in school is still higher than that of the girls.

    A United Nations Organization for Education, Science and Culture (UNESCO report in 2014  girl enrollment in schools said over 5.5 million girls are out of school, while 40 per cent women and 28 per cent men had never attended school. This was illustrated by the National Population council (NPC).

    The report went further to say that nearly two thirds of women in the North-West and North-East regions had no education compared to less than 15 per cent in the South-South.

    The report also put Net Enrolment Rate at primary school level at 56 per cent for girls and 61 per cent for boys. It added that dropout rates are highest at the sixth grade of primary school and higher among girls than boys.

    Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Professor Paul Pindar Izah, explained that the best gift you can give any girl-child is education.

    Prof. Izah called for urgent need to address all the issues affecting women and girls.

    Izah, who is an expert on advocating for the rights of girls said: “Though a lot has been done, we still need to do much more, we know as a fact that a lot of girls in the north don’t go to school, and when they do go, they end up dropping out to get married.

    “It is in line with the traditions of the Ahmadu Bello University Zaria for us to come up with initiative that will help build this nation, women make up 50% of our populace and if we neglect them then we are doomed.”

    Also, Acting President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo at the launch of the HE for SHE campaign recently in Abuja to mobilize one billion boys for girls, advocated for gender equality.

    According to him, over 40 per cent of girls on the average are illiterates, and illiteracy means that they will not find decent well-paying jobs, in many cases they will be married off early, many will be discriminated against in inheritance rights or punitive widowhood practices.

    “They will work the hardest on the farm and no doubt in the market but they will earn far less than men, even the most educated or best educated women will sometime, probably or severally in the work life be subjected to one form of gender base discrimination or other, many may add to the growing statistics of domestic violence,” Prof. Osinbajo had said.

    He added that giving women equal opportunities is not a privilege but a right.

    ”It is an entitlement, a debt paid to women, and it is not a gift, it is an entitlement, it is perhaps the greatest leap of development in contemporary history when boys and girls can today take gender equality for granted, women and girls will be free to reach their full potentials, to get decent education and earn equal pay for equal work, the full potentials of the other half of the population of the world, will finally be unleashed and the implication of this will vastly improve the quality of life for all,” he added.

    Also, Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Senator Aisha Jummai Alhassan, said at the event that women are asking for the opportunity to contribute our own quota to the development of our country.

     

    “We cannot be equal to you, even religion sees men as natural leaders but women too if given the opportunity can also do quite well, we want the opportunities to go to school, move up in our careers and reach our potentials that is all we are asking for,” she had said.

    Dr David Okoror, of the International Institute for Security and Governance Studies advocating for the rights of women and girls, said a conference on women in security, defence, law enforcement, would provide a forum to further address the important issues of the girl child education; violence against women; and provide a platform to build solid network and address other peculiar gender issues that will promote performance of women.

    Okoror, who is also the Director of the conference said: “Even though we seem to have achieved some levels of development in our national life, the Nigerian woman is perhaps more imperil today than ever before in our living memory.

    ”If you recall the case of the Chibok girls, the increasing reports of rape of minors and domestic violent target against women and the increasing incidences of homicides you will agree that we have a serious situation at hand. Largely several factors can be adduced for the unacceptable situation of our women and the girl child today.

    Dr Okoror said poor implementation of policies, the negative role of some religious teaching, conflicts, bad governance and ignorance among others had not helped in promoting the issue of girl-child education in the country.

    “The unfortunate incidences of human trafficking has not abated inspite of the efforts of law enforcement and the obvious danger which even many willing ‘victims’ can see,” he added.

  • Addressing education ills in Nigeria

    Addressing education ills in Nigeria

    Medical practitioners the world over are wont to proclaim that a good prognosis precedes a good diagnosis; and they want us to take that root, stem and branches. Borrowing a leaf from the physicians, social commentators and public affairs analysts would make us believe that a drastic disease calls for an equal drastic measure of cure. Both positions are probably incontestably right.

    A cursory look at the country will show that education and security could be said to be critically sick and, therefore, deserve equal measures of treatment to get them back to acceptable and comfortable shapes.

    From the foregoing, it is, therefore, no small wonder then that just as the Police High Command is organising a two-day “Security summit on how to stop pastoral farmers/herdsmen clashes in Nigeria” in Abuja on May 8 and 9, the frontline legal icon and Founder of Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola (SAN), has called on the National Universities Commission (NUC), the university regulatory authority in the country, to convene an education summit where the various ills plaguing the nation’s educational system will be addressed in the overall interest of education.

    The security summit is most assuredly a welcome development in the face of the threatening menace of various shades and shapes of violence, including kidnapping and the orgy of Boko Haram and its attendant loss of lives, and means of livelihood amounting to several billions of naira in both ambulatory and non-ambulatory property.

    Babalola, who spoke recently at the farewell reception for the immediate past Executive Secretary of the NUC, Prof. Julius Okojie, and the reception for his successor, Prof. Abubakar Rasheed, in Ado-Ekiti, said  the summit had become more imperative than ever before for the country to tackle the hydra-headed problems bedevelling its education and, thereafter, take its rightful place in the comity of providers of quality and functional education world-wide.

    The reception was organised to appreciate Okojie for the support he has consistently given to the university and to welcome Rasheed for his love for ABUAD. More importantly, it is to impress it on Okojie to use his wealth of experience to continue to support Rasheed to ensure continuity and to be able to identify problems afflicting education in Nigeria with the overall aim of offering constructive advice on how to overcome such problems.

    His words: “I want to seize this opportunity to appeal to the two NUC giants, Prof. Okojie and Prof. Rasheed, to continue to work together. Prof. Okojie should continue to use his wealth of experience to advise his successor. The umbilical cord of their working relationship must remain unbreakable as this is one of the veritable ways the much desired change in the country’s education landscape can be consummated and actualised.”

    Leaning heavily on his seven-year experience as Pro Chancellor and Chairman of Council of the University of Lagos (UNILAG) and as the Founder of ABUAD since 2009, Babalola, a man who will not stand idle when his voice must of necessity be heard, identified the major problems afflicting the educational landscape as funding, attitude of Nigerians to giving, university autonomy in relation to the power of the Governing Council and Pro Chancellors; the quality of students being admitted into Nigerian universities in the face of JAMB lowering cut off mark to 160; the place of good quality teachers and curriculum development; as well as the emerging technologies, which are redefining virtually all professions in this “knowledge age”.

    “All over the world, every university has the right to screen the candidates it wants to admit. It also has the right to embark on other exercises, whether written or unwritten, to make it and its products stand out. It is for this reason that any student applying to study Law in the University of Oxford is mandatorily required to take the Law National Aptitude Test (LNAT), any student applying for Biomedical Sciences must take Biomedical Admissions Test (BMAT), any student applying for Chemistry must take Thinking Skills Assessment (TSA) while any one applying for Classics must take Classics Admission Test (CAT)”, he added

    He added: “It must be emphasised that many of the students being recommended for admission in the universities by JAMB are certainly not university materials. Universities need to be populated by students who have received proper and quality primary and secondary school education; and that was why I was shocked and amazed when JAMB reduced the cut-off for admission in universities to 160 last year. This is rather bad. The minimum cut-off mark should not be below 200 for universities while a cut-off mark of between 160-180 should be for polytechnics and colleges of education”.

    Babalola, who has always maintained that education is too important and expensive business to be left to governments alone to fund in the face of innumerable and competing other needs, decried a situation where $7,130,137,243 amounting to N1,212,123,331,310 budgetary expenditure of North California State University in 2012 dwarfs the Federal Government of Nigeria’s N495,456,130,065 budget for 50 federal universities, including the Universal Basic Education for the same year; and which translates to 40.88 per cent of the budget allocation of the former.

    With this scenario, the protagonist of quality education postulated that it would be impossible for Nigerian universities to compete favourably with any of the top universities in the world let alone drive innovation and maintain qualitative levels of delivery without donations, endowments or gifts from sources other than the government.

    Babalola, who also denounced the attitude of Nigerian to giving, lamented that “an average Nigerian does not believe in giving and that is what makes a lot of difference in Europe and America where individuals wilfully will their estates in support of university education.

    ‘’Today, it remains incontrovertible that the best universities abroad thrive on grants and donations. And so, funding of universities in country can be improved upon if Nigerians change their attitude about giving. The funding of education cannot and should not be left to government alone,” he said.

    He added: “The time to act is now, that we can through donations, gifts and endowments change the face of education in Nigeria. If universities have to rely on grants, endowments and other kinds of gifts, then the societies in which they exist must imbibe the culture of philanthropy. This culture of philanthropy is unfortunately insufficiently practised in Nigeria. This failure to imbibe it is a threat and challenge to funding of educational institutions.

    “The government should let Nigerians know that they cannot be bearing children for government to educate. Besides, government itself should change its attitude towards the funding of education. It must make deliberate efforts to comply with UNESCO’s recommendation of 26 per cent of the country’s yearly budget allocation to education. In addition, governments at all levels should stop deceiving the people about offering them free education which no government has been able to do after the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo (SAN), who devoted as much as 52 per cent of the resources of the then Western Region to successfully prosecute free education in that region.

    “…the change we need is not about corruption only. We need change about giving, about endowment, about institution of professorial chairs in our universities. Our case should not be different from what obtains in other parts of the world. My plea to you is that you should use your good offices to impress it on the government to increase the annual budgetary allocation to education while there should be more financial commitment on the part of the generality of the people, particularly the well-to-do in the society”.

    On Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), which private universities has not been able to benefit till date, Babalola said the time has come for NUC to reverse that trend. He said private universities are non-profit entities limited by guarantee and are clearly distinct from limited liability companies where shareholders share money at the end of every business year.

    According to him, any private university, which operates on its permanent site with a minimum of 20 of its academic programmes accredited by the NUC and has also commenced its postgraduate studies, should enjoy unfettered access to TETFund.

    Babalola recommended more of such summits to brainstorm on the way forward in Nigeria’s education future, adding that there lies the much-desired change, peace and harmony in the land.

  • Addressing the grazing challenge

    Addressing the grazing challenge

    For want of a grazing field, cattle have been invading farmlands. Such invasions have led to clashes between cattle rearers and farmers. Some experts are calling for the establishment of grazing zones in the North to address the problem, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    The livestock sector makes large net contributions to food supply. Red meat provides protein for about 150 million people. The cattle that supply red provides food, and also other products, such as leather, traction and manure.

    Traditionally, farmlands in the West and South provide pasture and water for the cattle, which graze the land.

    But the challenge of feeding the cattle has negative social, environmental and animal welfare implications. This is because the cattle roam large areas, causing damage to properties as well as natural resources.

    Last month, farmers in Ondo State  counted their losses after the invasion of their farms by Fulani herdsmen. The siege led to the destruction of crops worth millions of naira by their cattle.

    The cattle grazed farms, trampling on crops, which included maize. The Ondo State Agricultural Commodities Association demanded N2 billion compensation from the Federal Government for the colossal loss suffered by cocoa and oil palm plantations owners affected during the raid.

    In a communiqué signed by its Chairman, Akinola Olotu and the Secretary, Obaweya Gbenga, the group called for “urgent government assistance” for the affected farmers. The group said the menace of the nomads transcended grazing on crops, with “a new dimension of bush burning, rape and physical attack with machetes, robbery, kidnapping and destruction being recorded across the state”.

    The group called for measures to tackle the nomadic Fulani herdsmen.

    According to the group, the activities of the normads make them more dangerous and destructive as they destroy properties during raids.The farmers said they were living in fear of the Fulani cattle rearers.

    They said they could no longer entertain Fulani herdsmen and their cattle because they’re not law-abiding.

    The group has despatched a petition to the National Assembly on the matter.

    Olotu noted that the activities of Fulani herdsmen had become a serious problem and that the nomadic system of cattle rearing was obsolete.

    Also, farmers and residents of agrarian communities in some local government areas of Ogun State, also had some gory tales to tell on the menace of Fulani cattle rearers. Following their invasion, many lives were lost while properties worth millions of Naira were destroyed allegedly by Fulani marauders. It was gathered that the Fulani herdsmen move with their cattle from one of these agrarian communities to the other wreaking havoc.

    Indeed, conflicts over grazing and watering resources have become a major livelihood challenge for farming communities and pastoralists. The struggles for grazing lands have brought conflict between the Fulani pastoralists and crop farmers.   Cattle rearers from the North come to the South to graze.

    This is because of the low level of productivity across pastoral areas in the North, caused by  heat, aridity, low soil fertility, and unusually sharp seasonality. Associated with this is rainfall variability and periodic droughts that disturb long-term growth of herds.

    To address this, the Federal Government is introducing improved pasture seeds from Brazil to increase availability of fodder for cattle.

    Globally, improved pasture seeds, help dairy farmers increase nutrition levels, growth rates and reduce reliance on supplementary feeding. Besides, pasture is the most efficient, effective and economic source of feed for grazing-based livestock enterprises.

    For the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, improved pasture is important to grazers, livestock owners and breeders.

    With improved pasture seeds, he stressed that Nigeria can get excellent grass and legume seeds that are guaranteed to improve the vitality of the national herds under proper management.

    Even if planted in marginal areas with poor  soil and harsh environmental conditions, he noted that they were able to produce forage of high quality.

    Ogbeh stressed that the government was promoting improved pasture seeds to help cattle rearers and promote profitable livestock production.

    Consequently, the seeds will be made available to seed suppliers and cattle producers.

    In addition, the Minister explained that the government would acquire deep water rigs and build windmills to operate wells that will provide water for the planned grazing grounds.

    He added: “The massive paddocks for animal grazing will not only improve the quantity and quality of beef and milk produced in the country but will also make cattlerearers more sedentary.”

    Ogbeh said the Federal Government would embark on programme to develop massive grazing grounds for cattle to bring rearing and its attendant problems, such as Fulani herdsmen/farmers clashes to an end.

    Mainly, the improved pastured seeds programme is targeting pastoral herders in dry land hotspots of the North.

    This is besides the effort to find new ways to help communities living in the North to become more resilient and to increase their agricultural yields and incomes.

    The Director, Animal Production and Husbandry  Services Department, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Egejuru Eze, explained that the Brachiaria grass cultivars from Brazil  that government planned to introduce into the country is known for its productivity, vigour and high nutritive value and  would also improve the nitrogen level, over- all healthy structure of the soil.

    Mrs Eze said Brachiaria grass, which has good nutritional value that will result in higher weight gain per year per area, also has the ability to thrive in various ecological zones while the cultivation will be on commercial basis and privately led.

    She said: “We also have different type of seeds that can grow in different ecological zones of the country, we are going to bring improved pasture seeds/cultivars and plant them in different ecological zones where they will thrive to improve the pastures we have in those areas.”

    The director pointed out that improved pastures seeds were needed to be introduced and tested to increase pasture on commercial basis.

    She said Brachiaria was under evaluation in Brazil for over 18 years and was derived from an accession introduced from Nairobi, Kenya, citing the oil palm seed that was taken from NIFOR in Nigeria to Malaysia for development many years ago.

    She said Brachiaria grass is an excellent option that needs to be evaluated under Nigerian conditions.

    The director said governments would exploit the growth of Alfalfa, a leguminous pasture, which is suitable for dairy cattle production in the temperate areas such as Mambila Plateau, Adamawa, Jos Plateau and Obudu.

    To solve the problem, the  President, Federation of Agricultural Commodity Association of Nigeria (FACAN), Dr. Victor Iyama, canvassed that state governments in the North collaborate with FACAN to develop pasturelands systems that would support grazing of livestock by both landed and landless keepers.

    Experts believe Nigeria requires an increase in livestock production, especially, beef and dairy.

  • Are candidates addressing issues?

    Are candidates addressing issues?

    Is President Goodluck Jonathan utilising effectively the opportunities available to him to ensure that his re-election bid sails through seamlessly? Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI looks at the President’s campaign vis-à-vis that of his main challenger, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari. 

    With the general elections about two weeks away, the campaigns are in full swing. The competition to occupy the moral high ground is intense. This is not unexpected; elections and campaigns are noisy enterprises. But,  the campaign for next month’s general elections is assuming a worrisome dimension because the candidates are not addressing the issues. The two major political parties — the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) — may have been paying lip service to running an issue-based campaign, but for most part they have been abusing each other and heating up the polity.

     

    Diversionary tactics

    Indeed, the PDP has been criticised by many observers for what have been described as a diversionary tactics; to shift away the focus of the campaign from the burning issues, such as corruption in high places, the insurgency in the Northeast, the inability of the government to rescue abducted Chibok school girls, unemployment and the fate of the power roadmap.

    The APC has been making an effort to focus on issues. Judging from the messages filtering to the public, its campaign appears to be more focused, specifically on the issue of fighting corruption, tackling the insurgency and giving the country a new direction generally.

    The same cannot be said for the ruling PDP. For most part, the party’s campaign has been focused more on the personality of the APC standard bearer, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, than anything else. Initially, it was the allegation of religious bigotry and plan of islamising Nigeria that was on the front burner of the campaign. Later, attention shifted to Buhari’s age, his health and capacity to function in a modern economy. Now, Gen. Buhari and the APC presidential campaign team are being compelled to focus on the issue of the candidate’s educational qualification.

    Besides, the campaign posters, billboards and newspaper advertisements of President Jonathan appear to lack coordination and focus, compared to that of his major opponent in the election. According to experts, the content of the campaign communication materials suggest that they do not pass through a central coordinating authority or clearing house, as expected in a campaign of this nature.

     

    Smear campaign

    In particular, it is generally believed that the advertisement by the Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose last week, suggesting that Buhari could die in office, is politically damaging to the President’s re-election bid. It has been widely condemned as insensitive. The advert suggested that Buhari could die in office, as was the case with three former Nigerian leaders from the Northwest geo-political zone. Two days after the advert appeared in two national dailies, the National Human Rights Commission carpeted Fayose and a Roman Catholic Priest, Rev. Fr. Ejike Mbaka, who had earlier used his pulpit to preach politically partisan messages, saying they contravened provisions of the Electoral Act prohibiting the use of hate speech in campaigns.

    The commission, through its chairman, Dr. Chidi Odinkalu, said the recent advertorial sponsored by Fayose and Mbaka’s comments on candidates constituted hate speeches barred by sections 95 to 102 of the Electoral Act. Odinkalu added: “Father Mbaka has violated the Electoral Act twice with his comments first in favour of President Jonathan and the second in favour of Gen. Buhari. Section 92 to 102 prohibits hate speeches. It prohibits the use of religious places for political campaigns.”

     

    Buhari under attack

    Buhari has come under attack as an ex-military Head of State for seizing power from a democratically-elected government in December 1983. For the PDP, it is perhaps a case of a leopard and its spots. The party, which has been in power since 1999, has been whipping up the politics of fear, harking back to the days of the former army general’s crackdown on corruption and indiscipline. “No matter how many pretty robes you wear, once a tyrant, always a tyrant,” one PDP newspaper advertisement said, with photos of Buhari in military uniform, a dinner jacket and ethnic attire. Others evoked the fear of jailing political opponents or his muzzling of the media during his 20 months in power. Whether the tactic will pays off for the PDP remains to be seen.

    But, for political observers, the standard of the campaign is a worrying development, arguing that it does little to help enhance already shaky confidence in the country’s leaders. “I think it has a negative impact on the political process and citizens aren’t able to see the quality of people running for election,” said Clement Nwankwo, Director of the Policy and Legal Advisory Centre, a pro-democracy group. “What they see are personal attacks, falsehoods and political smearing… that has not elevated the debate,” he noted. For Nwankwo, the APC has fallen into a PDP trap by responding to the claims, instead of rebutting the allegations by continually questioning the government’s achievements.

    Dapo Thomas, a lecturer at the Lagos State University, called it a “gutter campaign” borne out of fear in the PDP that it could lose power for the first time in 16 years.  The electorate may be able to see through it, he suggested, particularly as some of the issues had not been raised on the three previous occasions that Buhari contested the presidential election. “They (the PDP) have seen the writing on the wall,” he added.

    The President committed a monumental blunder at the Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos, when he flagged off his campaign, by not seizing the opportunity to explain to Nigerians the reasons why they have not started feeling the positive impact of his Transformation Agenda and what he intends to do, if re-elected. Rather than focusing on issues, he chose to take a swipe at past administrations, including that of his major opponent, for poorly equipping the military. This is in addition to indicting his generation for failing to do something to contribute to the development of Nigeria. In what seems like a clear failure of anger management for a public figure, the President has been hurling invectives in all directions.

     

    Missing link

    Even, supporters of the President are not happy over the way his re-election campaign is being prosecuted. The mood at the President’s interactive forum with the organized private sector and leaders of professional bodies last Sunday suggests that his re-election bid is losing steam. The impression that assailed many observers at the event is that the problem of the administration is that of poor perception by the public and that the problem is self-inflicted. Some of President Jonathan’s ministers were on hand to reel out achievements of the administration, which are to some extent verifiable. They include the Minister of Finance and the Co-ordinating Minister for the Economy Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Minister of Petroleum Resources Mrs. Diezani Allison-Maduekwe, Minister of Agriculture Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, Minister of Trade and Investment Dr. Olusegun Aganga and Minister of Works Mr. Mike Onolememem. The ministers tried desperately to convince the audience that the administration has posted a scintillating performance in the last four years.

    But, given the achievements that were enumerated, the missing link, as pointed out by the Managing Director of Emzor Pharmaceuticals Limited Mrs. Stella Okoli, is communication. The impression was that those in charge of the government’s publicity are not doing a good job of it. The thrust of the achievements is that the administration has succeeded in diversifying the economy, as the recent rebasing suggested. In his response to the comment, President Jonathan admitted that his administration may not have done enough in terms of publicity. His words: “If I tell you the number of times that my ministers appeared on television to showcase what the administration is doing, you won’t believe it. But, still it doesn’t penetrate. Probably, they are using more of television; we must find a way of doing this, so that people would know what government is doing.”

     

    Lack of articulation

    It was also obvious at the interactive forum, which was well attended by many captains of industries, that the President did not equally live up to his promise of holding such forum with the corporate world as regularly as he had promised. Jonathan acknowledged this by apologizing to the house that he could not sustain the interaction, which was supposed to take place quarterly. The Corporate Forum’s evening with President Jonathan, which also doubled as a fund-raising event, was almost a desperate plea by the ruling party to secure the backing of the private sector. Captains of industries that graced the occasion include Oba Otudeko, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, Mr. Femi Otedola, Mr. Jim Ovia and Mr. Atedo Peterside.

    In terms of their manifestoes and programmes, observers say there is no much difference the PDP and the APC; as they are still preoccupied by what has been described as “infrastructural democracy”, which focuses on the provision of roads, power, education, healthcare, housing and the like. For instance, oil industry operators have taken a swipe at the presidential aspirants, saying that electioneering campaigns are not issue based, but more of mud sliding.

     

    Vote of no confidence

    Some of the operators expressed dissatisfaction that Nigerians are being taken for granted, as the aspirants are not identifying specific policies that will save the oil-dependent Nigerian economy from doom in the light of current realities of sliding oil prices. One of such respondents, the Managing Director/Chief Executive of Frontier Oil and Gas, Mr. Dada Thomas, said, “I’ve watched and listened to all the campaigns by the presidential aspirants in the different regions, and I’ve not seen or heard any issue based campaign from any of them.”

    He added: “Such a development is a shame because what the private sector operators and Nigerians want to hear are: what are the issue, problems and challenges; what are the solutions and what we are going to do from level 1 to level 2; and what is the time bound for effecting these solutions? But they are not saying anything, and are busy attacking their personalities. Is this what Nigerians want to hear, or the aspirants saying that Nigerians do not understand the issues affecting their daily lives?”

    While acknowledging that the campaigns are not issue-based, the President, Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE), Mr. Chikwe Edoziem, noted that the aspirants are playing safe by concentrating more on common place issues that will appeal to the electorates. He said: “Nobody is making any economic comments or in deed any comment on the industry (oil and gas), which is the bedrock of the economy in the light of global developments. Rather, they talk about roads and other basic infrastructures which is taken for granted in other climes that the common man can relate to.”

    Edoziem, however, blamed the trend on lack of understanding, saying, “They (the aspirants) are not saying anything possibly because none of them is well grounded on economic operations, and may want to stick to what they know.” Nevertheless, a confrontation on the economy would become inevitable for all the contestants, especially Buhari and Jonathan, when they square up to each other face-to-face, to tell Nigerians how they intend to implement their party manifestoes.

  • Addressing the problems of the education sector

    Addressing the problems of the education sector

    SIR: A recent report quoted the National Universities Commission (NUC) Executive Secretary, Professor Julius Okojie as stating that 60 percent or more of university lecturers are without PhD. What right to good quality of education does this give us the future leaders of this great country? In what ways does this prepare us for the future? I think it is time we start asking ourselves tough questions.

    The earlier we as one people realise that we can’t heal what we refuse to confront, the earlier the journey to the rehabilitation of this once flourishing and bright sector. It hurts to find that our educational institutions especially our colleges and universities are behind international standards in technology, research, development amongst many other things.

    Is there a solution to this problem putting the future of this country at a great risk? Personally, my answer is ‘yes’. But as one people, one nation, the decision depends on us. The moment we say ‘yes’, then we just unwrapped our determination to make things work for this precious sector. We will also be showing the zeal in laying a solid foundation in education for generations yet unborn.

    What policies and structures are we to put in place to make this intended transformation a reality? Why don’t we take a journey into history and try to figure out what brought upon us this predicament and then proffer solutions to each of them.

    Political instability will be the first thing that comes to mind. Since independence till the end of the military era in 1999, we have experienced gross political instability. The ever recurring military succession and coups have affected our educational systems negatively. We do not have long term ministers of education; they spend just a short period of time in office before being replaced. Usually, one comes on board and just decides to change everything according his or her taste without considering the changes and policies that the previous minister had kept in place and it goes on and on. To solve the problem of leadership instability is to prevent the future ministers of education and all other people from changing policies and structures that have been in place without necessary or important reason.

    Another point that comes to mind is the inadequate fund provided to the higher institutions. And even the funds provided by the government are not channelled properly due to corruption and looting at every level. My solution to this problem might sound absurd, but if properly considered is worth a shot. Students in higher education institution should be billed heavily; in this way the public institutions will be able to run their institutions without waiting for grants and funds from the government. Government can come in by giving financial aids and scholarships to students in need or exceptionally gifted either in extracurricular activities or academics.

    This way, the schools will have sufficient funds to run their programmes with the aid of modern research equipments and machinery. The institutions will also be able to send their lecturers abroad to gather more experiences and to upgrade their ways of doing things. As for the students who borrowed money to finance their education, they would be expected to pay back with very little interest charged as soon as they are employed. This is one sure way to enhance the quality of education.

    • Oluwayemisi Joseph

    Egbeda, Lagos