Tag: Afe Babalola

  • Afe Babalola decries dilapidated infrastructure in Nigerian schools

    Chief Afe Babalola, the Founder and Chancellor of Afe Babalola University, (ABUAD) Ado Ekiti, on Wednesday lamented the dilapidation of infrastructure in many Nigerian educational institutions.

    He expressed his displeasure during the 7th International Conference on Infrastructural Development in Africa (ICIDA), held in Lagos.

    Babalola was represented at the event by Prof. Adeolu Durotoye, Provost, College of Science and Management Sciences, ABUAD.

    The chancellor said dilapidated infrastructure was responsible for the alarming rate of Nigerian students going abroad to study.

    He blamed the rate of dilapidation in schools and other vocational institutions over the years on neglect by successive regimes.

    Babalola urged government to address the problem by increasing  budgetary provisions for education.

    “For Nigeria to catch up with the rest of the world in terms of quality education, government must comply with the 26% UNESCO benchmark for education.

    “I recall that Chief Obafemi Awolowo devoted 54 percent of the budget to education.

    “Targeting a certain percentage of GDP each year would ensure that the education infrastructure deficit is slowly reduced, while demands for new infrastructure are met,’’ he said.

    Prof. Joshua Ayarkwe, Chairman ICIDA and Provost, College of Art and Built Environment, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana, also spoke at the event.

    He said approaches to infrastructure development in Africa are Eurocentric.

    Ayarkwe said that the conference, an intellectual discourse, was aimed at rethinking infrastructure development in Africa.

    “We have come to realise that there is no way we are going to develop without an inclusive thinking, so we need to really look beyond what we are doing.

    “We need to position ourselves and look beyond the
    current mode of development and embrace the fourth industrial revolution,’’ he said. (NAN)

  • Afe Babalola urges Nigerians to invest in education, healthcare

    Legal luminary and founder of Afe Babalola University in Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola (SAN), has urged well-meaning Nigerians to join him in promoting quality and functional education, industry, service and character as well as discipline in humanity.

    He said this would leave the society better than they met it.

    Babalola spoke yesterday at the brief ceremony that heralded the beginning of operation at the 400-bed ABUAD Multi-System Hospital in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital.

    The eminent lawyer noted that if more well-to-do Nigerians channel their resources towards the establishment of quality universities and health facilities, there would be no reason for people to send their children to foreign lands for education or medical service.

    According to him, with the modern equipment in his nine-year-old university and the state-of-the-art equipment at his Multi-System Hospital, which was inaugurated on October 21, last year, the university has been rated Number One Private University in Nigeria by Webometrics, while the hospital has been primed to provide quality health care that would end medical tourism outside Nigeria.

    Babalola opened the doors of the hospital, which is managed by ABUAD and Aster DM Healthcare of Dubai, for a four-day procedures at discounted rates and free consultation from yesterday till March 24.

    He said: “I must make it clear that this hospital is open to everyone – the rich and the not-so-rich alike. We will run this place like we run our chambers where we handle the cases of the not-so-rich at minimal charges while those who can pay are made to pay.

    “In the short and long run, the rich and the not-so-rich will be happy. The rich will pay less than they would have paid going abroad for the same treatment, while we will be able to subsidise the cost for people on the lower rung of the ladder.”

    Those at the ceremony included Babalola’s wife, Yeye Aare Modupe; ABUAD’s Vice Chancellor Prof. Michael Ajisafe; his two deputies – Prof. Yekini Lawal (DVC Academic) and Prof. Smaranda Olarinde (DVC Administration); some members of the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the university; Dr. Gboyega Babalola, a member of the Governing Council of the university and the Catholic Bishop of Ekiti Diocese, Bishop Felix Ajalaiye.

  • Buhari not to blame for insecurity, says Afe Babalola

    •ABUAD founder gets North’s youths’ award   

    The Founder of Afe Babalola University in Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola (SAN), has urged Nigerians to stop blaming President Muhammadu Buhari for the killings in some parts of the country.

    He said military took over of government in 1966, which ushered in a lopsided unitary system in the country and abrogated the regional system, was responsible for the bloodletting in the guise of herdsmen and Boko Haram insurgency.

    Babalola spoke yesterday in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, while hosting a group, Northern Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN).

    The body honoured the eminent lawyer with the Sir Ahmadu Bello Platinum Award as the ‘The Icon of Greater Nigeria’ and Garkuwan Matasan Arewa Najeriya.

    Babalola said: “The essence of government is to guarantee the security of life and property of the people. President Buhari is not to blame for this insecurity but the military.

    “Before the military took over in 1966, Nigeria was operating a regional system, with each region growing and developing at its own pace.

    “These regions were closer to the people. Killings or insurgency was alien to our culture then. Nigerians love one another, though they were divided politically.

    “I want to say that if those regions were allowed then, the country would have had a nation or nations that are well developed today.”

    The eminent lawyer regretted how Nigerians were dying from leadership failure, particularly civil servants and pensioners, due to non-payment of their entitlements.

    He said: “Many pensioners have died, having been owed several years of pension arrears. Even those in the service are owed seven or eight months’ salary arrears. So, just like I said earlier, our leaders have turned us into beggars.”

    On the vision of ABUAD, which was to build the youths into reliable future leaders, Babalola said many rich men in the North have the financial wherewithal to establish such fast-growing university.

    He added: “There are many rich people in Nigeria who can establish this kind of university with the vision to bring quality education as well as moral and cultural values to the doorsteps of Nigerians.

    “If we have this kind of university in each of the six geopolitical zones or every state, Nigeria will change for better.

    “Go to the North and propagate the ideals which my university stands for. Nigeria must be united at all cost for us to make a headway and overcome all our challenges.”

    The group’s leader Steven Babangida said the award was in recognition of Babalola’s contributions to humanity and the unity of the nation.

    He said: “At a time Nigeria youthd are facing relegation from the scheme of things, Babalola continues to exhibit youth-friendly vision, which gives us a renewed hope as leaders of tomorrow.

    “Chief Babalola is a symbol of a true Nigeria, where unity, love, integrity, compassion and brotherhood take a seat at the high table. He is a true representation of Sardauna’s philosophy, which was about religious and ethnic tolerance.”

     

     

     

  • Oba Ogunwusi is Ooni of our dream, says Afe Babalola’s wife

    Oba Ogunwusi is Ooni of our dream, says Afe Babalola’s wife

    The leading role the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Eniitan Ogunwusi, Ojaja II, has been playing since he mounted the throne of his forefathers to ensconce unity in the Yoruba Nation and the country at large got a boost over the weekend when the wife of the Founder of Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Yeye Aare Modupe Babalola, described the frontline royal father as the “Ooni of our dream”.

    The setting was the second edition of the Women Empowerment Programme titled, “Women Empowerment as a Catalyst for Improved GDP in Nigeria”, a programme initiated by the Ooni to ensure that women are not limited or restricted to the informal sector of the nation’s economy alone, but encouraged to continue to play a pivotal role in the economic development of the country.

    To arrive at her conclusion of Oba Ogunwusi as the “Ooni of our dream”, Yeye Aare Modupe Babalola, who was the chairman of the occasion, said: “Why do I describe Kabiyesi as the ‘Ooni of Our dream?’ It is simply because in the olden days, it was the people that were bringing royalty to the Obas. But here is an Oba with a difference. Here is an Oba with a burning passion and desire for the development of his people. Here is an Oba that will stop at nothing to see that people make it life. Today, he is championing the empowerment of women. Kabiyesi, I salute you sir”.

    Yeye Aare Modupe, who conceded that her role at the Women Empowerment Programme was largely ceremonial because of the array of the resource persons on parade to do justice to the topic of the day, called the attention of the audience, which included the Ooni himself and the Director General of the National Directorate of Employment, NDE, Dr. Nasir Ladan Mohammed, to the fact that all over the world, especially in the developing countries, including Nigeria, young girls face various socio-economic challenges of exploitation, violence and abuse.

    She listed other challenges faced by girls as rape, discrimination and harmful traditional practices such as female genital mutilation, food taboos leading to childhood loss and an endangered future. She pointed out that as they grow up especially those from poor households, they are heavily burdened with economic and domestic duties and labour which rob them of childhood education.

    Her words: “Largely unschooled, many of these girls are married off early, for financial and cultural reasons. They arrive in marriage without education and their bodies inadequately developed for child-bearing. They are also faced with the dismal prospect of obstructed labour leading to Vesico Vaginal Fistula (VVF), unsafe abortion and maternal mortality.

    “Many are trafficked internally and across borders for cheap labour, hazardous jobs and sexual exploitation. Girls also suffer domestic violence, live or work on the streets, in addition to millions whose tender lives are destroyed by rape, HIV and AIDS, and drugs. All of these, in her view, impact negatively on women’s contributions to our country’s GDP.

    “There is no doubting the fact that unemployment and lack of productivity will reign supreme among any people that promote ‘baby mothers’ by consenting to early marriage by their adolescents girls instead of encouraging them to go to school or learn some worthwhile vocation that will stand them in good stead in life”.

    She, therefore, enjoined the womenfolk to wake up from its slumber and appreciate that it is the symbiotic combination of economically and socially productive men and women that will turn the tide of poverty and unemployment around for better for the country.

    The above discrimination against women notwithstanding, Yeye Aare, who was happy that women continue to make their marks across all professions and making significant contributions to the economy particularly from the informal sector of the economy which they dominate, could not fathom the trend in many banks whereby women are precluded from having babies within certain periods of time to allow the banks to use them to drive their deposit for many years before they start procreation.  This, according to her, is not only insulting, but it is also embarrassing to the womenfolk.

    This should not be so. It is indeed unfair for men to dominate politics and take the commanding positions in almost all other sectors of the economy to the exclusion of women. The fact that women are found in some high offices both in the public and the private sectors of the economy is a testimony to the fact that women are no less intelligent than their male counterparts. They are equally no less productive in terms of hard work and getting results in their chosen careers.

    There is no doubting the fact that an improvement in women representation in all sectors of the economy will enable them to address the socio-economic problems associated with their prolonged discrimination and encourage them to improve themselves and show that they are not limited to the kitchen, farms and petty trading but that they are as competent as their male counterparts and that they can hold their turf in any sector of the economy.

    She appealed to  leaders at all levels to always pay attention to the 30% “Affirmative Action” from the 4th World Conference on Women in Beijing 1995 and United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the National Policy on Women as well as the third goal of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG).

    Commending the Ooni for the Women Empowerment Programme, she said: “The Ooni has sown a good seed today. It is left for us to go back home and water it, nurture it for it to be able to bear fruits, more fruits, much fruits and variety of excellent fruits so that together we can indeed change the world to achieve greatness and excellence in future. Through this initiative, we, as women will be able to impact the country’s GDP positively and contribute to the growth of our economy”.

    Olofintila wrote in from Ado-Ekiti

  • ABUAD signs MoU with Dubai hospital to end overseas medical tourism

    ABUAD signs MoU with Dubai hospital to end overseas medical tourism

    Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti ( ABUAD ), has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Aster Group of Hospitals in Dubai, United Arab Emirates to halt medical tourism abroad by Nigerians.

    ABUAD Founder, Aare Afe Babalola (SAN), said the partnership will make the Afe Babalola University Teaching Hospital ( ABUADTH ) and Aster to sign a pact in the areas of training, consultancy, offering of technical expertise and in medical administration.

    The MoU was signed on Tuesday, where it was agreed that Aster will offer short and  long terms as well as permanent partnership for smooth take off of ABUADTH .

    Speaking  after  the memorandum was signed, Dr. Navin Pascal, who spoke on behalf of the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Aster, said the hospitals has subsidiaries in nine countries and had been receiving over patients from over 90 countries across the world.

    He said it was sad that Nigeria loses over 35,000 doctors to advanced countries due to poor remunerations, saying the trend has been affecting healthcare service in the country.

    “Aster has become a referral centre in the middle East. Our partnership with ABUAD will be in the areas of training, technical and administration.

    “What we will do is to train the doctors here so that ABUAD can be self sufficient in having experts that can perform critical operations that can make the rich and middle class Nigerians to see the hospitals as a better alternative.

    “We appreciate the fact that ABUAD is working hard for humanity and Aster partnering with it will bring a paradigm shift in Nigeria’s health sector”, he said.

    ABUAD Founder disclosed that a delegation will leave for Dubai in January 26 to perfect the MoU for enforcement .

    Babalola said: “In this partnership, ABUADTH and Aster are equal partners. Though, we agreed for long and short terms, but the memorandum may be forever depending on its workability.

    “Nigerians can’t afford to be spending so much on medical tourism and I have faith that this partnership will take  the country will be a leading nation in healthcare services”.

    He said the breaking down of medical equipment in critical areas like dialysis , oncology and cardiology was becoming embarrassing,  urging Aster to bring in experts in biomedical engineering to train the experts in ABUADTH to prevent such from occurring in the hospital.

  • Afe Babalola among Africa’s most influential persons, says Adams

    Afe Babalola among Africa’s most influential persons, says Adams

    • ABUAD founder backs OPC chief as Aare Ona Kakanfo-designate

    The Aare Ona Kakanfo-designate of the Yoruba, Gani Adams, has said the founder of Afe Babalola University in Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola (SAN), is “one of the most influential people in Africa”.

    Adams, who toured ABUAD yesterday when he visited Babalola with his entourage, also described the eminent lawyer as “an illustrious son of the Yoruba nation”.

    The Aare Ona Kakanfo-designate described the ABUAD Teaching Hospital as a world-class health institution that can end medical tourism among Nigerians.

    He urged the hospital’s management to charge fees that poor Nigerians can afford.

    The Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC) coordinator said he was at ABUAD to seek Babalola’s advice as he prepared for his installation as the Aare Ona Kakanfo of the Yoruba on January 15.

    Adams said: “I came to seek elderly wisdom from Chief Afe Babalola, who is considered to be one of the most influential people in Africa.

    “He’s not only as legal luminary but also as somebody who has done a lot to unify the Yoruba nation.

    “I am here for his advice. He has taught me a lot about the history of the Yoruba race. For you to be put in an influential position and you don’t know the history of the Yoruba, you will not be resourceful.

    “He has taught me, even post-installation agenda, because it is one thing to be installed as the Aare Ona Kakanfo and it is another thing to perform in that position.

    “I am here to see an illustrious son of the Yoruba nation. I begged Baba not to relent on his efforts regarding the unity of the race. The Yoruba nation is great with about 250 million people across the world:  those in Nigeria are just 60 million; those in the Caribbean countries are about 100 million. In Brazil, with over 200 million people, the Yoruba are about 18 per cent of that population.”

    On his impression of ABUADTH, Adams said: “Afe Babalola University Teaching Hospital will become a medical tourist destination with the kind of equipment I saw here. I can compare it with the one I saw in Germany.

    “Afe Babalola University Teaching Hospital will ease the problems of health challenges in the Southwest and other parts of Nigeria.

    “I have just appealed to the management that it should allow the fee to be moderate. With the kind of equipment I saw there, I can imagine what a patient will pay for a medical check-up. We don’t need to check out again for medical check-up with what is in the teaching hospital.”

    Babalola said: “Everybody knows he (Adams) has been nominated by the Alaafin as the next Aare Ona Kakanfo. He came personally to give me my invitation to attend his installation. I am 100 per cent in support of the appointment of Gani Adams by the Alaafin.

    “If you followed the history of this young man, he has been very dynamic, highly focused. I think this is part of the characteristics that made Alafin to appoint him.

    “My advice to him is that he is holding a very sensitive position in Yoruba land, the position held by great people who made Yoruba a nation. He will continue to do what others before him did: think of making the race greater and to defend its cause.”

  • Fayose, Afe Babalola, others for book launch

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose is among dignitaries expected at the book launch on poverty eradication.

    The governor is the special guest at the launch of the book, titled: Why the Poor Are Still With Us, written by Senator Bode Ola.

    The event comes up tomorrow at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre in Abuja.

    Bode Ola represented Ekiti Central in the Sixth National Assembly.

    The book will be reviewed by Prof Gbenga Ibileyee, of the Federal University in Lokoja.

    Former Senate President David Mark will chair the event while the founder of Afe Babalola University in Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola (SAN) will be the chief presenter.

    Eminent scholars and personalities in the socio-economic sphere as well traditional rulers are expected at the event.

  • A living legend: Afe Babalola

    A living legend: Afe Babalola

    In every generation, God has a way of blessing mankind with a few akoni-eda (exceptional colossus individuals) whose ways and accomplishments would be confounding to their fellow countrymen. Aare Afe Emmanuel Babalola, the founder of Afe Babalola University (ABUAD) is one of such rare distinguished few in Nigeria. He is an Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic (OFR) and Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON). Aare was the former pro-chancellor and chairman of the governing council of the University of Lagos, Nigeria. Onetime chairman of the committee of pro-chancellors of Nigerian universities. Winner of the best pro-chancellor award in 2005 and 2006 and winner of Queen Victoria commemorative award at Socrates award of European business assembly in Oxford, UK; member of the Rector of Europe, October 2007; vice president, Rector of Europe 2010; and honorary professor of an international University. His over $2b investment in education has resulted to over 6,727+ beneficiaries and to his credit are large quantity of crops and animal production of different species in his integrated mechanized farm.

    Inline images 3

    Aare Afe Babalola B.Sc (Econs) Lond; LL.B (Hons) Lond; FFPA, FNIALS, FCIArb, LL.D; Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN); Doctor of Letters (LL.D)

    In September 2017, he bagged the latest award of a Doctor of Letters (Honoris Causa), in appreciation of his “service to the nation and significant contributions to human development” from Nigeria Defence Academy University, Kaduna during their 28th Convocation ceremony. Earlier honorary awards include Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) University of Ado-Ekiti, Ado-Ekiti, 2000; Doctor of Letters (honoris causa) (D.Litt) Kogi State University, 2012; Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) University of Lagos, February 2013; Doctor of Laws (h.c) University of Jos, March 2013 and Doctor of Management (honoris causa), Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA), 2014 as well as Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) University of London.

    He has handled over 10,600 court cases as a solicitor and general advocate, many of which were landmark cases some of which could have scared away the cowardly. He is also an honorary alumnus of Christ’s School Ado-Ekiti. The exemplary Ekiti man brought honour to Nigeria when he bagged Doctor of Law from the University of London. The award made him to belong to the elite class of honorary recipients of the degree of the University of London, having been preceded by only two Africans in the history of the University, Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu. The award from London has made Chief Afe Babalola a living legend. This distinguished status and outstanding recognition has been described by the emeritus  Prof Michael Omolewa as “a symbol of victory over all forces that hinder growth, a real demonstration of the point that one can make it to the very top by perseverance, and without the initial advantage of rich parents, powerful contact and connections, and even against all odds, the limitation of wealth and the disadvantage of place of birth or ethnic origins. The award also offers the recognition for the investment in neighbours and the wider society of kindness, sensitivity, and passion for the pursuit of excellence.”

    Aare Afe Babalola who is a giant today had a very humble beginning, his life story of success will remain an inspiration for indigent students and struggling Africans; where there is a will there is way, God being one’s helper. He started off as a teacher enrolled for the Senior Cambridge School Certificate examination by private study with the help of tuition courses which he ordered from the Wolsey Hall, Oxford.

    Afe Babalola University Teaching Hospital (ABUATH) Complex

    He  left Ado-Ekiti for Ibadan on January 5th 1948 with determination not to return to his hometown until he had obtained a university degree. After passing the Senior Cambridge School Certificate examination, he obtained B. Sc degree in Economics through private study. His determination through private study later earned him degree in Law from the University of London as an external candidate. Subsequent to traveling for the mandatory stay at an Inn in England, he returned to Ibadan to establish his legal practice, Emmanuel Chambers. His diligence and dedication to law profession earned him Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) and his law firm has trained over a thousand eminent lawyers more than twelve of whom became SANs and four of whom became Attorney Generals and Ministers of Justice of the Federal Republic of Nigeria

    A prominent member of Ekitipanupo Forum and an unequaled pillar of support for the preeminent Ekiti indigenous intellectual roundtable. ABUAD hosted 10th anniversary celebration and 2nd public lecture of the forum in 2015. It was indeed a rare honour for Ekitipanupo Forum to appreciate the distinguished Ekiti man who holds 2015 Ekitipanupo Timeless Merit Award and made him the chairman of the first Ekitipanupo colloquium held in 2016.

     

    Unveiling the plague

    Afe Babalola University commissioned 400-Bed Teaching Hospital in the Ado-Ekiti campus on October 20th 2017. The hospital is built on 60 hectares of land and consists of 9 blocks. the central block is five floors while the remaining eight have four floors each making total of 37 expansive floors.

    In order to give the teaching hospital complex an international touch in health care, teaching, training and research, ABUAD has entered into partnership with organisations which include:

    World renowned Abbot laboratories in conjunction with Afriglobal Diagnostic Services to provide modern laboratory equipment.

    Aster Hospital Group, Dubai and India is providing healthcare of international standard for which they are internationally acclaimed especially in surgery. To mark the commissioning, Aster will carryout 50 free operations.

    Project C.U.R.E. United States of America provided modern hospital equipment installed in the new ABUAD hospital.

    Naruia Export , India provided and installed five Modular Theaters as well as Pneumatic Tubes.

    JNC International provided CT scanners, MRI and other radiology and diagnostic equipment.

    Trigenesis India provided dry wall partitioning and cubicle track

    Protech Gas supplied medical gas and oxygen

    Adler England provided steam boilers

    College of Pharmacy, Howard University, USA will set up a joint pharmacy department and factory to manufacture drugs

    Bridge of Life (BOL) USA will supply kidney dialysis machine Care 4 You Association of Demark will supply equipment and gadgets.

     

    • Continued online
  • Afe Babalola canvasses need for Ekiti airport

    Afe Babalola canvasses need for Ekiti airport

    The founder and Chancellor of Afe Babalola University in Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola, has urged the Federal Government to revisit the airport project it planned to establish in Ekiti State.

    Babalola, who spoke at the weekend at ABUAD’s fifth convocation, regretted the state of the federal road to the institution.

    The eminent lawyer has been repairing the road in the last eight years.

    He regretted that the Ekiti airport project had been stalled by politics while other states, whose similar projects were approved, had either made theirs operational or got them to various stages of completion.

    Twenty-one-year old Ahwin Kevin Akporode, of the Department of Mechanical Engineering, was the best graduating student with a Cumulative Gross point Average (CGPA) of 5 points among 869 graduates.

    An American philanthropist and President of Project CURE, a humanitarian organisation, Dr. Williams Douglas Jackson, as well as a former Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof. Peter Okebukola, were conferred with honorary doctorate degrees.

    While Jackson got an honorary Doctor of Medicine degree, Okebukola got honorary Doctor of Letters degree.

    Making a case for the airport, Babalola said: “I apologise for the bad roads, which you had to go through to get to ABUAD. As a matter of fact, the federal road from the town to this place is so bad that the university has been responsible for its repairs and maintenance for the last eight years.

    “Yet, our university is the only one that can boast of having students from all 36 states. Thank you for your perseverance.

    “It is for this reason we have been pleading with the Federal Government to revisit the airport, which was approved for this state with Bayelsa, Delta and Gombe in 2007.

    “Whereas the other three states have completed their airports, that of Ekiti State was politically aborted because of the then Governor Kayode Fayemi, who said the airport was not his priority even though the Federal Government had allocated N680 million for its take-off.

    “Ladies and gentlemen, I plead with all of you today to please plead with the Federal Government to revisit the airport project.”

    The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi, urged the Federal Government to set up a special fund to cater for private universities.

    He said: “With what Chief Babalola has done in this university, nothing is too big for the Federal Government to do for a private university of this stature.

    “This university is an exemplar in learning and character. It is moulding Nigeria’s future leaders in the best fashion. I believe it won’t be out of place for the Federal Government to give special intervention funds to private universities.”

    Ahwin attributed his feat to ideals he imbibed from his parents and Babalola.

    He said: “I owe this achievement to my parents. My father’s strict military background and my mother’s guide as a teacher helped me a lot.

    “When I got to ABUAD, I also applied the aphorism of our founder, which is: industry, determination, learning and character. All these helped me a lot.”

  • Septuagenarian wins best farmer in Ekiti, gets N1m

    Septuagenarian wins best farmer in Ekiti, gets N1m

    A 73-year old farmer, Alhaji Olayinka Adeyemi, has emerged the Overall Best Farmer of the year in Ekiti state, winning N1 million prize.

    Alhaji Olayinka has been in farming since 1965.

    Chief Afe Babalola, Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), the organiser of Afe Babalola Agricultural Exhibition code named “ABA-EX 2017” gave the prize to the winner on Sunday at the closing of the exhibition at the Afe Babalola University ( ABUAD ), Ado Ekiti.

    The agric exhibition, where Adeyemi won the prize was organised by Gov. Ayo Fayose.

    The Septuagenarian was among about 300 other farmers shortlisted for the government exhibition from among leading farmers in all the 16 local government areas of the state.

    Two farmers each from the 16 council areas got N150, 000 and N100, 000 for wining first and second positions at the local level.

    Babalola offered to start buying farm produce from farmers in the state.

    This, the legal luminary said would save farmers in the state the agony of produce wastage and loss of profit on their produce due to lack of storage facilities and ready market.

    Babalola, who is also a big-time farmer,said he decided on buying the farm produce to improve the well being of farmers and make farming attractive again like it used to be before the discovery of oil.

    He noted that most Nigerian farmers were usually compelled to sell their produce at ridiculous prices because of lack of facilities to preserve them.

    The (SAN) also identified lack of working capital, storage facilities and modern farm implements as reasons why many had abandoned farming for odd jobs in the city.

    He also said lack of access to ready market for their produce contributed to farmers abandoning the occupation, thereby making them poorer.

    “As from now, I wish to announce to all farmers in Ekiti State that they are free to bring their farm produce in bulk to us here. We are ready to by them and pay you appropriate prices.

    “We have all the facilities in ABUAD farms to accommodate as well as process whatever volume of both cash and food crops that we have with us.

    “We do not only prepare them for local consumption, we also prepare them for export.

    “I am always moved to pity when I see hard-working farmers not making commensurable profits on their farms despite toiling day and night to ensure they have good harvest.

    “I do not want this ugly situation to continue,” he said.

    Fayose, who was represented by his deputy, Prof. Kolapo Olusola thanked Babalola for his intervention in agriculture and education sectors in the state.

    He described Babalola as the best, most critical partner and a stakeholder in the running of government.

    NAN