Tag: crisis

  • Crisis behind Nigeria’s poor performance – Babangida

    Crisis behind Nigeria’s poor performance – Babangida

    Former International, Tijani Babaginda has identified the incessant crisis engulfing the NFF as the major reason behind the poor performance of the country’s various national football teams.

    The former Ajax Amsterdam winger said that no football playing nation can survive in the midst of an unending crisis. Quoting him : “The failure of our various national teams is unexpected, considering the crisis that has engulfed the NFF right from the inception of the present administration.

    “Since Amaju Pinnick took over the mantle of leadership, it has been one problem or the other, and they have been moving from court to the other. So, in the midst of all these, it would be extremely difficult for the game to develop. Football is a team game, and it would take a total synergy of all the stakeholders for the game to move forward. But with the situation we have now, it is extremely impossible for us to progress.”

    He finally called on all the aggrieved parties to come together and iron out their differences in the interest of the youths and the game in the country.

  • Adeojo quits politics over PDP’s unresolved crisis

    Adeojo quits politics over PDP’s unresolved crisis

    The former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Deputy National Chairman (South), Chief Yekini Adeojo, at the weekend, said he has decided to quit politics after several decades.

    Adeojo, who was until now a founding father of the PDP in Oyo State, said his decision was not unconnected with the recent happenings within the party.

    In a chat with The Nation at the weekend, the PDP chieftain, who made several attempts at reconciling the factionalised PDP both within and outside Oyo State, noted that he was “fed up with politics”.

    He said: “That is why you didn’t  see me at the Port Harcourt convention. I have since discovered that it is not worth it after all. I want to face my private life and my business. That is it; it just doesn’t worth it.”

    Adeojo, who is the Seriki Musulumi of Yorubaland, admitted that he intentional didn’t want to make any statement when he was appointed by Governors Olusegun Mimiko and Ayodele Fayose to chair a committee to select a candidate from Lagos and Ogun states at the Akure PDP meeting co-chaired by the two governors.

    “Yes, I was aware of that meeting. Even the meeting in Ibadan, did you see me there? I felt it is time to quit. Let me face my business and private life. I think that is the best thing to do,” he said.

    Adeojo, a traditional Ibadan chieftaincy holder, had made several attempts to become the Oyo State governor, but each time he contested, he had issues with the late strongman of Ibadan politics, Chief Lamidi Adedibu.

  • Ondo APC crisis: Southwest APC chairmen back Kekemeke

    Ondo APC crisis: Southwest APC chairmen back Kekemeke

    •Chieftains: party ’ll conduct free, fair governorship primary

    The Forum of State Chairmen of All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Southwest Zone has backed its embattled member in Ondo State, Isaac Kekemeke.

    It called for calm among APC members in the state.

    The forum, in a statement yesterday, said it would not support the idea of calling for a new chairman at this critical time because Kekemeke had worked hard for the party’s popularity across the state.

    The statement was jointly signed by the chairmen in the five other states in the zone: Chiefs Oladele Ajomale (Lagos), Akin Oke (Oyo), Gboyega Famodun (Osun), Jide Awe (Ekiti) and Roqeeb Adeniji (Ogun) and the Zonal Secretary, Mr. Ayo Afolabi.

    It expressed concern about the crisis and appealed to members not to allow the fifth columnists to infiltrate the party with the aim of preventing it from winning the forthcoming election.

    Allaying the fears that the primary might be manipulated in favour of any particular governorship aspirant, the forum emphasised that Kekemeke would not have any role to play in the primary because the party’s national leadership would conduct it.

    “We like to state that the party will conduct a free, fair, open and credible primary election devoid of any interference from any quarters as was done in Kogi and Edo states.

    “The state party chairman has no role whatsoever to play in the process and conduct of the primary election as the team to conduct the primary will be put together by our party’s national headquarters.

    “Up till now, Kekemeke had performed creditably well in mobilising the party. He and his state executive had increased and expanded the party’s acceptance to the generality of the people of Ondo State. The party will, therefore, not be favourably disposed to any clamour for the change of its structure and leadership at this critical time.

    “We appeal to all our party members and the governorship aspirants in particular to remain calm, prevail on their individual supporters to allow peace to reign for the conduct of a transparent primary election that will usher in a candidate that will be acceptable to the generality of the people of Ondo State,” the statement read.

  • Kogi’s unending salary crisis

    SIR: I plead with President Muhammadu Buhari to please intervene in the deteriorating situation in Kogi State concerning payments of salaries and pensions of workers and pensioners respectively.

    Kogi State government started a staff screening exercise since February and up till now it is on-going. Nobody quarrels with that, but our concern is the hardship the poor people are going through.

    For example, pensioners in Kogi State are 9000+.After the first round of screening, the state government came out with 4,000 paid. The remaining 5000+ pensioners are still unpaid till today. Majority has not been paid pension since December 2015 and some since January -no reasons have been given for this up till today. It must be emphasized that all the 9000+ pensioners appeared in flesh and blood before the screening committees. They are no “GHOST” at all. They were all screened.

    The Local Government Staffs & Primary School Teachers Pensioners are about 6000+. Only 2,700 were paid leaving out a total of 3,300+ pensioners unpaid-since March. They all also appeared in persons before the screening committees. They were equally screened.

    The state government has not come out with any reason(s) why these pensioners have not been paid.

    Many of these pensioners are old, some weak and sick either in the hospitals or in their homes. Many are on daily drugs and some had to pay some aides to assist them. Pensioners are dying in Kogi on daily basis as a result of frustration, hunger and sickness.

    Same goes for the workers. Up till today, no staff has been paid in any of the 21 Local government Education Authority offices since March.In some hospitals, none of the nurses are paid like in Okene General Hospital while in some schools, only 20% of the staff have been paid. There are some schools, especially, science schools where only one teacher has been paid, while in some primary schools teachers were randomly paid. This situation is all over Kogi State. There is hunger, disease and frustration all over the state.

    Please, do your independent investigations and not rely on your staff in Lokoja as all the newspapers correspondents in Lokoja may have been compromised. One wonders why the newspapers have not countered the propaganda of the government that everybody had been paid.

     

    • Tant’olorun Esan,

    Lokoja, Kogi State.

  • Still on the OAU crisis

    One image that lingered on the screen of my mind for a few days as I consciously monitored the crisis invented by the Non-Academic Staff of University (NASU) and Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU) of Obafemi Awolowo University over the process that produced Prof. Ayobami Salami as the 11th Vice-Chancellor (VC) of the university is that of the mob in William Shakespeare’s plays. Specifically, the mob depicted in the eponymous Julius Caesar possesses everything but tact, character, discipline, and structured thinking.

    As a matter of fact, as the seminal play shows, the first casualties of the mob’s actions are those adumbrated virtues. To achieve their nihilistic goals, the mob dispenses with discretion and organised thinking, speaks in decibels higher than their numerical strength, and believes its own lies and passes them off as truths. As the mob loathes civility, so does it detests justice. It does not care about the corroding consequences of choosing evil as good.

    Let’s not pretend about it; the actions of NASU and SSANU members in OAU against the process that threw up Prof. Salami were glaringly in tandem with that of a mob. These unions repudiated civility, embraced indiscipline, and acted lawlessly. The present fragile resolution puts in place by Abuja also satisfies the hankering of the mob.

    In their organised violence, they demanded two things and got them.

    They wanted the Governing Council of the university dissolved. President Muhammadu Buhari, the visitor, granted it without first investigating their claims that the body was incompetent and manipulated the process leading to the appointment of a new Vice Chancellor. They demanded an Acting VC and the visitor obliged them. The two unions boasted they could commit punishable offences and get away with them. They did – they disrupted a meeting of the Governing Council at a point and locked up the members before the Ooni of Ife came to secure their release the following day. The offences of disrupting a lawful meeting and the one of false imprisonment were freely committed by the unions without any corresponding condign legal retribution.

    Even the defunct leadership of NASU in the university hardheartedly beat up representatives of their national executives and seized their vehicle. No comeuppance greeted that behaviour.  The unions said they could determine when the school opens and close. They got it. It was on account of their conducts that the university was shut down in June. They have also swanked that they would only ‘hand over’ the control of the school to the Acting VC of their liking. They abhor dialogue as a means of solving social problem. It is the reason they went to court but decided to take laws into their hands, declaiming that the court would not dispense justice.

    The two bellicose unions did call on the visitor and the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu (someone The Punch newspaper in one of its editorial aptly carpeted for his ‘reckless desecration of university values’), to intervene in the contrived crisis (to quote Femi Macaulay, a columnist with The Nation newspaper) before they carried on too far with their campaign of impunity. The improper intervention of the visitor via the Education Minister in the OAU matter is another striking illustration of the present central administration’s telling incompetence in crisis management.

    The sacking of the OAU Governing Council without an investigation to establish whether it was guilty of the imagined crimes levelled against it by the two unions in the university was hasty and improper and remains an example of how the Visitor picks and chooses when it comes to obeying the law of the land. The law is clear that the Governing Council of a federal university whose tenure has not ended can be disbanded by the visitor where an investigation proves that it is incompetent and corrupt. In fact, the Universities Autonomy Act No.1, 2007 (Section 2A) clearly states that ‘The Council so constituted shall have a tenure of four years from the date of its inauguration provided that where a Council is found to be incompetent and corrupt it shall be dissolved by the visitor and a new Council shall be immediately constituted for the effective functioning of the university’.

    One recalls here the unlawful sacking of 13 vice chancellors of federal universities and their Governing Councils last March. Not even the admittance of the wrong by the visitor compelled a reversal of the illegality.

    Let it be noted that the new peace in OAU is brittle. The solution generated by the visitor is insubstantial. It is a rape of justice that will still boomerang. The visitor ought to know by now that anywhere justice is contemptuously denied as in the case in OAU, unity and peace cannot reign. The cockeyed action of the OAU visitor, to wit doing the bidding of a party to a case without even the least understanding of the core issue, has widened the gulf of disunity in that university. He has done exactly what Chinua Achebe’s Obierika in Things Fall Apart says of the coloniser: ‘He has put a knife on the things that held us together and we have fallen apart.’ The undisputable fact is that, to borrow the words of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the visitor and the unions in OAU have only ‘scotched the snake, not killed it’. And because the brazenly belligerent unions were not made to account for their follies and lawlessness, they will soon behave like the camel of the Bedouin in a story which after his master acceded to its request to allow it warm its nose in the room later brought in its whole body and deprived its master of his abode. It is a matter of time; the mob is forever besotted to the logic of anarchy and impunity. Anytime SSANU and NASU in OAU or those of the branches in other universities rake up impossible demands and insist on who they want as VCs but get turned down, they will resort to the rule of the mob and make the universities ungovernable.

     

    • Alawode writes from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife.
  • Insecurity and food crisis

    When the 1994 Rwanda genocide began, the international community didn’t pay much attention because most of the foreign journalists that would’ve reported it left with those evacuated. It later took a video from one of the last journalists to leave for the world to realise that a massacre of unimaginable proportion was taking place. But before they could act, the rebel Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) saved the day by marching into Kigali, the capital and thereby setting off a refugee crisis – also of immense proportion – that would later engulf the entire Great Lakes region.

    The point I’m trying to make is that journalist play a key role is letting us know what is happening in our world because events that go unreported often end up unnoticed. This is the case with two issues I will be dealing with today; the alleged herdsmen killings in some parts of the country and the hunger crisis in the northeast as a result of the Boko Haram (BH) insurgency.

    It took a massive demonstration of Idoma’s from Benue State for the searchlight to be beamed on the killings that took place in Agatu – one of its local government councils. After waiting for help for weeks, the people mobilised and converged at the National Assembly complex in faraway Abuja to bring their plight to the public domain; in essence, they took their destiny in their hands and ensured their voices are heard and government live up to its primary responsibility of protecting lives and properties of citizens.

    During the peaceful demonstration in March this year, they reminded Senators that over 300 of their compatriots have been killed with 5,000 internally displaced. Unfortunately, the killings still persists and if unchecked a food crisis looms – if it is not already happening – in that largely agrarian society. Farming is their mainstay and it does not take a prophet to prophesy that if they do not farm this farming season, the result would certainly be a food crisis. How can they even farm when they do not know when the alleged herdsmen would be “visiting?”

    Their Tiv neighbours in the same state are suffering the same fate. I received reports from Gaambe-Tiev community in Logo local government area which is one of the numerous areas these alleged herdsmen have struck more than twice. I was told that the Restoration Church in Anyiin is now serving as an IDP camp with over 3,000 people there – there is no IDP camp close by. Just like with the Agatu’s, a food crisis looms if they people cannot farm this year.

    When the present administration in Benue State came to power last year it rolled out an amnesty programme where citizens were urged to surrender all weapons in their possession. They were rewarded with cash ranging from N10,000 to N100,000 depending on the weapon submitted. The wisdom was to have a state devoid of communal crises. But some are now alleging that the Benue situation is pathetic and smirks – according to some – of a silent conspiracy because the people’s flank have been left open with no weapon to defend themselves in the face of largely unprovoked alleged herdsmen attacks.

    At a point “Benue Massacre” trended on social media platforms with Nigerians accusing the government of insensitivity by commiserating with foreign governments over deaths of their citizens while turning a blind eye to what is happening in their own country. This was the case with the Bama and other killings as well.

    My focus on Benue is not to relegate to the background other killings in Plateau, Kogi, Enugu and other areas, but to draw attention to an issue that demand urgent national attention.

    Most Nigerians living in the northeast will not readily forget the year 2009. It was in that year that the Boko Haram tragedy snowballed into a full blown insurgency. Over the years, it has led to widespread displacement of hard working citizens, violations of international humanitarian and human rights law and most importantly a growing food crisis. Recent successes recorded by Nigerian troops in the fight against the group forced the government to declare a food and nutrition emergency in Borno State when access was restored to communities cut off for over two years.

    Seven years of conflict has left farmlands devastated resulting in high food prices, inflation, and major disruptions to livelihoods and farming. Evidence from the March 2016 Cadre Harmonisé Integrated Food Security Phase Classification and United Nations’ agencies rapid needs assessments indicates that an estimated 617,000 children are currently suffering from acute malnutrition. An estimated 250,000 children in Borno alone are acutely malnourished, according to recent UNICEF reports. Those numbers in and of themselves signal an appalling level of human suffering.

    It is instructive to point out here that we have near accurate figures to work with because of the field work carried out by UN and other aid agencies that are versed in these issues. Such figures – and the level of sufferings – are not readily available for other parts of the country.

    Despite government’s declaration of a nutrition emergency, aid agencies said it remains desperately underfunded. Of the $279 million requested to deliver the Humanitarian Response Plan, only $78.5 million (28 percent) has actually been funded.

    According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), more than 20,000 people have been killed, and over 2,000 women and girls have been abducted. 2.5 million people have fled their homes, of whom 2.2 million are internally displaced, and 177,000 are seeking refuge in the neighbouring countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

    The figures are certainly grim, 7 million people are in need of emergency, life-saving assistance in the four worst-affected states, Adamawa, Borno, Gombe and Yobe, of which an estimated 3 million are caught up in insecure and inaccessible areas.

    Some Nigerians are still struggling to believe that 92 per cent of internally displaced people are seeking refuge among host communities, where resources and basic services are being exhausted, leading to risky livelihood strategies amongst displaced and hosting communities alike. Escaping from attacks in rural areas, IDPs are taking shelter in the relative safety of urban centres, causing overcrowding in already inadequate living conditions and putting resources and basic services under huge strain. For instance, Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State, has seen its population more than double with the influx of people displaced from other areas of the state.

    The crisis is affecting 3.8 million children, many of whom have been subject to violations including forced recruitment into Boko Haram, and being used as suicide bombers. Women and girls have been trafficked, raped, abducted and forcibly married.

    The misery did not end there; 3.9 million people are food insecure, and 2.5 million are malnourished, especially children and pregnant and lactating women. 1 million children are in need of emergency education.  With the ongoing disruption to basic services like health care, clean water and sanitation, susceptibility to disease is high, like the cholera outbreak in September 2015 that infected over 1,000 people in IDP camps and surrounding communities in Maiduguri.

    The “good” news however is that an estimated 262,324 people have returned to places of origin in northern Adamawa to find their communities devastated, houses and public infrastructure destroyed, and the security situation still fragile.

    We need serious diplomacy and confidence building to address the issue of alleged herdsmen attacks. The herdsmen/farmers issue should be an issue of urgent national concern because of its adverse security implications. As at the time of writing this article, I haven’t read about any of the alleged herdsmen being apprehended. The implication is that people live in constant fear, and where fear persists people cannot go to their farms.

    If left unchecked, people may be tempted to adopt the Governor Fayose’s model of forming vigilantes and laying siege on herdsmen. Anyone versed in statecraft would know this is the road to anarchy

    This is the time for the government and all concerned to summon whatever political will there is to confront this issue head-on or we’d have a national food crisis – perhaps worse than the one being experienced in the northeast – to add to our present series of woes.

  • Southwest PDP crisis persists

    Southwest PDP crisis persists

    •No truce in Ogun, Osun, Lagos chapters

    The crisis in the Southwest Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) escalated at the weekend as some chapters failed to agree on the proposal by two governors to present a single list of delegates for the national convention next month.

    The division in the zone persisted, following the refusal of certain chieftains loyal to the embattled “National Chairman”, Senator Modu Sheriff and the National Caretaker Committee headed by Senator Ahmed Makarfi, to sheathe their swords.

    At the meeting of selected zonal leaders at the Eko Hotel, Ikoyi, Lagos many chieftains reiterated their loyalty to Makarfi. They stressed that his committee was set up in accordance with the PDP constitution.

    Former Works Minister Senator Adeseye Ogunlewe, from Lagos State; former Osun State House of Assembly Speaker Adejare Bello; and former Senate leader Teslim Folarin, from Oyo State, emphasised that the region was backing Makarfi.

    But the embattled National Secretary, Prof. Wale Oladipo, disagreed. He said that Sheriff was the authentic chairman.

    He added that he remained  secretary, until resolution of the litigation triggered by the leadership crisis.

    The meeting, which was attended by selected leaders from Oyo, Osun and Lagos states, was summoned by Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose, his Ondo State counterpart, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko and Senator Buruji Kashamu, from Ogun East.

    Although Fayose explained that only leaders of the state without governors were invited, Ogun State leaders were not present and no explanation was offered for their absence.

    At the meeting were former Osun State Deputy Governor Olusola Obada Chief Tunde Odanye; former Sports Minister Prof. Taoheed Adedoja; Wole Oke; Ganiyu Olaoluwa; Senator Kofo Bucknor-Akerele and Captain Tunji Shelle (rtd).

    Others were Agboola Dominic, Femi Carena, Tajudeen Agoro, Niyi Owolade, Dr. Tokunbo Pearse, Pa Kola Balogun, Segun Adewale, Owokoniran, Dr. Ade Dosunmu and Senator Olasunkanmi Akinlabi.

    There was a mild drama at the venue when some Osun chieftains stormed out to protest the governors’ advice that the chapter should close ranks and present a joint list.

    The aggrieved chieftains said the proposal favoured unpopular chieftains, who lost out in the ward, local government and state congresses.

    A chieftain said: “It is better to conduct an election to select delegates as this will give opportunity to leaders and groups to test their popularity.”

    Olaoluwa, who pacified the protesters, said the chapter would “thoroughly discuss the option before taking a stand”.

    He said: “I advise we don’t disperse yet. Let’s go downstairs to discuss further and resolve our differences before we take a stand.”

    Lagos PDP chieftains were led by Ogunlewe and Balogun, who belong to the two main groups, led by Chief Olabode George and Adewale. The George camp installed Adegoke Salvador as chairman. But Adewale, the managing director of Aeroland Company, rejected the outcome of the congress. He said he was the authentic chairman.

    After Ogunlewe briefed reporters on the outcome of the meeting, Dosunmu and Owokoniran said he lacked the mandate to speak to reporters. In their view, Balogun led the chieftains to the meeting.

    Balogun, who reluctantly spoke with reporters, assured that party elders would resolve the crisis in the chapter.

    Adewale was also conciliatory, as he apologised to George for any wrong doing, promising to mobilise his group for reconciliation.

    Mimiko, who left before the meeting closed, said the zone made progress in resolving the crises affecting chapters.  He said Southwest PDP will go to the national convention as a united region.

    Bello said it was in the interest of the region to resolve its internal problem before the convention. He hailed the governors and Kashamu for the peace moves.

    Folarin said reconciliation became necessary following contrary positions taken by leaders.

    He said reality dawned on the PDP family that only the Makarfi committee could stabilise the party and conduct a peaceful convention.

    Fayose explained that the meeting was part of efforts by the Southwest PDP to put its house in order.

    He said: “We want a united party. We encourage our chapters to have one list each for the national convention. The list will reflect representation of various groups in each chapter.”

  • OAU crisis: Alumni hail Fed Govt’s intervention

    The national leadership of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) Alumni Association has hailed the Federal Government for the quick resolution of the crisis occasioned by the appointment of a new vice chancellor for the institution.

    Addressing reporters after the association’s National Executive Council meeting at Timsed Holiday Resorts, Ijebu-Jesa, Osun State, its National President, Mr. Segun Oke, said the intervention came at the appropriate time to restore sanity to the university.

    He described the appointment of Acting Vice Chancellor, Prof. Anthony Adebolu Elujoba, as perfect.

    Oke, who expressed satisfaction on the choice of Prof. Elujoba, maintained that the intervention has brought the 54-year-old institution on the track of progress.

     

  • Crisis rocking Ijaw youths deepens

    Crisis rocking Ijaw youths deepens

    The crisis rocking the umbrella body of Ijaw youths, the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Worldwide, has deepened following a suit seeking to stop Mr. Udengs Eradiri from parading himself as the President of the council.

    The suit which was filed at the Bayelsa State High Court by aggrieved members of the executive council of IYC is asking the court to grant an interlocutory injunction stopping Eradiri and Mr. Eric Omare, from parading themselves as the President and Spokesman of the council.

    The claimants relied on a purported national convention of the IYC held on June 16, 2016, in Rivers State where they claimed that Eradiri and Omare, were removed from their offices.

    According to them Mr. Elvis Donkemezuo and Mr. Mike Edonkumor were reportedly nominated and elected the president and spokesman of the council respectively.

    Donkemezuo who admitted filling the suit also reacted to an interview Eradiri granted the Nation where he referred to him as an impersonator and a non-member of IYC for failing to pay his dues.

    Eradiri also said Donkemezuo would soon be arrested for impersonation adding that based on the judgement of the state High Court, he (Eradiri) would remain the President till 2017.

    But Donkemezuo said Eradiri was suspended by seven out of the 10-member executive council of IYC over allegations of misappropriation of funds, abuse of office and highhandedness.

    He said a panel which was headed by the council’s Legal Adviser later indicted Eradiri and removed him from office.

    He claimed that a convention of Ijaw youths held in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, ratified the removal of Eradiri and immediately elected him to become the President of the council.

    He said: “I was absent at the convention, but the convention unanimously nominated and elected me in absentia as the President of IYC because of my integrity and my background.

    “Upon my arrival, I accepted, but ever since then, Udengs has has been parading himself as the President, despite the fact that he knows the law. When somebody is removed, he should go to the court and challenge your removal.

    “Instead of him to go to court. He said he said I was impersonating him. How can I be impersonating him. I am from Kolokuma-Opokuma Local Government of Bayelsa state.

    “It is the local government of Ijaw icon, late Isaac Jasper Adaka Boro. Boro was my cousin from my lineage. So, I don’t know between me and Udengs who is even more an Ijaw man”.

    He said the court judgement that said Eradiri’s tenure would end in 2017 did not foreclose his removal by indictment.

    He faulted the claims that he was not a member of IYC because he failed to pay his dues saying there was no time the payment of dues was a constitutional provision for being an IYC member.

    Donkemezue further said the constitution Eradiri was relying upon had not been adopted by the congress.

    He said: “There was never a time payment of dues was a constitutional requirement or a yardstick for becoming a member of IYC. Eradiri is traveling with a purported constitution, he cooked in his bedroom and want to impose it on Ijaw youths. But Ijaw youths are smarter than he is and they told him that, that constitution had not been adopted.

    “The chairman of that purported constitution review committee, Nengi James is still alive. If you ask Nengi any day any time Nengi will tell you that, that constitution is inconclusive. So, I don’t know where Eradiri is coming from with all these stories”.

    He said Eradiri had no right to claim the title of Presidency adding that the agreement reached in 2013 was that he would be a caretaker chairman of IYC.

  • OAU crisis

    OAU crisis

    •Everyone should respect the rule of law

    For over a month, the Obafemi  Awolowo University has suffered a lockdown. Spurring this paralysis is a logjam arising from conflicts over who should be the prime school’s top officer. Although the university top decision-making body has announced the name of the new vice chancellor and the federal government has appended its signature, the institution has no vice chancellor, the registrar cannot function fully, salaries are on hold and classrooms are quiet.

    This is not the first time the battle to be a university helmsman has generated furore in this country. Often it is a battle of egos, a contest of power blocks, a shadow of political contention in the larger society and, sometimes, an ethnic or religious combat.

    The Ife story is interesting because it seems professor Ayobami Salami has already been picked by the Governing Council after it deliberated on a shortlist of six candidates forwarded to it by the Joint Council of Senate and Selection Board (JCSSB) in line with the rules.

    But two principal stake holders in the university objected. They are the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) and Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities (NASU). They accused the JCSSB of foul play, and they objected to the choice of Professor Salami.

    They also took the matter to court and claimed to have obtained a restraining order, although the governing Council said they did not get any restraining order and went along with the exercise. SSANU and NASU objected to the choice of the shortlist in that some of the professors they expected to make it did not. They also took exception to two candidates from outside the campus. They also objected to the inclusion of a professor outside Ife who is allegedly afflicted with stroke.

    During the final interview, only three candidates showed up, including Professor Salami. When the governing council made its choice, the federal government was notified and the Federal Character Commission directed the registrar to notify Professor Salami as the new vice chancellor.

    It seemed the matter was over, and the querulous party had lost and the new helmsman could initiate reconciliation. Professor Salami did not have the opportunity to occupy his new seat. Perhaps more absurd was that the man he was to succeed was not allowed to enjoy his last day in office as an unruly drama of blockade prevented both exit and entrance.

    The dissenters have already taken the matter to court, and the federal ministry of education ordered the dissolution of the governing council and nullified the process it had already anointed.  With no top officer and governing council, classes cannot go on and the university has been in silence

    It is stunning that the federal government could have approved a vice chancellor without examining the process. It is also absurd it nullified its own decision. It is clear that due process was followed in picking Professor Salami. If the SSANU/NASU consensus is not Salami, it does not make the process any flawed.

    If the objectors hate the choice, it was no reason for them to break out in unruly theatre, bearing symbolic coffins and mounting blockade and imposing paralysis in a continuation of a rhythm of closure and opening that has characterised our university system for over a decade.

    The federal ministry has now directed the registrar to ask the deputy vice chancellor to convene a senate session to pick an acting vice chancellor. That will hopefully restore normalcy. The classrooms should soon hum with lecturers and students until the court determines the way forward.