Tag: crisis

  • Govt to Ihedioha: don’t cause crisis in Imo

    Govt to Ihedioha: don’t cause crisis in Imo

    The Imo State Government has warned former House of Representatives Deputy Speaker Emeka Ihedioha to stop making unfounded allegations against Governor Rochas Okorocha.

    The government urged him to concentrate on his case before the Election Petitions Tribunal, instead of crying wolf where there was none.

    Ihedioha was the Imo State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate in the April 11 election.

    The former lawmaker reportedly accused the Okorocha of diverting the state’s resources to acquire estates in and outside the country when the workers were owed salary arrears.

    But in a statement in Owerri, the state capital, the governor’s Chief Press Secretary Sam Onwuemeodo urged Ihedioha to stop disrupting the peace.

    The statement said: “Ihedioha is not the only Imo man or the only Nigerian who ran the governorship election and lost. Imo State cannot stop existing because he failed in an election. He should face his case at the Election Petitions Tribunal like other candidates in other states and stop talking as if he is still on election campaigns.

    “He should also stop insulting the governor as if he derives pleasure from doing so. He had run for the governorship and he has failed or refused to respect the governor on seat and the office.

    “It is also unfortunate that a man who had been in the House of Representatives for 12 years and Deputy Speaker of the same House for four years, and who is expected to know the efficacy of respecting political office, like that of the governor, was taking delight in abusing his governor without provocation.

    “Ihedioha’s party, the PDP, governed the state for 12 years and could not renovate one school and Imo people did not accuse them of stealing the state’s funds. He has the audacity to accuse a man who had done in four years what the PDP could not do in 12 years of stealing the state’s fund.”

  • APC: Okowa part of Delta financial crisis

    APC: Okowa part of Delta financial crisis

    The governor of Delta state, Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, was very much a very important part of the system that had in the last 16 years worked to put the state in the path of its current economic crisis, the All Progressives’ Party (APC) has alleged.

    The APC, in a statement issued by its Media Adviser in Delta state, Dr Martins Mukoro, warned the people of the state not to get carried away by the governor’s recent alarm over the huge indebtedness currently borne by the state, describing it as mere “playing to the gallery”.

    The party described as embarrassing and an  insult to the sensibility of Deltans , Dr Okowa’s attempt to ‘shed crocodile tears’ over the huge debt profile of the state  totalling over 600 billion naira, which his  predecessor left behind.

    According to the party, Okowa was merely setting the stage by crying wolf to divert attention and in order to lay the foundation for him to go borrowing more money, thereby plunging the state into a deeper financial disaster.

    The APC recalled having earlier forewarned Deltans, during the  campaigns,  that Okowa represents NO CHANGE but more of the SAME of PDP’s 16 years of mis- rule.

    “From Gov Okowa’s days as Commissioner, multiple times under Gov Ibori to his days as the Secretary to the  Government under Gov Uduaghan  that accumulated these debts , he has no moral excuse to attempt to distance himself as if he was an onlooker or bystander while the  state was being wrecked!

    “Okowa was not an on- looker but a key participant and a major co-conspirator in wrecking the finances and Economy of Delta State and he is in no position to rescue Delta from the mess created by him and the past Pdp Administrations.

    “If indeed Gov Okowa insist he has been an on-looker and truly expect deltans to believe he was not party to the financial rot, let him immediately and urgently institute a panel to probe the huge debt overhang in order to unearth how it was accumulated and who were the beneficiaries of the massive plundering of our commonwealth! Until then, Gov Okowa can’t pull wool over our eyes”, the statement added.

    The party urged all Deltans to brace up for the change that has been delayed and be ready to  seize the opportunity of the expected re-run that may soon be ordered by the ongoing elections tribunal to support the APC at all levels to effect the desired change that will bring relief,  a breath of fresh air and freedom from a political dynasty of corruption in Delta State, the statement ended.

  • Buhari: Ekweremadu as Saraki’s deputy  unacceptable

    Buhari: Ekweremadu as Saraki’s deputy unacceptable

    •APC governors, state chairmen want Saraki, Dogara to accept party’s list on principal officers
    •Ogbeh may head disciplinary committee

    For President Muhammadu Buhari, the emergence of a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) member as deputy Senate President in the current dispensation is nothing short of a setback for his administration.

    He is irked that some members of his own party, All Progressives Congress (APC), conceded the position to Ike Ekweremadu when the PDP never gave that much all through its 16 years in power between 1999 and last May.

    But he is optimistic that the APC will overcome the setback.

    President Buhari made his feelings known at a meeting with a delegation of the   Unity Forum at the Aso Rock Villa on Friday night.

    The forum is the group of senators backing Dr. Ahmed Lawan, the APC anointed candidate for the Senate Presidency.

    Buhari, at the meeting, reportedly pleaded for the understanding of APC Senators as the party explores reconciliation options.

    However, the majority of the APC governors and state chairmen of the party are insisting that Senate President Bukola Saraki and House of Reps Speaker Yakubu Dogara comply with the party’s directive on the choice of principal officers of the National Assembly.

    The APC governors and state chairmen are encouraging the leadership of the party to enforce discipline to prevent it from collapsing.

    Some party leaders, it was gathered, have proposed a former National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Audu Ogbeh, as chairman of the APC Disciplinary Committee to look into allegations of anti-party activities against some members.

    President Buhari at the Friday meeting was said to have said there was no reason for the party to be divided over who heads the National Assembly.

    “The President gave us audience and admitted that the development in the Senate was a setback but he expressed confidence that APC will overcome it,” a source at the meeting said.

    “He said there was no basis for the split among APC Senators which led to the concession of the Office of Deputy President of the Senate to the PDP. He said PDP did not give the opposition such an opportunity in its 16 years in power.

    “Buhari told Lawan and others not to take the law into their hands as the leaders of the party explore reconciliation options. He said peace and the survival of the nation’s democracy should be paramount more than any other thing.”

    Asked to assess the President’s mood at the session, the source added: “He was not happy about the development in the Senate but he was hopeful that the situation is redeemable if some leaders can sacrifice their ambitions for the survival of APC and his administration.”

    Another source said: “The session was cordial and reassuring. The President interacted with us individually and even had time to crack jokes with us before we receded into the business of the day.

    “As for the Lawan group, it was Senator Barnabas Gemade who spoke on behalf of the 51 aggrieved Senators.

    “Gemade said the Unity Forum is after justice since its members have demonstrated their faith in APC leadership and having been loyal to the party to a fault.

    “Gemade restated the six demands of the group and the need to prevail on Saraki and Dogara to abide by the directive of the party on the nominees for principal offices in the Senate and House of Representatives.”

    The source quoted Gemade as saying: “When the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo called a meeting to address the looming challenge, it was only our group that responded; we were the only group which participated in the party’s straw poll and even on June 9, we deferred to the party’s invitation to a meeting at the International Conference Centre.

    “Before anybody knew it, the Like Minds went for the inauguration of the Senate and elected Saraki.

    “We have proved our unflinching loyalty to the party. This is the time for the party to assert itself and enforce discipline or else members will continue to take the leadership of the party for granted.”

    Ahead of the meeting of the National Executive Committee of the APC on Tuesday, there were indications last night that the governors elected on the platform of the party and state chairmen are pushing for Dr. Saraki and Hon. Dogara to comply with the party’s directive on the choice of principal officers of the National Assembly.

    They said they will no longer tolerate the defiance of the party by the two leaders.

    A member of the NWC said: “We are expecting a stormy session on Tuesday. Saraki and Dogara will have to choose between loyalty to the party or self-serving agenda.

    “The only condition for moving forward is for these leaders to accept the list sent to them by the National Chairman of APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun.

    Those  recommended by the APC for Senate positions are Sen. Ahmed  Lawan(Majority Leader)—North-East; Prof. Sola Adeyeye( Chief Whip)—South-West; Sen. George Akume( Deputy Majority Leader)—North-Central; and Sen. Abu Ibrahim(Deputy Chief Whip)—North-West.

    The party’s list for the 8th House of Representatives  is as follows:  Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila( House Leader)——South-West; Hon. Alhassan Ado Doguwa( Deputy House Leader)—North-West; Hon. M. T. Monguno( Chief Whip)—North-East; and Hon. Pally Iriase( Deputy Chief Whip)—South-South.

    It was gathered that if Saraki and Dogara refused to respect the party’s list, APC may resort to sanctions.

    It was learnt that some forces in the party are pushing for the appointment of a former National Chairman of PDP, Chief Audu Ogbeh as the head of the party’s Disciplinary Committee.

    A top member of the party said: “There is no doubt that Ogbeh is well grounded in party politics and he is a disciplinarian.  We are thinking of him to assist in unraveling the anti-party activities in the Senate and the House.”

  • National Productivity Centre’s crisis worsens

    The crisis of leadership rocking the National Productivity Centre has worsened with the emergence of a third claimant to the position of director general.

    Hajia Rekiya Momoh-Abaji, who is the most senior director in charge of Information Services and Personnel (ISP), said she was completely schemed out by the outgone DG in connivance with the board.

    She alleged that Mr Kashim Akor, the eighth director in the agency, was named ahead of her as DG on the strength of a letter of appointment from the Ministry of Labour and Productivity contrary to the rules and regulations of the civil service.

    Dr Faith Roberts from Bayelsa State University also reported as DG on the strength of a letter from the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF).

    Hajia Momoh-Abaji has asked the Head of Service of the Federation, Danladi Kifasi, to intervene.

    She said in a petition that she remains the most qualified for the job having spent over 30 years in service with a PhD in Public Administration and Policy Analysis.

    She said she has never being found wanting in her career, describing her ordeal as acts of persecution and unmitigated injustice.

    “As a Nigerian civil Servant with utmost faith in the regime of His Excellency, the President, General Muhammadu Buhari to be just and concerned about equity, I put forward this protest knowing that it will be investigated and not ignored to bring about justice being delayed and so denied,” she said in a letter dated 2nd June 2015 addressed to the Head of Service.

    “Please note that the persecution I have suffered in the past four years (2012 to date) at the National Productivity Centre, has led to gross injustice leading to the emergence of two (2) Director-Generals at the National Productivity Centre since the end of tenure of the out-gone DG on the 18/05/2015.

    “An interview was hurriedly arranged for five junior directors under me without giving me a chance to be in the competition!!! I was not invited for the interview by the Board of the Centre whom the outgone DG connived with to interview Directors which has never being the manner of recruiting Director-Generals in the 25 years history of the Productivity Centre.”

  • How to end the crisis, by Ashafa

    How to end the crisis, by Ashafa

    The senator representing Lagos East, Gbenga B. Ashafa, has proposed some measures to get the All Progressives Congress (APC) out of the logjam arising from the National Assembly’s post-inauguration.

    Ashafa, who spoke following his earlier call for the collapse of caucuses and bridging of ranks within the family of APC senators in the newly inaugurated Eighth Senate, said: “We need to shed the bad blood that has accumulated as a result of the June 9 incident.

    “A flagrant disregard for party directives and a violation of relevant sections of the APC constitution is not a good way to start in this era of change.”

    He added: “Article 9:2 of the APC’s constitution, (Rules and Obligations) states that, ‘members of the party shall be obliged to affirm the party’s aims and objectives and conduct themselves in a manner that shall not bring the party to public odium and disrepute. Members of the party shall also observe the rules and regulations embedded in this constitution.’

    “Within the context of this provision, I believe that the National Working Committee of the APC can find a peace-building method to create a win-win situation for all aggrieved factions.

    “The party should embrace all and still ensure that the discipline and unity among its members is preserved.”

  • APC crisis ‘ll not split party, says Mamora

    APC crisis ‘ll not split party, says Mamora

    Senator Olurunnimbe Mamora has said the All Progressives Congress (APC) will soon get over the crisis caused by the National Assembly elections.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Lagos, at the thanksgiving for a member of the House of Representatives, Rotimi Agunsoye, at the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Victory Chapel, Magodo, Mamora said the party will remain intact.

    He added that APC is a dynamic party, made up of brilliant minds, noting that the division was usual.

    “The APC is a very vibrant party and don’t forget that the party came on board just about 18 months ago. A party where you have vibrant people, it is expected that opinions will vary, but at the end of the day, the APC will resolve its problems.

    “You may call it vibrant Nigerians, who may be at variant. Whatever happens will make the party stronger. We will move ahead as a party and work in the interests of the people. So, those who think otherwise should forget it. At the end of the day, APC will be the winner.”

    Agunsoye said it was better for the APC to experience shortcomings now instead of facing it midway into its duties, notin that the party will triumph no matter the hiccups.

    He said: “I want to say, there is a time to plant and a time to harvest. There is a time to be happy and a time for sober reflection. There is a time to be born and a time to die. The best time for the Eighth Assembly to have problems is now.

    “It will not be too good for us to face the problem, when we are in the middle of our duties. And by the special grace of God, the problem will be solved. Without solving the problem Nigeria cannot move forward.

    “I believe in the leadership of APC, I believe in the opinion leaders in Nigeria. There are certain things that we have to do to make our country work. We would have to fulfill certain conditions, to make the country work. We have to live a sin-free life, so that God will come to our rescue.”

    The lawmaker added that God will help the Eighth Assembly to do its job without hindrance. “We shall make laws that will help move this country forward. On the issue of allowances for members of the House, I will go the way Nigerian people want.”

    Pastor Peter Egho urged politicians who haves cases relating to corruption to clear themselves before the appropriate institutions.

    “If you are awaiting trial before the EFCC, you have to step aside because you cannot be a lawmaker in that condition. Such position is only for righteous people because it is righteousness that exalts a nation.

    “Those who fail to repent will receive open reproach from God. The lawmakers must show good examples. May God cure our land, so that righteousness can permeate and wonder will happen in our dear country,” he said.

  • The Mediterranean migrant crisis

    Geographically, the Mediterranean Sea passes along countries of southern Europe like Spain, Malta, Italy, Portugal and Greece, as well as the shoreline of North African states, including Libya, Egypt and Tunisia. Strategically, the mammoth sea is one of the most important routes for facilitating trade and commerce between Europe and Africa through shipping. However, the Mediterranean is currently on the front burner of international headlines. Obviously, this is on account of worsening crisis of rickety, overcrowded and unsafe migrant boats that often capsize in the sea while on illegal journeys to Europe from North Africa in recent months, alas leading to tragic and unnecessary loss of hundreds of lives. The worst of such incidents, seen as the deadliest in the Mediterranean and source of renewed international focus on the plight of illegal migrants, was the one that happened off the Libyan coast in the middle of last April, in which nearly 900 people reportedly died.

    From all accounts, most of the stream of Mediterranean migrants are Africans seeking to escape from hard realities of life in their homelands like misrule, political instability, armed conflict, insecurity, persecution, economic adversity, crushing poverty, chronic unemployment, hunger, famine and environmental depredation (including the adverse effects of climate change and the associated global warming). They principally come from countries wracked by bloody conflict and abysmal human rights records, including Eritrea, Somalia, Libya, Sudan, Egypt, Mali, Sudan, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The would-be migrants from these countries are joined by people fleeing sectarian violence and persecution in far-flung places like Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Palestine, Afghanistan and Myanmar (Burma). Others from countries like Nigeria, Ghana, Mauritania, Tunisia, Senegal, The Gambia and Bangladesh are in desperate search of greener pastures or economic prosperity in Europe.

    Going by the recurrent terrifying reports of migrant boat capsizing in the Mediterranean Sea in recent weeks, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) has estimated that more than 30,000 people may die by the end of this year from the festering crisis if drastic actions are not taken by the international community to arrest this unfolding humanitarian tragedy.

    In the face of the mounting death toll from the Mediterranean migrant crisis, it is gratifying that European Union (EU) leaders, after an emergency meeting last April, decided to treat the crisis with greater urgency. Part of the 10-point action plan they have unfurled to wrestle with the precarious situation are tripling the funding for rescue operations by naval patrols of EU countries under the Triton programme, sharing of intelligence about people smuggling networks, systematic effort to capture and destroy vessels used by the smugglers (including the possible use of military action), anti-piracy campaign on the scale of Operation Atalanta (in which EU helicopters would attack the boats and fuel dumps of people smugglers just as they were deployed to fight Somali pirates at the peak of their criminal activities in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden several years ago) and spreading the burden of taking in refugees. To be candid, without delay and prevarication by the EU countries, some of these plans are achievable, including the tasking one of national quotas for housing asylum seekers, which countries like the United Kingdom (UK), Germany, France and Hungary may oppose because of their tough asylum policies, fear of public opinion and threat from far-right racial supremacist movements and political parties.

    To vigorously address the plight of the Mediterranean migrants, now dubbed Europe’s boat people, the EU should go beyond her current spending plans on the crisis by considering a number of confidence–building measures. One of them is establishing asylum processing camps in entry points in North African countries like Libya, Egypt and Tunisia to handle both migrants trying to reach Europe overland and those saved from the seas. These countries, as an incentive, should be paid by the EU to maintain the camps. It is expected that asylum process for the Mediterranean migrants would be fast, fair and effective. While concessions should be given to migrants seeking to escape oppression, gross human rights abuses and violent conflict, those rejected on the grounds of hankering for economic opportunities abroad should be repatriated to their countries.

    More importantly, the EU countries are obligated to sign up to their share of refugees, as conceded to the Vietnamese boat people fleeing communist repression in their homeland in the 1970s and 80s. Thankfully, the judgment by the European Court of Human Rights this year stipulated that migrants must be given a fair chance to apply for asylum and may not automatically be sent back even if rescued in international waters. This landmark ruling is in tandem with the UN conventions that make refugees the responsibility of any country where they turn up. It is expected that such resolutions would serve as a moral suasion to countries like the UK, Spain, France and Germany to change their stance on not allowing hapless migrants to reach their shores due to fear that allowing a few to come in would lead to an unstoppable flow.

    So far, it is delightful that the EU has called on such European nations to take in 40,000 asylum seekers from Eritrea and Syria who landed in Italy and Greece after April 15 of this year over the next two years. There is much hope that this directive would help relieve some of the pressure on southern European states like Italy, Malta and Greece, which are kindly disposed to receiving vulnerable migrants. Remarkably, Italy has borne the burden of Mediterranean migrants by doing incredible work trying to rescue as many as possible with her navy and coastguard, as well as accommodating most of them on her island of Lampedusa, which is closer to North Africa. It is also expected that member states of the EU would reconsider the more comprehensive search-and-rescue mission launched by that country last year for Mediterranean migrants, known as Mare Nostrum. Other European states like the UK, apart from dismissing the mission as encouraging people smugglers who take illegal immigrants to Europe, said they could not afford to fund it, hence its replacement with the EU’s Triton surveillance operation, run by Frontex, the union’s border-control agency.

    No doubt, the Mediterranean migrant tragedies have amplified the need for developed countries to show unity and resolve in helping to address the sad condition in different parts of the so-called Third World, particularly Africa. Of course, there is a dismal record of inaction and lethargy on the part of the West (Europe and North America) in terms of responding to heartrending events like monumental hunger and starvation in the Horn of Africa (Ethiopia and Somalia) in 1984/85, genocide in Rwanda in 1994, subsisting brutal armed conflicts in the DR Congo and abysmal human rights violations in Isaias Aferwoki’s Eritrea that ought to shock and shame its civilisation. In the light of this, former Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain had warned during an international conference on Commission For Africa (CFA) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in 2004 that failure by the developed world to take urgent and firm action to help Africa escape bad governance, political instability, vicious conflict, economic collapse, debt overhang, extreme poverty, misery and despair would negatively affect the world by creating weak or failed states like Somalia. Admittedly, such states could contribute to international insecurity through trans-national crimes like terrorism, proliferation of small arms and light weapons, fraud, counterfeiting of hard currencies, drug peddling, human trafficking and trade in contraband, artefacts and endangered species.

     

    • Emeh is a social researcher based in Abuja
  • ‘APC should resolve Bayelsa crisis’

    ‘APC should resolve Bayelsa crisis’

    A leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Bayelsa State, Mr. Godwin Sidi, has called on the national leadership of the party to intervene in the crisis rocking the chapter.

    Sidi, a former Secretary of the defunct New Peoples Democratic Party (NPDP), was among the seven leaders suspended for alleged anti-party activities.

    He said his appeal for the intervention of the national leadership was to save the APC from disintegration, ahead of next year’s governorship election.

    He described his suspension as unconstitutional claiming that the person who signed the document containing the purported action, Mr. Marlin Daniel was no longer the party’s Secretary.

    He said: “I find it expedient to react to the said suspension, reason being that the person who made the announcement, Mr. Marlin Daniel, does not have the capacity to do so because he is no longer the secretary of our great party, APC.

    “You may recall that the so-called Marlin Daniel resigned as the state secretary to contest the just concluded House of Assembly elections and as such he is no longer the secretary.

    “If by any means he is parading himself as one, he should be regarded as an impostor and the public should disregard him. There is no truth in the suspension and it is baseless and does not hold water.

    “I am therefore, calling on the South-South Vice Chairman and national leadership of our great party to intervene in order to strengthen the state structure. Their intervention will also avert disintegration ahead of the coming governorship election in the state.”

    Sidi alleged that the suspension was meant to distract members of the APC and the public from gross misconduct, abuse of office by the state Chairman, Tiwei Orunimighe and his cronies.

    Another suspended elder of the party, Mr. Christopher Abareowei, said the suspension was illegal.

    He said: “Some of the APC members allegedly connived among themselves to suspend some party members without following the party rules and constitution as well as the law of fair hearing.

  • Alkali: we have been vindicated over APC crisis

    Alkali: we have been vindicated over APC crisis

    Prof. Rufai Alkali, the former Special Adviser on Political Affairs to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, has reiterated his earlier claim that the All Progressives Congress (APC) was not prepared to govern a complex nation like Nigeria.

    Speaking with reporters in Abuja yesterday, he reminded Nigerians of his earlier call on the leadership of the APC, before the handing over of government “to plan more and talk less”.

    But he alleged that he was instead castigated by the APC’s spokesman, Alhaji Lai Mohammed.

    He was reacting to the selection of the leadership of the National Assembly and the responses from stakeholders within and outside the APC.

    He said: “I have observed with keen interest the scenario in the National Assembly that resulted in the election of Senator Bukola Saraki and Yakubu Dogara and other leaders of NASS and what attracted my attention more, though not surprising, were the incoherent and contradictory responses from the leaders of the APC.

    “This is indeed a clear confirmation of my earlier warning to the APC to plan more and talk less. Undoubtedly, things have started falling apart in the APC.”

    On the emergence of Senator Ike Ekweremadu of the PDP as Deputy Senate President, he said: “Whoever said that the PDP is dead and buried should please show me the cemetery and the grave where the PDP was buried.

    “Nigerians should not forget the fact that some of the members of the PDP who joined the APC went there as a result of some circumstances, but the souls and minds of most of them are still in the PDP.”

  • UNIOSUN crisis divides workers

    UNIOSUN crisis divides workers

    The crisis rocking the Osun State University (UINOSUN) is far from being resolved as workers unions are holding divergent positions on the sack of three principal officers by the governing council.

    Last week, the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Bashiru Okesina, was recommended for sack but the Registrar and Bursar, Dr. J.O. Faniran and Mr. F.A. Lasisi, were relived of their jobs.

    A statement by its Chairman and General Secretary, Lekan Adiat and A. Adesigbin, after the emergency congress of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU)  advised the Governing Council to wait for the Visitor, Governor Rauf Aregbesola, to release the White Paper of the visitation panel set up by the government.

    SSANU said: “We are aware that the visitation panel report had been submitted to the governor and we are also aware that the White Paper is almost completed.

    “We advise Governor Aregbesola to release the White Paper. Its prompt release will serve as an antidote to resolving the crisis in the university.”

    Also, a delegate to the Governing Council, Prof. Wasiu Gbolagade, has written the Visitor on why he disagreeed with the sack.

    In the letter, Gbolagade said: “I reminded the Governing Council that the Panel was set up by the Visitor to look into all the issues causing crises in the university; one of which is the abrupt suspension of the principal officers.

    “Consequently, taking this further step of recommending the vice-chancellor for removal and termination of the appointments of the registrar and bursar is a premature action.

    “It is worthy to note that the panel Chairman, Prof Daramola Adebiyi, while submitting the panel’s report, said the crises “rocking the institution had nothing to do with religion as being speculated” and were solely “administrative lapses”, hence, the Council’s decision is too abrupt and unjustifiable in my opinion.”

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has condemned the sack, describing the development as prejudicial and done in bad faith.

    But a group of lecturers, Senior Professors of the Osun State University, faulted ASUU’s position.

    Prof. Abayomi Kizito Folorunso (French Studies), Prof. Christopher Alebiosu (Medicine), Prof. Temi Ologunorisa (Climatology), Prof. Odunayo Clement Adebooye (Agronomy) and Prof. Pat Akinwusi (Cardiologist) signed a statement against ASUU’s position.

    The statement reads: “We are dismayed by the recent statement of the ASUU-UNIOSUN Executive on the decision of Council to terminate the appointments of some principal officers and the subsequent recommendation of same for the vice-chancellor.

    “We, therefore, dissociate ourselves from the said statement because it did not emanate from the Congress of our Union.

    “In the absence of a collective ASUU congress, whatever statement  the ASUU chairman and his cronies have released should be disregarded by the public.

    “We are a group of intellectuals with strong belief in debate before final decisions will be taken on an issue as sensitive as termination of appointment.

    “In a situation where a group of individuals take advantage of the docility of our branch to ride roughshod on congress will always be challenged.”