Tag: Ekiti State University (EKSU)

  • Poor electricity: EKSU students take new VC to task

    For many years, electricity has been a rare commodity for students of the Ekiti State University (EKSU), particularly those residing in Satellite-Phase Two, School Gate, and Iworoko areas. All previous attempts at improving supply seemed to have defied solutions. But a new vice chancellor supposedly familiar with the terrain is in office.The students are urging him to work with the government to end their frustrations. ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA and RACHEAL DAMILOLA, 300-Level student of Linguistics, report:

    For how long will students of the Ekiti State University (EKSU) grapple with the challenge of poor electricity supply? This is the question on the lips of the students.

    The state-owned institution domiciled in Iworoko-Ekiti, Ekiti State, was established in 1982 as an off-campus institution. With over 20,000 student population; nearly all students live off campus, with majority spread across Satellite-Phase Two, School Gate and Iworoko areas.The school has two hostels that could hardly accommodate 70 students.

    Majority of students living at the aforementioned locations have indeed had their fair share of poor power supply. Their complaints range from theft of their personal effects, inability to use power to charge phones or conduct individual or group study, particularly at night, fear of being kidnapped at nightfall and general insecurity, among others.

    Interestingly, the management also finds the issue of power a harder nut to crack, saying the poor power situation  in those areas is almost as old as the institution established 37 years ago, and may therefore need a political solution more than mere theorising.

    Thankfully last week, the government of Ekiti State announced a new vice chancellor, Prof Edward Olanipekun.  Not only has Olanipekun spent nearly three decades in the institution before transferring his service to the University of Ibadan, many within and outside the institution believe that with an insider like Olanipekun, and a more- focused government in the saddle, the two parties could team up to break the power jinx that has for long afflicted the host community and environs.

    Incidentally, for about four years now, the power situation at Satellite-Phase II and School Gate has become more complex with students having to do nearly everything in pitch darkness.

    Students who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE lamented their predicament; no thanks to the seeming helplessness of the management of EKSU and the affected communities.

    Students share ordeals

    “This situation is so disheartening and not encouraging at all,” says  Aluko Ifeoluwa, a 200-Level student of Economics residing in Los Angeles hostel, Phase II.

    “Can you imagine,” Ifeoluwa continued, “to charge a cell phone costs N50 everyday! If we multiply that by seven days, it equals N350 per week. If we do the calculation in a month, it is N1,50 0 in a month and N9,000 for one academic session.  Is that not outrageous and unfair to us and our parents? Eksuites (students of EKSU) are suffering and the school management does not seem to care about our plights. Things are not like that in other schools. We have friends there. We are pleading with the new management to find practical solutions to this power failure’’.

    Students from rich or middle class background can afford to buy power generator while hustlers like us have to endure the outrageous noise and smoke some of the generators emit, laments Ademodi Okikijesu, a 300-Level Linguistics undergraduate who lives in God is Good hostel, Phase Two.

    “During exams period, we can’t even read in the hostels we paid for; reason being that the generators make so much noise that we can hardly assimilate.” Another 300-Level student of Physics who prefers to remain anonymous corroborated Ademodi.

    The source continued: “During my 200-Level second semester exam, I was supposed to write a paper by 11:30am, but that paper was rescheduled to 8:30 due to a clash. Unfortunately, I wasn’t aware the exam had been brought forward because my phone had a flat battery; only for me to get to school around 11am and saw my classmates emerging from the examination hall. I ended up having a carryover (CO) and that course was a three-unit course. Everything was a consequence of power failure. It was a saddening experience, one that I’ll  live to remember.”

    “From my point of view,” says Kenneth Omotayo, another 300-Level Chemistry undergraduate residing in Phase Two, “I  think the blackout has really reduced the level of motivation to study; and when motivation and comfort are not there, then our study process becomes difficult. I beseech the new management and the Ekiti State government to do something about it because despite the odds, students still strive to make this university proud by making good grades.”

    “How can we learn smoothly in an environment that’s not conducive to learning?” Oyindamola (surname withheld), a third year Linguistics student residing in Suncity Phase two asks rhetorically.

    “How can we read without power supply? Charging of lamps and phones is usually impossible.  How do we even make a better use of a university without power?”

    Agbeye Onaopemipo, a 500-Level Law student residing in Alva Hood hostel at Osekita, also lent his voice.

    “This issue has really affected me a lot, from the heat to risking my gadgets while charging them.”

    Onaopemipo continued: “Back home I don’t sleep without light, but getting to EKSU, I had to adapt to sleeping in the dark. As a Law student, I’m expected to dress corporately every day in my white and black uniform. I definitely need iron for straightening out the clothes; but that has only been impossible for obvious reasons. So some of the time Law students appear in school in rumpled clothes.

    “Charging our lamps is another headache too. Sadly enough, we have been compelled to adapt to the use of lanterns or candles for study purposes, and this is 21st Century, not minding the risks those things pose. Virtually all students on campus use a smart phone too. Ninety nine per cent of school activities ranging from lecture, examination, and even checking of result is posted on the school’s dysfunctional portal.”

    Similarly, a final year Computer Science undergraduate, Olotu Moses, recalled how he lost four of his handsets to thieves in the process of charging them.

    “The lack of electricity is affecting me in a lot of ways,” Moses moans.

    “For example, my phone has been stolen four different times while charging around. In fact, it has affected a whole lot of students. Some have even joined bad gangs all because they want to run generator always like their mates. They don’t want to be going from one room to another or staying outside in the cold all in the name of charging. As students, we can’t even use electric cooker. We can’t come back from school in the sun,shower and turn on the fan.

    “Most times when I’m supposed to be reading, which I really love doing, I will have to go from one hostel to another in order to charge my gadget, even after a strenuous day at school,” adds another student who simply introduced herself as Mojisola.

    “The funny thing is that I really hate reading with lamp or candle. My assimilation rate seems to lessen the moment the lamp dims; but I tend to read well and do better when I use electricity.”

    Likewise, Ayodeji Gbolagade, another final year Accounting undergraduate and a resident of Phase Two shares his experience: “Something happened during my 100-Level days. I went with my lamp on a night reading in school. As I was ready to return to the hostel at dawn, I discovered my bag containing my phone, laptop and power bank had been stolen. All I had left in school that morning were my books and lamp. I strongly believe if the whole place were illuminated that day, the thief wouldn’t have had his way. “

    The problem is intricate, says management

    Reacting to the development, EKSU PRO, Mr Deji Aleshinloye, said the power problem has become intricate and may therefore require political solutions.

    “I graduated from EKSU about 10 years ago and this issue you are talking about was there during our time,” Aleshinloye began.

    “”Iworoko alone accommodates about 5000 of our students. That community has a longstanding problem with electricity supply. The issue is quite complicated and multi-faceted. It ranged from arrears owed PHCN, to poor or non-functional transformer, bad poles, among others.

    “As a university, we are quite responsive and we sympathise with our students over their predicament, Nonetheless, there is little the management can do about it.

    “All those communities you mentioned are outside our jurisdiction. Much as we appreciate what our students go through, the university cannot take on the responsibility of those communities by simply dipping its hands into its coffers to pay a part of the bills.  “I can tell you that over time, successive management had made efforts to alleviate the suffering of our students. There was a time the immediate past government attempted to build more hostels within the university premises through build, operate and transfer (BOT) platform. Unfortunately, it was during this problem with forex then and that project, located at the back of the Students’ Union building, was stalled at the foundation level till date.

    “Our happiness is that the government has just appointed a new vice chancellor who had been with us for almost 30 years before he transferred his service to the University of Ibadan. Now, we are getting it right because our new vice chancellor knows the terrain quite well. Our vice chancellor and the Governor are on the same page.  If the plight of students can get to the Governor through the new management, I strongly believe some positive results will begin to evolve.”

  • Fayemi’s transition committee denies stopping EKSU workers’ salaries

    The Transition Committee set up by Ekiti State governor-elect, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, has denied instructing any bank to stop the payment of salaries of workers of the Ekiti State University (EKSU).

    The panel said the rumour making the rounds that it has given such an  order was the handiwork of mischief makers.

    The Transition Committee in a statement by its Secretary, Mr. Ayodeji Ajayi, said it does not have such a mandate and no instruction to that effect emanated from it.

    The statement reads: “The attention of JKF/APC Transition Committee has been drawn to a rumour making the rounds in Ekiti State University that it instructed a bank to stop the payment of salaries of  the Ekiti  State University workers.

    Read Also: ‘Fayemi will boost food production’

    “I wish to state that TC (Transition Committee) has no such mandate and so did not discuss such sensitive matters in any of its sittings.

    “Therefore, no such instruction was issued by the Transition Committee.

    “Members of staff of the University are advised to ignore such rumour and take up the matters affecting their welfare with the management of the University.

    “The Committee as a stakeholder in the Ekiti project wishes to advise  the University management to protect its landed properties around Oke  Ila, Ado-Ekiti from spurious sale.”

  • 18-year-old who raped seven EKSU students paraded

    …Accomplice also nabbed

     

    The long arm of the law has caught up with a suspected rapist, Chidi Okoye Christian, who was alleged to have raped many female students of Ekiti State University (EKSU).

    The 18-year-old Okoye has been on the wanted list of EKSU Security Unit for some times now following attacks on female students living off campus.

    Read Also:EKSU VC denies arrest over alleged electoral violence

    The suspect, who is not a student of the university, was arrested and paraded alongside his accomplice, Odunmbaku Kayode.

    Kayode used to open the door for the suspected rapist anytime he was returning from the scenes where he perpetrated the crime.

    Incriminating items recovered from Okoye include several smart phones, ATM cards, a Raleigh bicycle, a cutlass and a pistol.

    Speaking while parading the suspected rapist and his accomplice, EKSU Chief Security Officer (CSO), Captain Tunde Ajayi (retd), revealed that not less than seven female students had fallen victim to Okoye in the last three months.

    Ajayi, who paraded the suspects alongside the Investigating Police Officer from Iworoko Police Divisional Headquarters, disclosed that most of the victims are students residing in nearby Iworoko community.

    The EKSU CSO disclosed that the suspect who was usually armed with a pistol with which he threatened his victims to submission before forcibly having carnal knowledge of them.

    Ajayi said: “With a good knowledge of the neighborhood where Okoye himself resides, it was easy for him to unleash terror in the middle of the night and returned to his room which he shared with an accomplice, Kayode Odunmbaku.”

    Okoye, during investigation, confessed to the crime and he was identified by his father who told the Police that the suspect “has been a wayward boy who ran away from home.”

    The duo will be charged to court as soon as police conclude investigation into their case.

     

  • EKSU VC denies arrest over alleged electoral violence

    The Vice Chancellor of Ekiti State University (EKSU), Prof. Samuel Oye Bandele, has denied being arrested and detained for alleged involvement in electoral malpractice in Saturday’s governorship election.

    Bandele debunked news being circulated in various social media platforms that he was arrested while moving about with suspected thugs to disrupt voting in his hometown, Ijesamodu in Ilejemeje Local Government Area.

    Speaking on Monday during EKSU weekly management meeting, Bandele said he had to come out debunk the allegation because he has been inundated with calls and messages on his phone on the development.

    Read Also:NANS threatens Fayose over prolonged EKSU strike, others

    Bandele stressed that although he was in his hometown to exercise his franchise as a patriotic citizen, he disclosed that he returned to his home after casting his ballot.

    The VC emphasized that he is not a politician and not a member of any political party but added that he was bound to be loyal to the Visitor to the university.

    Bandele also denied mobilizing 10,000 students of the university to deliver votes to a particular political party which he said could not have been possible because there is only one polling unit in the institution with less than 200 registered voters.

    He said: “I, Prof. Samuel Bandele, I am not a politician and I have made it very clear. I am very loyal to my principal and I maintain 100 per cent loyalty to all Visitors.

    “I want to say that all the news being carried on the social media that I am mobilizing 10,000 to come and vote for a political party is a lie.

    “They accused me of moving about with thugs in my village and carrying a ballot box. How will I descend so low to be doing that? They also alleged that I was arrested and taken to the police station from my village.

    “Although I travelled to my village to vote, after voting, I returned to my house and I did not come out again until the election ended.

    “I want to put the record straight that I did not move with any thugs and I did not steal any ballot paper or ballot box. I can never do that because I am a pastor.

    “I was never arrested, anybody that is in doubt that go to the Police to confirm. The news being spread on the social media is not true, it is a lie.

    “I have informed the management of what actually transpired and I have also mentioned it to the Chairman of Governing Council, Mr. Dele Adesina (SAN).”

  • ‘120 million women suffering effects of genital mutilation’

    ‘120 million women suffering effects of genital mutilation’

    The battle against Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) is far from being

    won as over 120 million women and girls are said to be suffering from
    the negative effects of the practice across the globe.

    Ekiti State has the second highest prevalence rate in Nigeria with
    71.2 per cent as the state government threatened to invoke the law
    passed by the House of Assembly to bring the perpetrators to book.

    These revelations came to light on Saturday at sensitization campaign
    tagged “End FGM Edutainment” which featured a Nollywood actress,
    Juliana Olayode a.ka. Toyo Baby of Jenifa’s Diary fame.

    The event which was fully funded by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) was held at the 3,000-capacity Multipurpose Hall of Ekiti. State University, (EKSU), Ado-Ekiti.

    The high point of the event was the celebrity’s declaration of the
    abandonment of the harmful and outlawed practice not only in Ekiti but in Nigeria. Many of the female students after watching the video of
    female genital mutilation wept profusely.

    Executive Director of New Generation Girls and Women Development
    Initiative (NIGAWD), Miss Abimbola Aladejare and Director, Centre for Gender and Development Studies, EKSU, Prof. Kemi Ogundana, reeled out  the statistics to a shocked audience majority of who were female students.

    Some of the negative effects of FGM, according to them, include HIV,
    infertility, hemorrhagic diseases, broken home due to lack of
    satisfaction with spouses and other associated problems due to the
    removal of their genitals.

    Prof. Ogundana described genital mutilation as a flagrant infringement of the rights of the female gender, urging the government at all levels to stop the menace in the overall interest of motherhood.

    She said taking the programme, which was attended by over 2,000
    participants to a university community was appropriate, describing
    the undergraduates as the future mothers and husbands, who needed
    sensitization ahead of time.

    “Cultural and traditional beliefs are responsible for this devilish
    practice and some people see it as family heritage but we must stop
    it. Some of those who even performed the genital cutting are
    unskilled. They did it with primitive and unsterilized equipment that
    do damage to human parts.

    “The World Health Organisation had a law prohibiting this practice and it has been domesticated in Nigeria, particularly in Ekiti State. I
    want to appeal that the laws must be implemented to protect the lives
    of our women”, he said.

    Miss Aladejare said as a victim of the practice that she could not
    forget the psychologically imbalance she always suffered each time
    she remembered the level of dehumanization being experienced by the
    victims.

    She said those who practised the act were hiding under the myth that
    retention of female clitoris can cause promiscuity and still birth,
    which she said had been proven wrong by medical experts.

    Miss Aladejare said the high prevalence rate in Ekiti requires
    collective efforts of all stakeholders to save the life of the girl
    child.

    Commissioner for Information, Youth and Sports Development, Mr. Lanre Ogunsuyi, who revealed that most of the cutters are women , stressed that the Ayo Fayose administration will continue to sensitize the  populace until the practice is completely obliterated in the state.

    Other dignitaries at the event are EKSU Vice Chancellor, Prof. Samuel
    Bandele, who was represented by Dean of Social Sciences, Prof. T.T.
    Olofintoye; Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Health, Dr. Ayotunde
    Omole and Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Women Affairs, Social
    Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Peju Babafemi.

  • Disquiet in Ekiti varsity over alleged underground recruitment, contracts

    Disquiet in Ekiti varsity over alleged underground recruitment, contracts

    …VC: It’s not true

    Alleged underground recruitment of hundreds of new workers and award of contracts without due process is causing tension at Ekiti State University (EKSU), Ado-Ekiti.

    Some workers of the university are accusing the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Samuel Oye Bandele of “secretly” recruiting more staff without the knowledge of the Visitor, Governor Ayo Fayose.

    Workers who spoke in confidence also accused Bandele of purchasing ten new cars, awarding contracts to his wife, Mrs. Comfort Titilayo Bandele, and taking her on official foreign tours “when she is not an official of the university.”

    Workers, in leaflets distributed on campus, accused the VC of engaging in “frivolous overseas trips” alleging that he had engaged in not less than ten foreign tours within one year of assumption of office.

    The staff also accused the VC of renovating his residence to the tune of N20 million and appointing his wife as Director of EKSU Water, a business venture of the university.

    They alleged that the VC’s wife is in charge of admissions, contracts and employments and influencing the appointments of several indigenes of her hometown, Itapa-Ekiti into the university.

    Defending his integrity, Bandele described the allegations as “lies from the pit of hell.”

    He accused some former workers who were dismissed for forgery and certificate racketeering as the brains behind the allegations.

    According to him, seven of them were sacked after being indicted in the scandal.

    Bandele denied recruiting 300 staff “secretly” saying only 15 new workers were employed since the last major recruitment exercise of last year.

    Bandele denied the allegation that his wife is in charge of admissions, contracts and employments and her appointment as Director of EKSU Water

    He admitted going on foreign official trips with his wife which he said were done on economy class rather than business class to which he is entitled.

    Bandele said: “This place was a den of corrupt people selling certificates and don’t expect that these people will be my friend.

    “There are evil people here, they don’t want the university to grow; before I came to office, there was a cabal here. In fact, they forged my signature and these people have been dismissed.

    “Last year, we recruited 300 but some people alleged that we recruited 700 or 1,000; these are lies because since the recruitment of last year, we have only recruited 15 persons to fill some vacancies.”

    Speaking on foreign tours with his wife, Bandele said: “I will continue to travel (abroad) with my wife because I will not travel with somebody else’s wife.

    “Some women here are not happy that I did not take them along and I have no apology for travelling with my wife whether local or overseas. If I travel with my wife, why are they angry?

    “We travel by economy class even when I am entitled to business class but I write for a waiver because I don’t want to defraud the university.

    “When I came on board, I told the Procurement Officer not to give any contract to my wife. She has not taken a kobo contract.”

  • Nigerian campuses: Recession in session

    Nigerian campuses: Recession in session

    There is a popular notion that Nigerians rank highly among some of the happiest people on the face of this teraqueous globe we call earth; this prevalent adulation is not one of those garbs that we wear and glo with pride or relish, but a survival and adaptive swathe that keeps us going in the hope that in the end everything will be alright. It may as well be a typical case of “suffering and smiling” according to the legend – Fela Anilulapo-Kuti (of blessed memory).

    The foray into recession in the country has morphed from being a technically correct narrative to a practical overwhelming reality for most Nigerians. In fact, according to some public and economic analysts, this is the height of economic slide and gloom that the country has ever witnessed from its inception.

    However, this piece intends to traverse the length, breadth, and width of a few campuses across the country to garner opinion polls with respect to the state of recession on campuses relative to the grotesque economic reality perpetuating the larger society.

    Taking a panoramic view at the entrance gates of most tertiary institutions all over the country, one cannot help but notice the large number of people (especially students) who enter the campus community for the purpose of study, work, business, and a number of other personal reasons. Howbeit, beaming our focus on academics; we find that it is one thing to have the capacity, enthusiasm, and willingness to learn, it is a different thing entirely to have an enabling physical, psychological, social, and economic environment where learning can take place uninhibitedly.

    The cost of living on campuses in federal and state owned schools before now has always been very reasonable and affordable especially for indigent students who engage in petty jobs – before, during, or after lecture hours in order to eke out a living for themselves.

    Prices of food items (perishable and non-perishable), study materials, printing and photocopying, transportation, prêt-à-porter, and a number of other things that are necessary for study and living on campuses are usually lower in price compared to those obtainable in towns and cities where these schools are located.

    For Damilare, a student of the department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), the cost of “survival” (as he likes to put it) on campus has doubled owing to the increased cost of what he describes as the most important inspiration for the brain – FOOD! The quantity of food he would normally spend a paltry sum on and still get filled now cost a whopping amount to buy the same quantity. For instance, a plate of rice of one hundred Naira which normally fills his plate now struggles to occupy a half section of the plate. He now has to spend two hundred Naira for the satisfaction of one hundred Naira before now. Spaghetti increased from N120 to N200, a bag of pure water (produced by the school) now goes for N150 from N80. Supply of electricity which was almost constant before is now very epileptic and transient due to rationing in its supply.

    According to him, “the cost of bottled water has increased by about 30% (that is, from N50 to N70), and because of the hot temperature and the necessity to move – to and from lectures, students sweat a lot. By implication, they have to get handkerchiefs to wipe their sweat; this also has increased from N50 to N70. Students cannot even AFFORD TO SWEAT in this recession. Nawa O!”

    For David, a student of the department of Industrial Relations and Personnel Management of the same institution, this recession era has been most unkind to him because he now has to “double his hustle”. He is the first child of four siblings – born to an artisan father (carpenter) and mother that earn just enough to subsist the feeding of the family. Out of sheer will, doggedness, and determination, he got admission to study in the university. However, he had to work as a bouncer at night to be able to provide for his academic needs, and also send some stipends to his family back home. Now, he works two jobs just to be able to keep up with the increased cost of living and study on campus. He now works on shift as a waiter in a popular fast food restaurant on the Island during the day, and maintains his bouncer job at night. This according to him has taken a toll on his health and academic performance, so much so that he now contemplates dropping out of school.

    Students of the mighty University of Benin (UNIBEN) are not left out of the recession party as is evident in some of the lucid narratives by a few of its students. For Omo, a student of the department of Accounting, her campus economics is heavily dependent on the economy at home. As a lady, she has need of a lot of things: from items for personal hygiene, study material, to feeding and transportation etc. She practically have to ration her eating time table; she hardly can afford a three-square meal. What she does now is 0-0-1 or 1-0-1; the former code meaning that she eats only at night, while the later code means she eats only in the morning and at night. In her words, “I don’t want to be involved in aristo, sugar daddy or whatchacallit, but with the way things are going, I am gradually changing my mind about it…I must survive nah!”.

    For Olabisi, of the Ekiti State University (EKSU), a student of the Faculty of Law, the narrative seems to be in tandem to that of Omo from UNIBEN. According to Olabisi, the resultant effect of the recession on her parents (who are civil servants) has had a direct effect on her. Her parents, who have not been paid their salaries for months, now have to struggle to send her monthly allowance. She now gets half the allowance because of the financial situation back home. The sad part is that the half allowance does not reach her on time: When it eventually comes, she spends all of it settling accumulated debts from friends. Also, as a law student, prices of most law books have increased. From the angle of feeding, the smallest size of bread that sold for N50 now sells for N80; a bottle of palm oil that sold for N500 now sells for N900; photocopy that costs N5 now cost N15; imagine you have to make a photocopy of over 500 pages – then, you can understand the fiscal strain this would have on the pocket. Due to the perpetually unavailability of electricity on campus, photocopy business owners have to use generators; this is a major cause of the meteoric rise of the cost to photocopy materials.

    Funmi is a happy-go-lucky student of the University of Ibadan. According to her, “I have learnt to live life as it comes – one day at a time”. The prices of food items have skyrocketed so much so that eating in a cafeteria have become a luxury – the exclusive preserve of the rich. Even if one decides to cook and not constantly visit the overtly expensive cafeterias, the cost of kerosene is a major disincentive towards cooking in the hostel to cut cost.

    Transportation cost has increased immensely. Taking a cab is now for those with deep pockets and rotund account balance. Cabs that would normally cost N70 now cost N150 (over 100%); students now have to rely on their “nomadic abilities” to be able to adjust and adapt to the changing economic weather. According to her, the recession does not seem to affect students’ performance because they have learnt, although incommodiously, to adapt to the harsh academic environment due to the economic harmattan in the country.

    “When you call home, they tell you there is ‘nothing nothing’ in the house, that they also are just managing to get by each day.” “The situation is pathetic, despicable, shameful, and lugubrious,” she said.

    Merely looking at Collins, one can swiftly come to the conclusion that all is not well. He seems to assume a posture of someone making a call; he looks worried, depressed, and frustrated. On campus in Kogi State University, the cost of support items for food such as kerosene, gas etc., has gone off the roof. Student can no longer cook every day; they now struggle to cook once or twice in three (3) day. Students now cook with firewood to save cost. The cost of materials and photocopy is now a major headache because their prices have doubled. Students find it hard to photocopy a bulky material; you now find scenarios where three or four students combine financial resources to print or photocopy a material. In turn they ration the period in which each person has left to pass the book to the other person for reading.

    In fact, social activities, programmes, and events on campuses by faculties, departments, clubs, religious gatherings etc., have been gravely affected. Programmes which would normally hold twice or thrice a semester now struggle to hold once in a session. For example, the stage plays of Theatre Art department which would normally experience a deluge of students, even with gate fees, now struggle to get a handful of audience; the turnouts in the past had always been impressive. However, this period, students complain bitterly about unaffordability of the gatepass for the stage shows – 200 naira.

    Habeeb, a student in the faculty of social sciences of Great Ife! – Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) could not hold his peace as he expressed his frustration about the unbearable reality of increased prices with respect to feeding, movement, and study materials. For undergraduates and alumni alike of the university, “risky” is a quintessential element of the OAU experience; if you haven’t eaten “risky” – a bread stuffed with fried egg and manually toasted, you are not yet a bonafide student of the school. According to him, “risky” is now very risky to eat constantly, not because it is overtly unhealthy, but because of the cost implication on your pocket money or “allawee”. The cost of everything has skyrocketed. Students have now learnt how to augment the stipend they get from home by either working on part-time basis, providing services such as makeup, tailoring, barbing, computer and phone repairs etc. Truly, if necessity is the mother of invention, “recession” is the father of creativity and ingenuity.

    Speaking with Arc. David Adio-Moses, a lecturer at the University of Lagos, he firmly enunciated that it is an overwhelming reality that the recession has hit all parts of the economy; from the prices of food stuffs, wears, transportation etc.; virtually every area of our lives has been affected by the recession.

    However, according to him, “regardless of the effect of the recession on the students and staffs alike, they (students and staff) are learning to be more prudent with their resources. Living an overtly extravagant lifestyle is no longer an option.

    “People are learning to adjust to the economic situation. If you do not spend anyhow, you will have enough to last you till the end of the month; you also learn to curtail your expenses and focus on the important things,” he said.

    With respect to the performance of students in the recession, he said the performancesof students, rather than drop has improved. “In as much as students sometimes find it difficult to feed because it is a sober period, this times, you see people who would normally not think of God or a higher being before now, begin to get closer to God.” He said.

    “You also find people you are used to living extravagant lifestyles in the past begin to leash themselves; so instead of going to parties, they sit in their hostels or classrooms and probably read more. At the end of the day, taking a cue from the last convocation, we find astounding results. For instance, History department recorded its first ever first class since the inception of the department in the school; also, we see two ladies graduating with a CGPA of 5.0 just like the first ever 5.0 CGPA last year. We see all these happening even in the time of recession. In as much as things are difficult, people are learning to be more focused.” He added.

    His advice to the government in order to elevate the country from the abysmal planes of economic quagmire to the mountain top of economic prosperity is to leverage the competence and brilliance of its denizens. “There seems to be a disconnect between the government and the brilliant minds in the country. Government needs to open up channels of communication, interaction, and partnership,” he said.

    According to him, “those with the solutions to the ubiquitous economic doldrums do not have an unhindered access to the government in order to proffer qualitative prognostications and antidotes.

    “The government needs to create an interactive forum where these brilliant minds (without ethnic, religious, and political colourations) can interact freely with the government with the sole purpose to proffering enduring solutions to the economic problems bedevilling the country.

    Arc  Moses also added that he has been researching and working assiduously on green architecture; with the level of progress made and the serendipitous prospects it holds, we can provide renewable energies cheaply from five sources namely – solar power, wind energy, biomass (waste), the rise and fall of the ocean current, and the piezo electricity (electricity generated by walking).

    “No one is tapping into all that. We have the solutions and the people, but there seems to be a sharp divide between the government and these people; if this lacuna can be bridged, the people can help the government and the government can in turn help the people,” he said.

    Twitter: @memorinken

    Instagram: @memorinken

    Email: brandphase@yahoo.com

  • Civil servant commits suicide over unpaid salary

    Civil servant commits suicide over unpaid salary

    A senior civil servant with Ekiti State Government, Mr Tope Afolayan, has committed suicide over alleged unpaid salaries and his inability to pay his huge debt, a reliable source confirmed.

    Afolayan, a native of Oye- Ekiti, the headquarters of Oye Local Government Area of the state, worked in the Office of the state Accountant-General.

    The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that Afolayan, a level 10 officer, who died on Thursday, was survived by a teacher wife and three children.

    The source added that Afolayan was found hanging from the ceiling of his house, located on Peace Avenue, Olorunda, Ado-Ekiti.

    The source said the deceased was a final year student of Law at Ekiti State University (EKSU) and an interpreter in a branch of Christ Apostolic Church (CAC), Ekute area of Ado-Ekiti.

    The source said Afolayan, who had been buried, did not leave any suicide note.
    The source added that the deceased had consistently complained to friends about the non-payment of his accumulated salary arrears.

    He was said to have attributed his inability to pay his debts and perform his financial responsibility for the upkeep of his immediate family on the non-payment of his salary.

    “Although he didn’t leave any suicide note before hanging himself he had been very moody and heartbroken for a couple of weeks before the incident happened.

    “He had been complaining about the debts he owed which he was unable to defray because of non-payment of the arrears of salaries.

    ‘’In fact, he was among the last batch of applicants for car loan given by government last year but his name did not come out.

    “We are shocked by Afolabi’s death because nobody thought he would go to that extent, we are still mourning his death,’’ the source said.

    The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, DSP. Alberto Adeyemi confirmed the incident in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    Adeyemi said that the incident was reported at New Iyin Road Police Station in Ado Ekiti.

  • Eksu accident tragedy: family members shocked, speechless

    Eksu accident tragedy: family members shocked, speechless

    …trailer set ablaze for crushing okada rider

    Barely 24 hours after the auto accident which claimed the lives of five students of Ekiti State University (EKSU), relations and families of the victims are yet to come to terms with the tragedy.

    Many of them who stormed Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital (EKSUTH) were too grief-stricken to talk to reporters.

    They came to identify the bodies of their loved ones at the mortuary while the relations of injured came to be with them at bedside.

    Some relations cried profusely on sighting the bodies of the victims they had come to identify.

    The accident occurred at about 7.30 pm when the Lexus 320 car crashed into a bus belonging to a nursery and primary school.

    The victims who were said to be “yahoo boys” were  said to be coming from a party to celebrate the acquisition of a brand new Range Rover Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) by a member of the gang.

    Governor Ayo Fayose declared a 3-day statewide prayers for the repose of the souls of the departed.

    The governor explained while on a sympathy visit to EKSUTH that the prayers was also meant to forestall a recurrence of such terrible incidences.

    He expressed regrets that the Monday night accident claimed the precious lives of the students as of Tuesday, even as two other remaining occupants are still battling with life.

    In another development, there is tension in Erio Ekiti in Ekiti West Local Government Area following the alleged killing of a commercial motorcyclist by a truck belonging to a popular haulage company on Sunday.

    The youths of the community are calling on security agencies to fish out the driver of the truck. They set the truck on fire to avenge the killing of the okada rider.

    An eyewitness said the driver of the truck was on top speed when he ran into a big pothole and lost control in the process.

    It was gathered that angry mob pursued soldiers from neighboring Itawure and officers of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Efon Alaaye Unit Command, who raced there on getting the information.

    “The mob after pursuing the soldiers and the FRSC men set the truck ablaze,” the witness added.

    When contacted, the Efon Alaaye Unit Commander, Samuel Oyedeji, said the accident could have been averted if the driver had been careful.

    “The driver was on top speed and ran into a pothole. In the process he lost control and rammed into the motorcyclist killing him on the spot.

    “Six trucks of Dangote had been involved in accidents in the last one month.

    They are the ones giving us headache.”

    Also contacted, Ekiti Sector Commander, Maiwada Ismaila, confirmed that the angry mob “pursued soldiers and FRSC officials that raced to the place. They set the truck ablaze after.”

     

  • Lecturers demand management’s commitment

    Lecturers demand management’s commitment

    Lecturers from the Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCOPED), Noforija in Epe, Lagos State, have vowed to continue their indefinite strike ‎until the management pays half of the outstanding debts it owes them.

    The Union Chairman, Mr Michael Adefuye, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in Lagos that the payment would stand as a commitment from the management to the lecturers before the strike could be called off.

    Adefuye said following the declaration of the strike on April 18, the Special Adviser (SA) to Gov. Akinwumi Ambode on Education, had on April 21 invited the union executive for a meeting.

    He said the ‎governor’s aide had appealed to the union leaders to call off the strike as the government had increased the college’s monthly subvention effective from May 2016.

    According to him, the special adviser assured them that when the subvention is increased the management will start paying the outstanding debt monthly until it has cleared all.

    But the chairman insisted that the management must pay half of the outstanding debt, as a commitment before suspending its strike.

    According to him, the union insisted so because the current provost has just three years more to spend with the college.

    He noted that the outstanding debt was 42 months of unremitted pensions to the Pension Fund Administrator (PFA) and must be cleared before the end of the tenure of the present administration.

    “From our calculation, if we agree to the monthly payment of the debt as proposed by the SA, the present management will not finish paying the debt before the expiration of the present provost.

    “That is why we are insisting that half of the debt, which is 21 months be paid, so that the remaining 21 months can be paid before the tenure of the provost lapses,’’ he said.

    He said that the executive would call a congress next week to table the outcome of the meeting with the special adviser.

    ‎NAN reports that the lecturers, under the auspices of the Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU), MOCPED, Noforija, Epe Chapter, had on April 18, declared an indefinite strike and staged a peaceful protest.

    The union said it declared the strike as a result of the non-implementation of its demands by the college authorities.

    It was demanding for the payment of 42 months’ of un-remitted pensions to the Pension Funds Administrator (PFA) ‎after the state government increased its monthly subvention in 2013.

    It also accused the management of collapsing the degree programmes with Ekiti State University (EKSU), while others such as Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education (AOCOED) and Federal College of Education, Akoka, affiliates were flourishing.

    ‎According to the union, the present administration lacks transparency in the financial administration of the college’s Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), TETFUND and subvention, among other complains and demands‎.