Tag: Isaac Adewole

  • FG to create seven trauma centres – Minister

    FG to create seven trauma centres – Minister

    The Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, on Friday said the Federal Government will soon create seven trauma centres nationwide to cater for emergencies.

    He also said the government will revitalize about 10,000 Primary Health Care (PHC) centres to reduce pressure on teaching hospitals.

    Adewole, who spoke with some select journalists in Abuja, said the nation will soon have a trauma policy.

    He said: “The issue of trauma centre is not complex but it is also not simple. We want to ensure that each of our hospitals has a trauma centre no matter how small.

    “As part of evolution of what you can call an upgrade in the system, we are now creating specialized trauma centres and it is not peculiar to Nigeria. Already, there is one at the National Hospital in Abuja and another in Gwagwalada.

    “I actually invited seven Chief Medical Directors (CMDs) to my ministry and I said that I am looking for money to upgrade seven teaching hospitals, at least one in each geopolitical zone. I picked Maiduguri in the North-East, ABUTH in the North-West, National Hospital,  UNTH in the South-East , UBTH, UCH  Ibadan and UITH  Ilorin and I said in 2017, I will start with them.

    “I asked each of the Chief Medical Directors (CMDs) to identify two major priorities. The UMTH, Maiduguri CMD picked a trauma centre and I think the next one will be a cancer centre.

    “The trauma centre in Maiduguri will cost about N2.5billion. When you add that to the cost of setting up a cancer centre, each of the teaching hospitals might need about N5billion. So, if we want to create seven trauma centres, we might need about N35billion plus or minus. We have 12 but we said we should start with seven.

    “We are also working on a trauma policy; the ministry is going to have an emergency policy. What do we do for emergency; it will soon become a public matter.”

     

     

     

     

  • FG vows to shelve doctors’ strike

    FG vows to shelve doctors’ strike

    The Federal Government on Thursday said that everything will be done to prevent the impending strike by the National Association of Resident Doctors of Nigeria (NARD).

     

    The NARD had on Monday given the Federal Government a 21-day notice to meet their demands or face an indefinite strike.

     

    Their demands include payment of members’ salaries till date and appropriate placement of members in states and federal tertiary hospitals across the nation, reversal of sacked members in some hospitals and appropriate funding of residency training programme.‎

     

    NARD’s President Dr. Muhammad Askira, had told newsmen in Abuja, that the ultimatum took effect from April 4.

     

    But speaking at the commemoration of the 2016 World Health Day and the flag off of diabetics screening exercise organized by the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF), the Minister of Health, Isaac Adewole, gave assurance that there will be no strike.

     

    The focus of 2016 World Health Day campaign is on Diabetes with the theme “Beat Diabetes”.

     

    Adewole said: “I am assuring Nigerians that there will be no strike. We have received the ultimatum, we have talked and will be meeting again on Monday.”

     

    He said that with Nigeria’s sustained efforts and support from development partners, the spread of the wild polio-virus was halted and Nigeria was dropped off the infamous list of countries where the virus is still endemic.

     

    The Minister also commended Nigeria’s capabilities of meeting the health needs of a greater proportion of her population and her ability to withstand challenges of epidemic like HIV, infectious disease outbreaks as demonstrated by her response to recent Ebola virus epidemic.

     

    Quoting Wealth Health Organization recent ‎report, he said that 24 per cent of illness related deaths in the country is caused by Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), with diabetes accounting for two per cent of that figure.

     

    He said: “Diabetes is increasingly becoming an epidemic especially among adolescents and young adults, partly due to the rapid socio-cultural change being experienced, and the adoption of unhealthy lifestyles and risky behaviours”.

     

    His ministry, he said, has mapped out six critical action areas to tackle the disease.

     

    He said that the action areas included adoption of the global monitoring framework for NCDs, development of a National Diabetes Plan and Policy, ‎increased monitoring and surveillance systems, engagement and rights, improved access to care and sustainable financing for management of diabetes.

     

    The Minister also urged Nigerians to be actively involved in the campaign, stressing that people must learn to identify their risk factors and take steps to avoid them.

     

    He said that some of the steps included maintaining a healthy weight, eating healthy, being physically active, avoiding harmful habit like alcohol intake and tobacco use.

     

    He urged those already diagnosed with diabetes to follow up on doctor’s advice as well as be consistent with doctor’s appointment.

     

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Babachir David Lawal, warned that except Nigerians follow experts’ advice and adopt healthy lifestyle, the current adult population with the diabetes disease will increase.

     

    According to him, ‎diabetes is a disease that could be managed medically if detected early.

     

    He said that it can also be avoided if Nigerians take adequate interest in what they eat.

  • Lassa fever claims 63, spread to 17 states – Minister

    Lassa fever claims 63, spread to 17 states – Minister

    The Federal Government said on Tuesday that Lassa fever has claimed 63 lives out of 212 suspected reported from 62 local government areas in affected states.

    The Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, confirmed this at the emergency National Council of Health meeting in Abuja on the outbreak of the disease.

    Adewole listed the 17 affected states as Bauchi, Niger, Taraba, Kano, Rivers, Oyo, Ondo, Edo, Plateau, Gombe, Nasarawa, Lagos, Delta, Ekiti, Ebonyi, Zamfara and Kogi as well as the FCT.

    He said there is high level of denial and conspiracy across some states, adding that health managers should not deceive executives by the pretence and silence.

    The minister described the denial of Ebonyi to report five suspected cases and one death as conspiracy of denial.

    He said every state should consider itself at risk and put measures to contain and prevent the disease.

    Adewole said the federal government would maintain high level of alert all year round to celebrate Lassa fever obituary next year.

    “With the resources available we will collectively eliminate the disease in Nigeria soon.

    “We have special facilities around us and we have adequate human resource to address the challenge.

    “We will strengthen the Primary Health Care Centres across the country to enhance the surveillance mechanism,’’ he said.

    The minister said 5,000 Primary Health Care centres would be activated before the end of 2016.

    “A committee had already been set up to map out health care centres across the country would benefit from the programme.

    “At least one primary health care centre will be functional in a ward,’’ said Adewole.

    In a related development, the minister announced that six most affected states will have Lassa fever diagnostic centres.

    He said the states are Niger, Nasarawa, Taraba, Plateau, Bauchi and Ondo states; this is in addition to the six existing Lassa fever treatment centres.

    According to him, the centres are Lassa fever Treatment Centre, Irrua, Edo; University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, Maiduguri, Borno; Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, Kano.

    Others are Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), University College Hospital Ibadan, and the National Centre for Disease Control, Asokoro, Abuja.

  • ‘My many adventures as UI Vice-Chancellor’

    ‘My many adventures as UI Vice-Chancellor’

    Vice-Chancellor, University of Ibadan, Prof. Isaac Adewole will be 60 years on May 5, his reign in the premier university has largely been described as successful, but very little is known about his personal life and foray into the medical profession. Recently in his office, he had a chat with a group of journalists, he spoke extensively about his birth, adventures, and challenges as a Vice-Chancellor of Nigeria’s premier university. Tayo Johnson was there.

    SIR, how has life been at 60?

    I’m not yet 60 and I wouldn’t know how life is at 60. But you can say how has life been over the last 60 years? That will be a different story. It is a story of thanksgiving, appreciation simply because I was delivered inside a vehicle. So, by ordinary run of event maybe I shouldn’t be alive. For the fact that I’m alive is an evidence of God’s faithfulness, which is why I said thanksgiving.

    It’s thanksgiving because I was born into a happy family. I’m a lucky son with lucky parents. I was all over the place travelling even with my uncles and so on. I enjoyed my youth. I started from Ilesa and came to Ibadan and then went to Akure. From Akure I then moved back to Ilesa and I was then lucky to have attended a good school – lucky because of the good teachers we had. International teachers I was taught Physics by a Canadian teacher, taught Chemistry by a Pakistani teacher, taught Biology by an Indian teacher and I’m not too sure anybody would have that privilege nowadays. And then, I was lucky to attend the University of Ibadan. And that is why I must thank God for where I am today. I do tell people that the Vice Chancellor is not the best, but one of the best. So, to be in this office is a privilege. At 60, I have to look back and thank God. And I will then make a conscious decision that henceforth I want to give back. I have taken enough from my parents and the country, and now I must give back give back to the society, give back to the nation and also of importance, the people.

    You said you were born in a vehicle. Can you to shed light on that?

    Well, my mother was a trader. So she ran into labour in her shop and all they could do was to quickly call Mr. Seun Abimbola, a prominent medicine vendor in Ilesa at that time, who had a vehicle. He took my mother to the hospital, but I was delivered inside the vehicle on the way to the hospital. We know that in this part of the world, one of the factors for death during labour is lack of supervision. Someone who delivered inside a vehicle obviously would not have supervision. So, I’m not a candidate ordinarily who should survive. That is why I said I’m lucky to be alive.

    What impact does that have on you or what informed your choice of career?

    To be honest it did not. I think what informed my choice of career is what I must say is divine. My father who was a trader had an usual relationship with some of the missionaries – doctors and laboratory scientists. And through that relationship, I paid regular visits to Wesley and I think I got drawn into the serene environment. Wesley was a top grade hospital in those days. The environment was classic green, the walls were white and neat, and everything was set. And anytime I visit Wesley I just wept, it was not the Wesley I knew in those days. But then I visited them. Back then, I used to come back to recreate the hospital environment. I will barricade myself and start calling some fictitious names asking them to come and take injection and then their medications. And an uncle of mine right there said: “This boy will be a doctor”. But then that I studied medicine is also divine. Let me state clearly that my original plan was to do Mathematics, Physics and Geography. I think I was designed by plan and I wanted to do Aeronautic Engineering. But then, I got attracted to two bright young graduates from the University of Ibadan, one taught Chemistry, the other taught Physics and I can tell you these bright doctors captivated me. And I think the other one also taught Biology. So, I became a follower or disciple of these bright teachers. And of course, it was not too difficult for the guidance counselor in the school. He advised me: “Oh you have to do this and that and you’ll end up being a doctor”.

    Sir, talking about your background, you’ve been referring to your parents as traders, can you tell us more on that?

    Well, my father was a trader and also a unionist to some extent before he became a trader and then a community person. My father owned a shop in Ilesa, Osun State. It used to be a big shop in those days, but when I visited the place a couple of weeks ago, it looks so small. My father happened to be an agent of UAC and GB Olivant, and I learnt quite a number of things from him. He was very meticulous. He believed in transparency and accountability. He would take stock every month and I was his accountant and auditor. And I carried that into administration. I know so much about accounting, about reconciliation and auditing and so, people are quite shocked that how come a medical doctor be talking about reconciliation, auditing and so on. But I grew up in such practice and it has become part of me.

    Are from a rich background?

    By any standard, I came from a modest background. But not too poor, because my father was able to afford school fees. And to me by any standard, if your father can pay your school fees… then, my father had a bicycle. In those days, we don’t have cars.

    Do you have everything at your disposal to make life comfortable?

    I wouldn’t say so. I think I and others had what we needed to survive and then, my father one way or the other believed in education. In our house, he created a reading room. It was the biggest room downstairs in the storey building that it was created. It had a long table and chairs. He encouraged all my colleagues, friends including those of my brothers and sisters to come into the house and read. And we had electricity in those days. Quite a number of my classmates would come home to read with us. Many of us in those days read over night. Reading over night was quite fascinating.

    Sir, there are some life-changing adventures that you have experienced along the line.

    Let me say I’ve been a VC of interaction with so many adventures. And at various levels, those adventures have largely contributed to who I am today. I joined Medical Politics by sheer accident. I was encouraged by Dr. Kayode Obembe, who just came to me and said: “Dr. Adewole, I want you to be a Secretary”. And I couldn’t explain till today. So, I just told him: “Why not”. And I became the Secretary of the Association of Resident Doctors in UCH at that early level and from there rose to become the President of the association.  We led the nation-wide strike and we were dismissed. That was the turning point and everything appeared bleak and blank at that point, because we were sacked. That was during the Buhari-Idiagbon regime. We were not only sacked, we were asked to be picked dead or alive. And so some us went to Georgia. And till today, I tell people: “I won’t disclose to you how I got out of Nigeria for obvious reasons”. You know people knock doors to move out and you don’t want to put them in trouble – you don’t want them to regret helping you to escape. I escaped and I was away for about 15 months. But the experience I had in London also influenced who I am today and helped me when I returned, because while I was in exile, I wrote four papers. And so, by the time I came for interview and we were victims of some internal and complex national politics and one way or the other, some of those processes also helped us to come back and the then president, General Babangida gave us pardon when he was launching the then Political Bureau. He said: “I’m granting pardon to all the dismissed doctors, so they can participate in the national political discourse”. So, that was how we came back. I think I must thank some of my teachers, who believed in me and I must thank one of my teachers, Prof. Oladipo who is still alive, who took avid interest in me and brought me up. He is from Ogbomoso. He was one of those who encouraged me to come back. I almost did not want to come back, but he said: “I think you should come back”. And coming back means I’m now in the academic line.

    How did you meet your wife?

    Well, let me state clearly that I have had two marriages. I had the first and then the second one and I think I’m at the bus stop, much more matured. Sometimes when you are not matured things you would do. There are things you would not do as a matured person. So I think now I’m at the bus stop. I met both of them, the first and second in the hospital environment. My first wife is a nurse, while my second wife is a doctor. So that would explain that this is not somebody who believes in adventure. So, I’ve been able to fish in my local surroundings. (laughs)

    But what about the pressure around?

    What do you mean by pressure? I decided to fish in my local waters and that is why I didn’t go far beyond my environment.

    There would be other women that have had positive impact in your life. Can you just share?

    Let me just say that what I am today apart from God and then Professor Oladipo, women generally have contributed to what I am. And maybe that’s why I’m an Obstetrician Gynecologist. Maybe that is why I now believed I need to promote women health. My mother is a great woman, quite unique and has been likely influential to what I am today. I had quite a number of fantastic female teachers. One of them an Indian, Mrs. Mathew, who was my Biology teacher. Mrs. Mathew would take you home and ask: “Did you understand the lecture today?” I will say no and she will open the textbook and say go and read. The philosophy of Mrs. Mathew is that it is only those who read that can understand. To her you must read. So she encouraged me in the art of reading. When I became a doctor, Mrs. Abiola Oshoti taught me about resilience. As a woman, she would operate from evening till the next morning. And growing up under such a fantastic lady means a lot. We never complain, we were never tired, and we did one operation after another. And when I became top professional, quite a number of my collaborators internationally are women.

    At the beginning of this interview, you spoke about the job of a Vice Chancellor. Can you shed light on this?

    I said being a Vice Chancellor in U.I doesn’t mean you are the best, but one of the best. In other words, you are not the only person that can do this job. That is what I told myself. So you consider yourself lucky to be on this seat. And don’t let it get into your head that others can’t do it. I think the mistake most people make is that they believe they are the only one, but I say no, you are not!

    What came to your mind the day you were made Vice Chancellor?

    Well, let me paint this scenario. I had a fine CV. So, that is why I’m a bit different. I competed in 2005 for VC and came second. So, in other words, when the announcement was made to congratulate the man who won, I took my laptop and looked at what I presented and I said: “I will build it up for the next time, so I had enough period to work. And when I became Vice Chancellor, fortunately the announcement was made in August, I had three months to prepare and I thought that one of the things that would stand you out is to be prepared for the office. So, I put up a committee, gave them a vision and asked them to work with me, because you can’t do it alone. So I developed the Vice Chancellor Strategy Plan for five years and that plan is still what I’m using till today as my compass. So, with everything I’m doing today, I have four pillars. I promised to develop the welfare of the people, because the human capital is the most important factor in production. When the people are motivated and can go to anywhere. A highly motivated army would win wars. An ill-motivated or unprepared army cannot even conquer a terrain. So, we would work on infrastructure and governance so that we can put in place a system. So I was prepared for it and when I started, I was ready to fly.

    If you have that kind of a chance, what kind of successor will you desire?

    Well, I will look for a successor who will build and amend. I will look for a successor, who can build on what I have done. I told somebody this morning that I’m already unwinding and preparing for it. Because you can’t finish this job. Let the next person come and finish it. And I’m also going to make sure that my successor has a three-month period to work with me. We would travel around. So all the decisions that I am going to take in my last three months will be taken in conjunction with my successor. I will take him round and introduce him, because anybody can occupy this seat. I will take him or her around and make sure I tell what I ought to have done, which I could not do. This is because I still have two items left that I have not been able to achieve. I still hope we’ll be able to do it, but for chance we could not do it. I will give him or her a robust hand over it.

    The university has been transformed, how have you been able to achieve this with all the workload as a Vice Chancellor?

    Well, I did mention that we had a plan and this was a product of what one would call serious interaction. We sold the plan to the Senate and to the Council. The Senate said this is the first time we are having a Vice Chancellor present a strategy plan. This is a plan we approved so go and implement it. The Council said the same thing. “If this is a thing from you, we wish you luck”. And then, I must commend the people I have around me. It is not a one-person show. The Principal officers have been fantastic, the Director of Works. I pushed them and they keep on moving, and we’ve been able to achieve a lot as a team. And I also believe that what of the thing that we’ve done: one, we were also fortunate there was an investigation panel right at the beginning of the tenure. And I had a discussion with the Chairman of the investigation panel who gave me lots of advice and I have put it into use. And I will also tell my successor some of those tricks.

    Was one of it the seven-point agenda? And what has been your greatest challenge so far?

    No, it was a four-point agenda. My greatest challenge so far is to convince people that it can be done. There is a wide spread pessimism. And to move people from pessimist to optimist is to me the greatest challenge. You go around and ask why this is like this and they tell you: “Oh, we can’t do it. It is because of money”. You then ask them how much do you need? They have no idea. So how can you say you need money when you don’t even have an idea? Even when we provided some of the resources, people can’t still believe it is like can it be true? Money is good, but I tell people it is not the only solution, it is won with the solution. And I won’t be the one to start shouting we need money. We need money, we need people, we need ideas and when we marry all together, we can move mountains.

    Let’s look at the challenges you have so far. How would you describe the challenges that have affected the work or hinder what you have in mind for the school?

    Well, let me situate ASUU strike in proper context. One, is to say that we stand to be very unfortunate. The strike was completely preventable and avoidable, but we mismanaged it. And this country would not take decisions as at when due and when necessary. That to me was the unfortunate side. Otherwise, government can sign an MoU with ASUU. ASUU needed to go on strike for government to wake up. And then, the strike lasted for months… A solution came when Vice Chancellors were involved. And all we did was to marry ASUU and government positions. After finding a way of marrying both, someone said why have we not thought of this before? But in terms of how it has affected us in terms of positive and negative sides – first thing is that it has made government to honour the agreement. So in terms of resources, we are optimistic that there will be more resource for revitalization. Negatively because we lost for six months and it will take us up to two or three years to recover that. We are trying to readjust the calendar back September/June or October/July calendar that we use to operate. When we get there it will take us another two or three years.

    The issue of security challenges now, we are now witnessing a trend whereby schools are now been attacked. How prepared is the university in terms of this?

    Nigerian universities are part of the society, so I do not see how Nigerian universities can pretend not to be part of Nigeria. I think my message is that all of us must be security conscious.

    As a Vice Chancellor, what’s your position on ranking of universities in the world? U.I is number seven out of 100 universities in Africa.

    Well, let me say that rankings have their shortcomings but they are still ranking. And we believe we must reposition ourselves. We need to take it seriously. And I am a university Vice Chancellor, who can give a marching order to the staff. The rankings essentially measure the website. But we must not complain. I’m not going to be a Vice Chancellor, who will be chasing rankings.

    Sir, what is your happiest day and your saddest day?

    The saddest day was when I lost my sister. My happiest day was the day I was made a professor. I was made a professor in 1999.

    What would you want to do better if you have the chance?

    Let me tell you one thing I did in 1984 and 85. I declared a nation-wide strike as a doctor and in 1988 and 90 I was in a meeting in Hungary. There was another strike. And so I told someone sitting next to me that all the hospitals in Nigeria will go on strike and he said:”Is your country at war? Because even in war time situations hospitals are never completely shut.” So I came back a changed person, and I told my colleagues we can go on strike, but let’s create an emergency, where there will be intensive care unit, labour room and children emergency room. Four places in the hospitals were not to be closed.

    What will you do after your tenure as VC?

    I’ll go back to my department and lecture.

  • ’Don’t manipulate VC’s emergence’

    ’Don’t manipulate VC’s emergence’

    •UI  VC launches NGO for women

    Former Pro-Chancellor of the University of Ibadan (UI) Wole Olanipekun (SAN) has warned the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Isaac Adewole and the Governing Council to desist from influencing the emergence of another VC in 2015.

    According to him, a good governing council and its management should not impose a vice-chancellor on the university .

    The legal luminary spoke at Adewole’s 60th birthday celebration, held at the International Conference Centre, UI, Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    “Neither you (Prof Adewole) nor the governing council should sabotage the exercise of choosing your successor.

    “University of Ibadan is a great institution that needs to follow due process in selecting its leaders, because we set the pace and others follow,” he said

    Olanipekun recalled that when he was the pro-chancellor, there was controversy before Adewole’s emergence but he insisted that the best candidate emerged.

    “I told them I was ready to resign if the Federal Government interferes in the selection and go against my judgment.

    “I believe in due process and any attempt to play politics with the selection will jeopardise the progress of the institution and lead to the emergence of a dull VC.”

    In his congratulatory speech, Olanipekun described the VC as a man of integrity and high standard.

    “His record over the years speaks for him as a gentleman of gentlemen and a scholar of high esteem.

    ” The battle field has ended for you and please at 60 don’t hold any grudge against anybody because you are still going higher  in life.

    “You need to move closer to God and serve him in truth and spirit,” he said.

    The VC launched a Non Government Organisation, Isaac Folorunso Adewole Foundation (IFAF).

    IFAF intends to promote women’s health focusing on cervical cancer prevention and its management at the facility, community and national level.

    Adewole said IFAF will offer high quality, humane and selfless services in areas of advocacy, development of accessible cervical cancer prevention programmes, capacity building for young and committed medical personnel.

     

  • Ex-Odu’a boss urges health workers to be professional

    Former Chairman of the Odua Investment Company Limited Chief Sarafadeen Abiodun Alli has urged health practitioners to adhere to best practices.

    He spoke yesterday on “Pharmacy Practice in Relations to Nigerian Law” at the opening of the 30th anniversary of the Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Ibadan (UI).

    Alli said health practitioners should discharge their duties professionally, adding that they are responsible to their colleagues and clients and should not be involved in crime.

    He said: “There is no immunity for a pharmacist who gets involved in, for example, drug trafficking, foreign exchange racketeering, criminal abortions, trading in human beings, commerce in human parts or organs, obtaining by false pretences (419), economic and financial crimes, and corrupt practices.”

    U.I. Vice-Chancellor (VC) Prof. Isaac Adewole said the Faculty of Pharmacy was positioned to bring the gown and town together on drug manufacturing.

    He said it was endowed with some of the best minds in pharmaceutical education.

    The Dean, Prof. Chinedum Peace Babalola, said the faculty had churned out many PhD holders and professors, adding: “It is time we turned our research findings into products. This can only happen if we have a drug manufacturing and quality assurance unit as captured by the Centre for Drug Discovery Development and Production (CDDDP). This grant will soon elapse and the only way to sustain it is for the centre to own a pilot drug manufacturing unit.”

    She urged individuals, groups, organisations and the government to assist the faculty in this regard.

    Highlights of the ceremony included the presentation of awards to 16 people, inauguration of the Faculty Anthem, unveiling of the Faculty Logo and launching of the endowment funds.

     

  • Ige: 12 years after

    Ige: 12 years after

    Just as well Prof. Isaac Adewole, vice chancellor of the University of Ibadan, caused it to be announced that he had no hand in shutting the event from Trenchard Hall, the advertised venue. It eventually held at the Students Events Centre, the university’s old central cafeteria.

    The story was that first, Trenchard Hall; then, the UI Conference Centre, were denied the organisers of the two-day events marking 12 years after the assassination of Chief Bola Ige, SAN. That political colossus, UI alumnus and former federal attorney-general was killed on 23 December 2001.

    Trenchard Hall was to host the symposium on February 4 after the showing, at the UI Arts Theatre the previous evening, of Ofin-Ga, a film written by Prof. Akinwunmi Isola, famed scholar, cultural activist and Yoruba language purist.

    Prof. Isola chaired the symposium, with twin topics: “Impacts of Unresolved Political Assassinations on Future Elections and on Nigeria’s Security” and “National Conference according to Bola Ige’s Dream”. The Bola Ige Centre for Justice, anchored by Awa Bamiji organised the event, in concert with the university’s Students Union elements.

    The story, therefore, was that not a few hearts skipped, among the university’s management, at the horror of the event turning explosively political, with the Jonathan Presidency getting hit.

    For one, Bamiji, who goes by the pre-fix “Comrade”, was likely to attract starry-eyed ideologues and fire-blazing cadres from the students’ Aluta column, irreverent folks who love to work themselves into a lather mouthing socialist slogans, denouncing the extant “decadent” order.

    For another, the twin topics were explosively suggestive: one amplifying the notorious fact that Bola Ige’s killers have still not been brought to book, some 12 years after; and the other suggesting the imminent National Conference was the latest fakery, contrasted to the classic Sovereign National Conference (SNC), which Ige and kindred spirits espoused.

    But thank God the vice chancellor was trenchant he was no part of the alleged Trenchard conspiracy. The rumoured reason was scandalous: that it could turn political; and some presidential folks could be embarrassed.

    It would have been embarrassing that after 66 years, UI, Nigeria’s premier university, had not evolved a culture robust enough to handle partisan political exchanges, without top management hearts quacking. That simply cannot be true! Every university ought to allow equal opportunity access to all shades of political opinions, making it a hub of ideas.

    But the organisers’ odyssey was not limited to alleged administrators’ nerves. Aside from Osun Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, who sent a representative, Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) Chairman, Wale Oshun, one of the guest speakers, represented by Comrade Laoye Sanda, and Prince Tajudeen Olusi, who also sent a representative, none of the advertised political heavyweights showed up. Even for a Bola Ige memorial, governance was enough distraction!

    None of the biological Iges was there too.

    But neither of these dampened the zest of the organisers nor the admirable commitment to the memorial, by the cultured old guard, led by the taciturn Prof. Isola, the chairman at the symposium, whose cultural activism nevertheless shone through, as he challenged speakers who could, to make their presentations in Yoruba, as Bola Ige would flawlessly have done if he had wished!

    Indeed, the mix was quintessential Bola Ige: cultured old folks and aspiring young Turks, all fired by the ardour for progressive thinking, the zeal for a cultured society and the drive for governance devoted to the social welfare of the mass of the people; and total commitment to the Jeremy Bentham credo of the greatest happiness of the greatest number.

    Indeed, the parade was intimidating in its cultured temper: Prof. Isola, Retired Methodist Archbishop, Ayo Ladigbolu, Baale of Ekotedo, Ibadan, Pa Taiye Ayorinde (who, in response to the compeer addressing him as “chief”, insisted the nearest English equivalent of Baale was Duke, since the Baale installs chiefs; but added Baale was Baale and would rather be addressed by simply that!), Prof. Kola Ogundowole, ace Yoruba poet, Chief Tunbosun Oladapo, Dr. Wale Okediran, the famous medic with literary blood coursing in his veins, Comrade Moshood Erubami, Comrade Laoye Sanda (who represented Hon. Wale Oshun), Princess Bisi Sangodoyin and Comrade Gbenga Awosode, among others.

    At the film show, the previous evening, were Prof. Ishola, Prof. Oladapo Akinkugbe, emeritus professor of medicine, Dr. Tony Marinho, medic and The Nation weekly columnist, and Prof. Ogundowole among others, despite the film showing at the forecourt of the Arts Theatre, and not inside as advertised.

    Of course, the students too came in numbers, both at the film show and at the symposium, a fitting tribute to Ige’s memory, for he was not only a perpetual friend of the youth, he was also their exemplar, to which not a few aspired. Indeed, at the symposium was an Aluta column of students, shouting “vic-to-ry” and whipping up comradely fists.

    Still Ige, near-beatified since his tragic death, was all too human.

    Like the literary tragic heroes, he fell to no one but hubris. It was hubris that drove Ige to break ranks with his Afenifere family for felt betrayal, after the Alliance for Democracy (AD) caucus presidential primary that rejected him for Chief Olu Falae. That drove him into the conservative camp, which signalled the beginning of the end.

    Even more tragic, it was hubris that made him shunt aside the dire warning, by a loyal aide, Alhaji Kayode Adekojo (who spoke at the symposium), that death lurked that night, if Ige slept in his Ibadan home.

    Alhaji Adekojo claimed he had seen Ige’s killing in a trance; and tried to dissuade his boss from sleeping at home or, if he insisted, offered to serve as spiritual bulwark against the would-be killers. Ige dismissed both offers, despatching him instead to distribute Christmas turkey to Governor Lam Adesina and some other local VIPs. Less than two hours after parting between boss and aide, however, Ige’s first-born and daughter, Funso, reportedly called Adekojo that his dire dream had come to pass!

    Still, that was Ige, the human. In Ige, the near-divine, all the tragic dross of human foibles is gone. What is left is the quintessence: the one that is dead and yet lives; a true hero whose essence transcends his immediate family; and is proudly owned by a doting community, for generations to come. That is indeed the fundament of greatness.

    As to be expected, therefore, the bitterness that Ige’s killers still walk free remains undiminished; and resonated all through the two-day event.

    But there is great comfort — and that comfort is not cold at all! — that though Ige died but still lives, those associated with this murder live but have long died!

    So, as the Nigerian state lumbers to fish out and punish the killers, and secure justice for its own attorney-general and minister of Justice, let those who believe in the Ige essence champion those ideals he and his progressive Palladium stood for: quality education and health paid for by the state, and an equal-opportunity, just society and a truly productive federal Nigeria.

    Nothing less would immortalise Ige.

  • Boko Haram goes to university

    What an interesting development, the proposal by the Vice-Chancellor, University of Ibadan (UI), Prof Isaac Adewole, for partnership with the Nigerian Army in the counter-terrorism campaign against Boko Haram! Don’t forget that the name of the dreaded Islamist group mirrors antagonism to Western education and way of life. So when a centre for the very type of learning that the group is opposed to offers assistance in the battle, it appears to be a fitting move for self-preservation, which is said to be the first law of Nature.

    Prof Adewole, during a visit to Maj-Gen Ahmed Jibrin, the general officer commanding (GOC) 2 Division, at Ojoo, Ibadan, Oyo State, said: “The Chief of Defence Staff said the insurgency will end in April. I do not have the facts and information that he has. But I believe that winning the war involves winning the heart and soul of the people. The university can partner the military to find out what are the real reasons for the insurgency.”

    He added that the suggested collaboration between the Army and the university’s Department of Strategic Studies would also serve the purpose of “re-teething and retooling “the military’s personnel.

    The motive and objective may be appealing. However, perhaps unsurprisingly, given the professor’s academic background, the gesture was rather over-intellectual. Reminder: Boko Haram has been on the rampage since 2009, and at various times its spokesmen have projected its “guiding principles,” if such a positive-sounding phrase may be used in describing the group’s destructive philosophy.

    In other words, the group’s grounds for violence have not only been well publicised; they are also well-known. Driven by a theocratic agenda, perhaps fuelled by unacceptable socio-economic conditions, Boko Haram, the truth must be told, does not require any elaborate study to deconstruct it. The anti-terror effort should not be complicated with impractical over-analysis.

    It is noteworthy that Prof Adewole mentioned the comment by the new Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Marshal Alex Badeh, on crushing the terrorists by April, the terminal date of the six-month extension of emergency rule in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states in November last year, following an initial period from May to October. Also worth mentioning is the fact that, in a demonstration of apparent contempt for Badeh’s time-table, Boko Haram carried out devastating attacks in Adamawa and Borno, which claimed at least 138 lives.

    This context clearly calls for urgent action, certainly not the type proposed by Prof. Adewole. Even considering that the Army buys the Vice-Chancellor’s idea, there is no doubt that the advocated strategic research would likely be time-consuming, which is a luxury the country can ill afford in the face of the group’s relentless and remorseless rebellion.

    While such study might be of intellectual value, it is highly improbable that it could be decisive in winning the terror war. It could be endorsed for academic reasons, but it would be over-optimistic, if not unrealistic, to imagine that it can yield the kind of concrete result needed at this time.

     

  • VP meets UI VC, others over ASUU strike

    To resolve the ongoing strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Vice President Namadi Sambo yesterday held a closed door meeting with stakeholders in the education sector.

    The meeting, which was held at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, had in attendance stakeholders, led by the Supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike.

    Others included the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof. Julius Okojie; and Vice Chancellor of the University of Ibadan, Prof. Isaac Adewole.

    But none of them spoke to reporters at the end of the brief meeting

    The Vice President’s office did not issue any statement.