Tag: MAPOLY

  • MAPOLY union acquires 10 tricycles

    MAPOLY union acquires 10 tricycles

    TO ease transportation on campus, the Students’ Union (SU) Caretaker Committee of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY), Abeokuta in Ogun State, has acquired 10 new tricycles.

    The committee said the tricycles would be driven by students of the institution.

    “The 10 tricycles were purchased by the Caretaker Committee of the Students’Union to aid intra-campus transportation. It would cost N20 to board by students. It is also expected to serve as a work and study programme for the students, as the tricycles will be driven by them,” David Akhilome, a member of the committee told our correspondent.

    The Rector, Prof. Oludele Itiola, described the project as a “water-shed” in the history of the institution.

    He implored the committee to run the project themselves and make it a serious business so that they can maintain the tricycles.

    Itiola said: “Today is a water-shed in the history of MAPOLY, the evidence is here. Without prejudice to anything or anyone, we have been setting up committees to look into malpractices and what have you. But today we are celebrating. MAPOLY is moving forward. I am saying with my mouth now but very soon you will see what I mean. MAPOLY is going to greater heights.

    “These tricycles are very important for the students who will alight at the bus-shed and still need to go to the market and other places. The business arm of the institution was still looking into this transportation situation, not knowing the Students’ Union would come out in this honourable way.”

    Director of Students’ Affairs (DSA), Seyi Shobande, also applauded the committee for the milestone, charging the incoming executives to do more than their predecessors. He praised the Rector for his support.

    “You have created an enabling environment for this to happen. This cannot happen without your able leadership, Prof Itiola. I have been thrilled working with these young boys and girls. I hope to continue to work with intelligent people. The feedbacks we have got from students is that you have showed tremendous care to their welfare with this project,” he said.

    Meanwhile, Chairman of the committee, Sodiq Usaefat said the tricycles were procured in the best interest of the students of the institution.

    He said: “We are trying to serve the interests of the students and management of MAPOLY. It is on that note that we thought of what we could do as a give-back to MAPOLY. We are rounding off our administration with the commissioning of these tricycles. This wouldn’t have been possible without the efforts of the Rector. Sir, you are our greatest inspiration.”

    As part of the inauguration, the Rector, DSA and the Caretaker Chairman were transported from the venue to the bus-shed in one of the tricycles.

  • MAPOLY suspends six for manipulating students’ results

    The Management of Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta, Ogun State, has suspended for six months, six senior lecturers including one director and a head of department for allegedly manipulating of students’ results.

    The affected lecturers, who were also demoted, were from the School of Business and Management Studies.

    Their suspension and demotion followed the report of the Staff Disciplinary Committee (SDC) which found them “culpable” of wrongdoings in separate allegations levelled against each of them.

    MAPOLY management added that the affected lecturers would not be allowed to hold any position of authority or responsibility in the institution for five years.

    The institution’s management which communicated sanctions in a letter signed by the Deputy Registrar, S.A.Ashaye, and addressed to each of the affected lecturers said it based its decision on the report of the SDC on the alleged case of result manipulation levelled against a number of staff who examined Higher National Diploma course in the Department of Accountancy during the first semester examination of the 2015/2016 session.

    The suspended persons are – M.A. Ademuyiwa (director) Mr. M.A. Ajayi (HOD) and four senior lecturers namely – Dr. M. A. Adesola, J.K. Ogunwede, R. A. Oduwole and Agbebi Pius.

  • ‘Keke MAPOLY can ease transportation hassles’

    Rector of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOL), Abeokuta, Prof Oludele Itiola, has said the institution may have to inaugurate its engineering school to mass produce one of its latest inventions –  a tricycle called Keke Mapoly, in order to address the transport challenges often faced by students.

    The Rector of the Polytechnic, Prof. Oludele Itiola, who made this known to reporters during the matriculation for the 2015/2016 academic session, said the Keke Mapoly when produced in large number, would help convey students to and from the institution’s campus at Ogere.

    According to Itiola, the institution’s “exploits in the production of solar – powered street lights, tricycles, fuelless generator … prominently indicate that it is not a mere local champion.”

    A total of 5000 freshers comprising of National Diploma and Higher National Diploma – full and part time students, took their matriculation oath to abide by the “rules and regulations” of the polytechnic, last Friday.

    The Rector cautioned them against cultism, examination malpractices and indecent dressing, warning that whoever is found culpable of such vices would be expelled.

    “I advise you to be mindful of the individuals, groups, associations and societies you would belong to. Here at Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta, we shall not tolerate acts like indecent dressing, examination malpractices, cultism, cult-related acts, fighting, stealing thuggery and other vices. We shall not hesitate to show you the doors if you are found culpable of any of these,” he said.

     

  • Our frustrations at MAPOLY

    Sir; where is no more time to be wasted again in the conundrum caused the 2013/14 Mass Communication ND graduates by the authorities of Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta (MAPOLY).

    Just like is was reported weeks back that a top official of the school has directed that the 2015/16 HND admission (which these ND graduates are eligible for) to be deferred till next year, the school has shown its true colours with the omission of the names of the Mass Communication graduates (now applicants) in the HND admission list recently released by the school.

    On Tuesday, November 24, the admission list was released and later withdrawn by the school with unofficial reports blaming errors in the list for the withdrawal.

    But as of Thursday, November 26, new admissions were given to the HND applicants for several courses excluding Mass Communication applicants who sat for the same examination on Thursday, October 8 (and for some Friday, October 9).

    We saw hell on the HND screening day (ask any Mapoly HND applicants) who wrote the exam where countless number of students collapsed while waiting for hours in the rain and the sun to write this exam.

    We were subjected to physiological and psychological torture before this exam (security agents took time to harass us) and now more than that with the ‘deferred’ admission of the selected students.

    Some have blamed the deferred admissions on the unavailability of our results but we will also wish to bring to the notice of the general public that it took over a year for our school to produce our final year results when we had finished studies on October 29, 2014.

    The results were eventually posted on Friday, November 13, but not without errors ‘as usual’. More than 50 percent of the said results are still pending.

    Unfortunately for us, the school management has not deemed it fit to address us on either our delayed ND final year results or the ‘deferred’ HND admission.

    It is worrisome to note that the delay and the error-laden results have cost some of our other colleagues gainful employments and admission into other institutions of learning (especially those seeking direct entry into other universities.) How can we do that when the result isn’t ready?

    It is no gainsaying the fact that these ordeals of encountered from the delay of our ND results happened under the watchful eyes of the immediate past Head of Department of Mass Communication, Sina Aina, but yet the institution is yet to take any punitive actions against him.

    Just as we are calling on Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun and Commissioner for Education, Modupe Mujota, we also call on the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu; Executive Secretary, National Board for Technical Education, Dr. Masa’udu Kazaure; State Chairman, Committee for the Defence of Human Rights, Comrade Yinka Folarin to look into this ‘perfected’ injustice on us as regards the infringements of our rights to quality education.

    If I may borrow from the words of Martin Luther King Jr. “Our lives begin to end, when we keep silent to the things that matter to us most”. Governor Amosun, this is not the ‘Ogun Standard’ we bargained for!

     

    • Albert Adebule,

    Ibara, Abeokuta.

  • MAPOLY, release our ND results

    SIR: I and over 5,000 National Diploma graduates in the department of Mass Communication, Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta, 2013/14 set are walloping in abject disappointment over the non-release of our final year results even after one year.

    It is disheartening how we are supposed to live for over 365 days as graduates without our results. We finished our studies on October 29, 2014 and as of today, the final results has not been released.

    The non-release of our results, we were informed, will make the school defer the admission of students who have applied for their HND programmes in school for this year.

    I have personally complained to the Head of Department to look into this unwarranted delay but nothing has been done. What is the objective – is it to destroy our education careers?

    It is no gainsaying the fact that the non-release of the results has denied some of us admission into universities and polytechnics including MAPOLY for B. Sc. and HND programmes, but for me, gainful

    employment.

    I appeal to Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun, the Rector, Professor Oludele Itiola to help look into the problem and see to the immediate release of our results.

     

     

    • Albert Adebule,

    Ibara, Abeokuta, Ogun State.

     

  • Fanfare as Etisalat Cliqfest fetes Mapoly students

    Fanfare as Etisalat Cliqfest fetes Mapoly students

    For the student community in Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta (MAPOLY) penultimate Saturday would go down in the annals of the polytechnic more memorable in many ways than one.

    First, it was a day it got its share of entertainment from arguably one of the most innovative telecommunications company in Nigeria, Etisalat, which stormed the school with its unrivalled youth-centric, empowerment, and educative initiative tagged: ‘Etisalat Cliqfest.’

    The two-day event which held last weekend began with an inspirational session delivered by Motivational Speaker and Life Coach, Niyi Adesanya.

    The icing in the cake was the second day as students were thrilled at a concert headlined by popular Nigerian artistes, a football match and a raffle draw.

    Speaking on the event, Elvis Daniel, Head, Youth Segment, Etisalat Nigeria, described Cliqfest as a touch point for young people where they are at liberty to express themselves and their dreams.

    “We go around the country, bringing an entertaining platform that delivers a wholesome experience to students because Etisalat is passionate about the Nigerian youth and their aspirations. Cliqfest is designed to help them discover themselves right here within the walls of their institution,” said Daniel.

    The climax of the event emerged when Bilikis Egusola Omowunmi, a Science Laboratory Technology student was announced as the winner of a brand new Hyundai i10. The elated student said, “To be honest I bought two raffle tickets in anticipation that I might win but I still cannot believe that I truly won. Etisalat is the best network ever and I am extremely grateful to Etisalat for this encouraging experience.”

    In just six years of operations, Etisalat Nigeria has become a major industry player with a growing subscriber base of 20 million in a highly competitive market. Its portfolio of voice and data-centric products include – easy starter, easycliq, easybusiness, and easyblaze; all tailor-made to meet the needs of its customers.

    Etisalat Nigeria is one of the 19 operations of the Etisalat Group that spans across Africa, Middle East and Asia serving over 182 million subscribers; and it is committed to delivering innovative and quality services to its growing subscribers.

  • Mapoly students arraigned over unlawful possession of arms

    Mapoly students arraigned over unlawful possession of arms

    No fewer than five students of Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, were Friday, arraigned before a Magistrate Court sitting in Abeokuta in connection with unlawful possession of firearms and membership prohibited secret cult.

    The arraigned students are Olawale Olaniyi, Adeyemi Azeez, Olufalo Bidemi, Osilaja Hammed and Bashorun Sodiq while the charge listed against them bordered on conspiracy, unlawful possession of firearms and belonging to a secret cult.

    The suspects were arraigned following legal advice from the state’s Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) in a letter marked AB11/S.9631A/12 and dated July 21, 2014 and which recommended their trial.

    They were said to have on August 5, 2013 at Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta suspected to be members of Black Axe, a secret cult society in contravention of section 3 and punishable under section 5 of the secret cult (prohibition and special prohibition) laws of Ogun State, 2006.

    They were also said to be in illegal possession of home – made gun which is an offence as stipulated in section 3 of the firearms act (Cap 28) laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 2004

    The accused however pleaded not guilty to the charges when they were read to them.

    Bolarinwa Odeyale and B. Saidu appeared for the accused and while the trio of Olawale Olaniyi, Olufalo Bidemi and Bashorun Sodiq were granted bail, the duo of Adeyemi Azeez and Osilaja are to be remanded in prison for until they meet bail conditions.

    The case was adjourned till February, 19, 2015.

  • Free education in Ogun:  The untold story

    Free education in Ogun: The untold story

    I used to pay school fees and buy textbooks for all my children from the primary school to tertiary level. When Amosun came and talked about free education, I was a bit sceptical. But when my daughters in the primary and secondary schools did not pay school fees throughout the last session (2011/12) and returned home with writing materials and textbooks, I was so happy. I have also not paid school fees for my boy in the nursery school in the last one year. Now, I only pay for my daughter in Ojere (MAPOLY). I am very grateful for this financial relief by the Amosun administration.”

    That was the voice of a chauffeur at the workshop of an auto-mechanic in the fall of 2012. I was only drawn into the chit-chat when the man mentioned nursery school. I thought there was a mix-up somewhere. Was there a charity organisation running free nursery school? Up till that time, I must confess, I did not know that many government’s primary schools also had nursery schools. Upon inquiries, I discovered that our free education also covered that level of education.

    Garrulity, admittedly, may be a vice, but taciturnity is not always a virtue. If you don’t blow your own trumpet, nobody will blow it for you. In a country like Nigeria, where politics is still seen by some as a zero-sum game, you need to constantly tell your own story, otherwise the lies being spewed by the opposition may one day be accorded some undeserved attention by the unwary.

    Before Amosun was sworn in as governor of Ogun State on May 29, 2011, there was no free education at the pre-primary, primary, secondary and tertiary levels of public education. Parents were paying for everything and buying everything. Today, to the glory of the Almighty and through responsible governance and prudent husbandry of the resources of Ogun State by the governor, education is free at the pre-primary level, primary level and in secondary schools. Education at the tertiary level is heavily subsidized by the current government; it is not free.

    When you consider the fact that an average family in Ogun State has children at the four levels of education at the same time, then you can appreciate the huge financial burden that has been lifted off the shoulders of these parents by the Amosun administration. This is a landmark achievement our government should celebrate.

    Between 2007 and 2011, Ogun State defaulted in the payment of counterpart fund for UBEC, hence no money could be accessed under the UBE Act; parents paid for everything. The state also defaulted in managing the ETF in 2009, hence was unable to access the intervention fund in 2010. In parenthesis, I recall that Ogun was denied the MDGs funds for the years 2009 and 2010 because it mismanaged the N1.64bn for the year 2008. When you consider the above and the fact that education was not free at any level, then you can appreciate the value the Daniel administration placed on education in Ogun State.

    Today, the Amosun administration has offset all the outstanding counterpart funds and has not defaulted once. When you see structures in our primary schools with the inscription, ‘SUBEB 2008/2009’, it does not mean they were built under the last administration. Indeed, they were built under the Amosun administration, having paid the state’s counterpart funds for those years. At the JSS level under the Daniel administration, the highest enrolment figure was 174,820. Today, through the free education policy of the Amosun government, enrolment figure has shot up to 214,837. The figure has increased from 146,737 to 162,536 at SSS level. Due to improvement in our technical education, some children now move from JSS to such schools while the majority proceed to SSS, which is a big plus for our drive in vocational/technical education. Expectedly, performance of our children in WASSSE has increased tremendously.

    In a space of four years (2007 – 2011), for example, the last government did not provide a single chair or table for pupils and teachers at the pre-primary school. But under the current government, our children in the nursery schools have been provided with 3,200 chairs, 800 tables, 17,043 two-seater desks and 10,900 two-seater desks with shutters. 7,148 tables and 14,296 chairs have also been provided for their teachers.

    Under the Daniel administration, pupils were paying for all manner of things such as file jacket, ID card, school prospectus, students dossier, examination fee, school inter-house sports, etc., which the Amosun government abolished.

    At the inauguration of our free education in the fall of 2011, a question arose on whether the token PTA fees should even be allowed in public schools. The governor said it should be abolished. There was an argument that it was voluntary. The issue came up later during a courtesy visit by the state’s chapter of PTA, where the body said the token was a voluntary donation on the part of the parents. The governor accepted but with a caveat: no child must be sent home on account of PTA fees. And just how much is involved here? Between N300 and N900, which cannot buy a single textbook. Yet, depending on the class of the pupils, under our free education policy, they get a minimum of 7 textbooks and maximum of 12.

    If you have ever been a teacher in a public school, then you will appreciate what it means for every student in your class to have textbooks. The practice before the declaration of free education by the Amosun administration was for the class teacher to have each of these textbooks and write on the blackboard. Most often, the textbooks were creased and torn as a result of long usage. In a class of about 70 pupils, not more than two pupils would have one or two textbooks because of the heavy financial burden on the peasant parents.

    The previous government promised to pay the WAEC fees of SSS3 candidates but it reneged. According to the Commissioner for Education, Barr. Segun Odubela, the examination body wrote the new government, threatening to withhold the results of the children because of default by the last government. Not only that, running cost of the schools and subventions to our tertiary institutions were not paid. Virtually all the school buildings were  dilapidated. Teachers’ salaries and allowances were not paid for many months – not only in the education sector. In short, rot was the word. In one tertiary institution, there was no convocation ceremony for 8 solid years. To compound the infamy, the then government announced 100% increase in tuition fees in all its tertiary colleges.

    The Amosun administration not only offset the inherited WAEC fees, it restored payment of running cost and subventions. The backlog of salaries has been substantially cleared. For instance, the governor spent one billion naira (N1bn) to offset the CONTISS and Monetization allowances of the staff of Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), which he inherited from the immediate past government. Imagine how many modern classrooms or lecture halls that could have been built by that amount! The Daniel government actually owed OOU workers N2.5 billion in salaries and allowances. Amosun also paid the arrears of three-month salaries owed lecturers of the institution by the former government.

    As stated  earlier, the Daniel administration increased the tuition fees of tertiary students by 100%. Senator Amosun promised to reduce it by 50% once voted into office. On the eve of his exit from power, the former governor announced a reduction of 50%. Notwithstanding that, the Amosun government further reduced the fees by 10%, thus bringing the reduction to 60%.

    Of course, it was Amosun that achieved the significant reduction because the action of the departing government was cynical and opportunistic. Otherwise, why did it wait till the last minute to implement the promise made to the students by Amosun? It is now 3 years that Amosun approved the reduction. The school fees in our tertiary institutions have not been increased since then. What has increased are the incidental or ancillary charges, which the government has no control over. For instance, virtually all the students pay fees to their professional bodies, and government has no control over such payment. The inherited problem between TASUED and TASCE is receiving attention and will be resolved in due course.

    Currently, the Federal Government gets 52% of the Revenue Allocation from the Federation Account while the 36 states share 26%. When you divide the 26% by 36, you have 0.7% – but that is assuming the allocation is shared equally. But it is not, so Ogun State ends up with about 0.3% out of the 26% every month. When I saw the Federal Allocation recently in the newspapers, I shook my head. “This pittance can’t even pay the wage bill of workers,” I muttered. Yet, Amosun still has to fund the police, a federal agency, from that, repair some federal roads from that, etc.  From 1999, the centre has never devoted up to 20% to education, and there is no free education in all the schools it owns.

    Under the leadership of Senator Amosun, education has always got more than 20% of the yearly budget. Surprisingly, about 80% of that is used to pay wages and salaries of workers. That is why it is worrying that some staff will leave their employer in Abeokuta and go to Abuja to negotiate salary or allowance increment. There is a huge difference between 52% and 0.3%!

    Notwithstanding, the current government is so very friendly to workers. It paid salaries of those that went on strike for six months because of a dispute with the Federal Government! Ogun workers have never had it so good. Workers in some states have been on strike close to a year now on account of non-payment of the minimum wage, yet in spite of the meagre amount we get from the Federation Account, the Amosun government has paid above the minimum wage, and implemented it across board, thus making it the only government to achieve such a milestone in Nigeria. Not only that, workers now freely express themselves and had on one occasion gone on strike on account of salaries owed by the previous government! As we enjoy this freedom, it is good we remember the road we had marched so that there is no accusation of abuse of freedom.

    Contrary to the charge of the opposition that the Amosun administration only excelled in the area of infrastructure, the current government has achieved more in education than in other areas. Senator Ibikunle Amosun has taken education from the bottom rung that the previous administration left it and placed it on the top rung of the ladder of public policy. Again, while they spent money recklessly while in power, the Amosun government has been very frugal.  For instance, political office holders under the current government receive one-third of what their predecessors earned every month. What Amosun deserves is appreciation,  understanding and cooperation from the work force. The good news is that he is getting these from the overwhelming majority of the Ogun workers.

    The crisis created by the sudden slump in the federally-collected revenue from 2013 continues to take its toll but due to discreet management of our resources by Governor Amosun, no worker is being owed any salary. Even when there were hiccups in the implementation of our free education, occasioned largely by our warped federalism, we’ve always risen to the occasion and surmounted those challenges.

    Three years and three months of free education in Ogun, Senator Amosun can hold his head high because he has trod where others feared to tread. They said free education was not possible at any level despite the humongous resources they had for eight years, but Amosun has not only made education free at the primary level, but pre-primary and secondary schools. They increased school fees of tertiary students every year, completely out of reach of poor students, because the fees rose from about N20,000 to N200,000, N300,000 in some departments. Amosun not only reversed the trend but  slashed the fees by 60%!  The over 20,000 children that would have been out of school due to the policy faux pas of the previous government are now in school.

    We still have a lot to do. Amosun inherited a sector in complete ruins.  There are many dilapidated buildings scattered across the state, and have remained in such state for decades. Some have been renovated by this government. The majority of them need to be pulled down completely – many of them are already marked for demolition. Some of the schools need to be relocated because they are currently choked by development. Population has risen. Also, new schools have to be erected as schools are returned to their original owners.

    As we continue the renovation of some of the structures, invest in training and welfare of teachers and construction of world class, state-of-the-art model schools, we trust the overwhelming majority of our people to continue to give their maximum co-operation to the Senator Ibikunle Amosun-led administration.

    Soyombo, media aide to Ogun State governor, writes from Abeokuta.

     

  • Free education in Ogun:  The untold story

    Free education in Ogun: The untold story

    used to pay school fees and buy textbooks for all my children from the primary school to tertiary level. When Amosun came and talked about free education, I was a bit sceptical. But when my daughters in the primary and secondary schools did not pay school fees throughout the last session (2011/12) and returned home with writing materials and textbooks, I was so happy. I have also not paid school fees for my boy in the nursery school in the last one year. Now, I only pay for my daughter in Ojere (MAPOLY). I am very grateful for this financial relief by the Amosun administration.”

    That was the voice of a chauffeur at the workshop of an auto-mechanic in the fall of 2012. I was only drawn into the chit-chat when the man mentioned nursery school. I thought there was a mix-up somewhere. Was there a charity organisation running free nursery school? Up till that time, I must confess, I did not know that many government’s primary schools also had nursery schools. Upon inquiries, I discovered that our free education also covered that level of education.

    Garrulity, admittedly, may be a vice, but taciturnity is not always a virtue. If you don’t blow your own trumpet, nobody will blow it for you. In a country like Nigeria, where politics is still seen by some as a zero-sum game, you need to constantly tell your own story, otherwise the lies being spewed by the opposition may one day be accorded some undeserved attention by the unwary.

    Before Amosun was sworn in as governor of Ogun State on May 29, 2011, there was no free education at the pre-primary, primary, secondary and tertiary levels of public education. Parents were paying for everything and buying everything. Today, to the glory of the Almighty and through responsible governance and prudent husbandry of the resources of Ogun State by the governor, education is free at the pre-primary level, primary level and in secondary schools. Education at the tertiary level is heavily subsidized by the current government; it is not free.

    When you consider the fact that an average family in Ogun State has children at the four levels of education at the same time, then you can appreciate the huge financial burden that has been lifted off the shoulders of these parents by the Amosun administration. This is a landmark achievement our government should celebrate.

    Between 2007 and 2011, Ogun State defaulted in the payment of counterpart fund for UBEC, hence no money could be accessed under the UBE Act; parents paid for everything. The state also defaulted in managing the ETF in 2009, hence was unable to access the intervention fund in 2010. In parenthesis, I recall that Ogun was denied the MDGs funds for the years 2009 and 2010 because it mismanaged the N1.64bn for the year 2008. When you consider the above and the fact that education was not free at any level, then you can appreciate the value the Daniel administration placed on education in Ogun State.

    Today, the Amosun administration has offset all the outstanding counterpart funds and has not defaulted once. When you see structures in our primary schools with the inscription, ‘SUBEB 2008/2009’, it does not mean they were built under the last administration. Indeed, they were built under the Amosun administration, having paid the state’s counterpart funds for those years. At the JSS level under the Daniel administration, the highest enrolment figure was 174,820. Today, through the free education policy of the Amosun government, enrolment figure has shot up to 214,837. The figure has increased from 146,737 to 162,536 at SSS level. Due to improvement in our technical education, some children now move from JSS to such schools while the majority proceed to SSS, which is a big plus for our drive in vocational/technical education. Expectedly, performance of our children in WASSSE has increased tremendously.

    In a space of four years (2007 – 2011), for example, the last government did not provide a single chair or table for pupils and teachers at the pre-primary school. But under the current government, our children in the nursery schools have been provided with 3,200 chairs, 800 tables, 17,043 two-seater desks and 10,900 two-seater desks with shutters. 7,148 tables and 14,296 chairs have also been provided for their teachers.

    Under the Daniel administration, pupils were paying for all manner of things such as file jacket, ID card, school prospectus, students dossier, examination fee, school inter-house sports, etc., which the Amosun government abolished.

    At the inauguration of our free education in the fall of 2011, a question arose on whether the token PTA fees should even be allowed in public schools. The governor said it should be abolished. There was an argument that it was voluntary. The issue came up later during a courtesy visit by the state’s chapter of PTA, where the body said the token was a voluntary donation on the part of the parents. The governor accepted but with a caveat: no child must be sent home on account of PTA fees. And just how much is involved here? Between N300 and N900, which cannot buy a single textbook. Yet, depending on the class of the pupils, under our free education policy, they get a minimum of 7 textbooks and maximum of 12.

    If you have ever been a teacher in a public school, then you will appreciate what it means for every student in your class to have textbooks. The practice before the declaration of free education by the Amosun administration was for the class teacher to have each of these textbooks and write on the blackboard. Most often, the textbooks were creased and torn as a result of long usage. In a class of about 70 pupils, not more than two pupils would have one or two textbooks because of the heavy financial burden on the peasant parents.

    The previous government promised to pay the WAEC fees of SSS3 candidates but it reneged. According to the Commissioner for Education, Barr. Segun Odubela, the examination body wrote the new government, threatening to withhold the results of the children because of default by the last government. Not only that, running cost of the schools and subventions to our tertiary institutions were not paid. Virtually all the school buildings were  dilapidated. Teachers’ salaries and allowances were not paid for many months – not only in the education sector. In short, rot was the word. In one tertiary institution, there was no convocation ceremony for 8 solid years. To compound the infamy, the then government announced 100% increase in tuition fees in all its tertiary colleges.

    The Amosun administration not only offset the inherited WAEC fees, it restored payment of running cost and subventions. The backlog of salaries has been substantially cleared. For instance, the governor spent one billion naira (N1bn) to offset the CONTISS and Monetization allowances of the staff of Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), which he inherited from the immediate past government. Imagine how many modern classrooms or lecture halls that could have been built by that amount! The Daniel government actually owed OOU workers N2.5 billion in salaries and allowances. Amosun also paid the arrears of three-month salaries owed lecturers of the institution by the former government.

    As stated  earlier, the Daniel administration increased the tuition fees of tertiary students by 100%. Senator Amosun promised to reduce it by 50% once voted into office. On the eve of his exit from power, the former governor announced a reduction of 50%. Notwithstanding that, the Amosun government further reduced the fees by 10%, thus bringing the reduction to 60%.

    Of course, it was Amosun that achieved the significant reduction because the action of the departing government was cynical and opportunistic. Otherwise, why did it wait till the last minute to implement the promise made to the students by Amosun? It is now 3 years that Amosun approved the reduction. The school fees in our tertiary institutions have not been increased since then. What has increased are the incidental or ancillary charges, which the government has no control over. For instance, virtually all the students pay fees to their professional bodies, and government has no control over such payment. The inherited problem between TASUED and TASCE is receiving attention and will be resolved in due course.

    Currently, the Federal Government gets 52% of the Revenue Allocation from the Federation Account while the 36 states share 26%. When you divide the 26% by 36, you have 0.7% – but that is assuming the allocation is shared equally. But it is not, so Ogun State ends up with about 0.3% out of the 26% every month. When I saw the Federal Allocation recently in the newspapers, I shook my head. “This pittance can’t even pay the wage bill of workers,” I muttered. Yet, Amosun still has to fund the police, a federal agency, from that, repair some federal roads from that, etc.  From 1999, the centre has never devoted up to 20% to education, and there is no free education in all the schools it owns.

    Under the leadership of Senator Amosun, education has always got more than 20% of the yearly budget. Surprisingly, about 80% of that is used to pay wages and salaries of workers. That is why it is worrying that some staff will leave their employer in Abeokuta and go to Abuja to negotiate salary or allowance increment. There is a huge difference between 52% and 0.3%!

    Notwithstanding, the current government is so very friendly to workers. It paid salaries of those that went on strike for six months because of a dispute with the Federal Government! Ogun workers have never had it so good. Workers in some states have been on strike close to a year now on account of non-payment of the minimum wage, yet in spite of the meagre amount we get from the Federation Account, the Amosun government has paid above the minimum wage, and implemented it across board, thus making it the only government to achieve such a milestone in Nigeria. Not only that, workers now freely express themselves and had on one occasion gone on strike on account of salaries owed by the previous government! As we enjoy this freedom, it is good we remember the road we had marched so that there is no accusation of abuse of freedom.

    Contrary to the charge of the opposition that the Amosun administration only excelled in the area of infrastructure, the current government has achieved more in education than in other areas. Senator Ibikunle Amosun has taken education from the bottom rung that the previous administration left it and placed it on the top rung of the ladder of public policy. Again, while they spent money recklessly while in power, the Amosun government has been very frugal.  For instance, political office holders under the current government receive one-third of what their predecessors earned every month. What Amosun deserves is appreciation,  understanding and cooperation from the work force. The good news is that he is getting these from the overwhelming majority of the Ogun workers.

    The crisis created by the sudden slump in the federally-collected revenue from 2013 continues to take its toll but due to discreet management of our resources by Governor Amosun, no worker is being owed any salary. Even when there were hiccups in the implementation of our free education, occasioned largely by our warped federalism, we’ve always risen to the occasion and surmounted those challenges.

    Three years and three months of free education in Ogun, Senator Amosun can hold his head high because he has trod where others feared to tread. They said free education was not possible at any level despite the humongous resources they had for eight years, but Amosun has not only made education free at the primary level, but pre-primary and secondary schools. They increased school fees of tertiary students every year, completely out of reach of poor students, because the fees rose from about N20,000 to N200,000, N300,000 in some departments. Amosun not only reversed the trend but  slashed the fees by 60%!  The over 20,000 children that would have been out of school due to the policy faux pas of the previous government are now in school.

    We still have a lot to do. Amosun inherited a sector in complete ruins.  There are many dilapidated buildings scattered across the state, and have remained in such state for decades. Some have been renovated by this government. The majority of them need to be pulled down completely – many of them are already marked for demolition. Some of the schools need to be relocated because they are currently choked by development. Population has risen. Also, new schools have to be erected as schools are returned to their original owners.

    As we continue the renovation of some of the structures, invest in training and welfare of teachers and construction of world class, state-of-the-art model schools, we trust the overwhelming majority of our people to continue to give their maximum co-operation to the Senator Ibikunle Amosun-led administration.

    Soyombo, media aide to Ogun State governor, writes from Abeokuta.

  • Four critically injured as students clash in Abeokuta

    Four critically injured as students clash in Abeokuta

    Students of Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), Ago – Iwoye, in their thousands seized the entrance to the Oke – Mosan Governor’s Office, demanding 50 percent reduction in their tuition fee.

    They said the reduction should take immediate effect – 2013/2014 academic session and not by next session, lamenting that OOU students remain the highest fees paying students in Nigeria.

    The students who also blocked the Abeokuta – Kobape – Sagamu expressway for the better part of Thursday, made vehicular movement nightmarish for travellers and motorists going to and fro Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital.

    They dropped a frightening pot of fetish objects – ebo (sacrifice) bearing egg, eko, feather among others at the Governor’s Office gate with all the items smeared with red palm oil.

    Over two dozen policemen including the Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ikemefuna Okoye, had a hectic time labouring to contain the surging crowd lest they pull down the locked entrance gate in a bid to forcefully enter the government Secretariat.

    The protesting OOU students led by their leader, Comrade Ifade Olusegun, rejected the tuition fees reduction earlier announced by the state government and demanded to meet with Governor Ibikunle Amosun who was said to have travelled to Abuja.

    Olusegun said: “even if it’s going to take us one month or more than that, we are not going to leave the governor’s office premises until the governor attend to us. Enough of deceit, why the political school fees, when election is forthcoming, no we shall not accept the dubious offer.

    “It is a political reduction instead of proper reduction. Our demand is simple, we want breakdown of our tuition fees. Also we want the reduction to be implemented this session, it’s simple as ABC. If the governor realized the need for reduction, why must governor say the implementation must be from next session?”

    The students reckoned that any reduction above N50, 000 is unacceptable to them and not in consonance with the present economic reality, adding that the Governor, during the electioneering campaign had promised drastic reduction in the tuition fees.

    The Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Mr. Segun Odubela, appealed for calm, until the Governor who travelled to Abuja for a meeting with President Goodluck Jonathan on the outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD), returns.

    Earlier, another group of students including students from Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta FUNNAB, in their thousands converged at the Arcade ground at the Governor’s office for a solidarity rally in support of the reduction.

    They lauded Amosun for reducing their school fees to lightening the burden of education on them and expressed support for his second term ambition.

    The Chairman of National Association of Nigerian Students, NANS, Okikiola Ogunsola, who addressed the Ogun State government officials led by the Chief of Staff, Professor Ganiyu Olatunde, said the reduction was “drastic, unprecedented and commendable.”

    According to him, the present administration was magnanimous enough to have yielded to the yearnings of the students’ populace despite the dwindling allocation from the federation account.

    Ogunsola said: “We are here to appreciate the Governor because our Governor is a listening Governor, first of it is the reduction in the school fees, composition of governing council in Tai Solarin University of Education, the appointment of SA to the governor on students’ affairs and for the peace we have enjoyed in our schools.”

    But by noon, the protest turned violent and bloody, leaving four students critically injured and hospitalised while about a dozen of others received minor injuries as those opposed to reduction and others in support of it clashed.

    The clash occurred when  a bus conveying the Students of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta (MAPOLY), who were returning from the Amosun thank you rally for tuition fee reduction, ran into a pack of OOU students resulting in a free for all at the  Kuto area of the state capital.
    In what appeared  like a reprisal attack, the MAPOLY students were said to have reinforced and confronted the OOU students, leaving four seriously injured.

    Reacting, the Labour Party in the state described Amosun’s  School fees Reduction as a panicky measure and another greek gift to the students.

    Speaking through its Publicity Secretary in the state, Deji  Kalejaiye, the party said the reduction remains another desperate measure by the government of Ogun State to hoodwink the unsuspecting public, after similar steps taken by the All Progressive Congress (APC) Controlled government of Lagos State reduced school fees of Lagos State owned Institutions to twenty five thousand naira (N25, 000).