Tag: Moshood Abiola Polytechnic

  • MAPOLY Isokan fellowship set to celebrate 30 years of spiritual impact

    MAPOLY Isokan fellowship set to celebrate 30 years of spiritual impact

    The Cherubim and Seraphim Church Unification Campus Fellowship, Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY) Chapter, is gearing up to commemorate its 30th Anniversary with a week-long celebration from September 7 to 13, 2026.

    Themed “Enlarge My Coast” (1 Chronicles 4:10), the event promises a series of impactful programs and activities.

    The fellowship, also known as Heirs of God Chapel, has been a beacon of spiritual growth, leadership development, and community transformation for three decades.

    According to the Head of Publicity Committee, Sister Temitope Lajuwomi, the anniversary celebration is a testament to God’s faithfulness and a call to expansion, divine favor, and renewed influence.

    Lajuwomi said highlights of the event include; community outreach and empowerment initiative, entrepreneurship masterclasses, power-packed revival services

    She said the grand reunion & awards ceremony will hold on September 12, 2026

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    According to the press statement by Lajuwomi, the chairman of the graduate Forum, Prophet Wale Bakare, described the anniversary as “a divine moment of reconnection and revival.”

    “The current fellowship president, Bro. Oluwatimilehin Akintola emphasised the importance of the anniversary to current students

    “This is a life-changing opportunity for students to learn, grow, and serve. Beyond the celebration, we are building spiritual and moral foundations that will strengthen faith, inspire excellence, and prepare our members to be light wherever they go,” he noted.

    On his part, Elder Brother Ogo Odubote, Chairman of the Anniversary Planning Committee, explained the vision behind the theme: “The prayer of Jabez in 1 Chronicles 4:10 – ‘Oh, that You would bless me indeed and enlarge my coast’ – is our heart cry as a fellowship and as a nation.

  • Rector mulls collaboration with Alumni

    Rector mulls collaboration with Alumni

    Lagos State chapter of Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY) Alumni Association (MAPALUM) has reaffirmed its commitment to deepening alumni engagement and fostering institutional development through its inaugural Officers Training School (OTS) seminar.

    The event, designed to equip newly- elected executives with leadership strategies and institutional alignment, underscored the vital role of alumni-driven initiatives in strengthening MAPOLY’s legacy. 

    MAPOLY Rector Dr. Adekoyejo Jolaoso emphasised the importance of alumni unity and purposeful engagement in sustaining the institution’s progress.

     “Alumni involvement must go beyond mere affiliation—it should be a force for transformation,” he said.

    He urged members to contribute meaningfully through mentorship, infrastructure support and professional expertise, noting that “every action taken strengthens our institution’s foundation and creates pathways for future generations to thrive.” 

    Jolaoso hailed the Marketing Department alumni for their donation of Legacy House, a N150 million infrastructure project that enhances the school’s resources.

    He called on other alumni to emulate such impactful initiatives, advocating a spirit of generosity and strategic collaboration. 

    Chairman of MAPOLY Alumni, Lagos chapter, Mr. Gafar Odubote, outlined a vision for structured alumni engagement, anchored on the MESSAGE Pillars—Member Empowerment, Sustainable Structure, Alumni Growth, and Engagement.  He said the MESSAGE framework was designed to redefine alumni interactions, ensuring long-term value and strategic impact. 

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    “The MESSAGE Pillars are more than a set of ideals; they form the foundation of purposeful engagement,” Odubote asserted.

     “By strengthening communication, expanding digital outreach, activating committees and deepening institutional partnerships, we are creating a dynamic alumni network driven by strategy, clarity and impact.” 

    He noted that MAPALUM’s leadership sought to cultivate alumni synergy that transcended social gatherings, evolving into an ecosystem of mutual benefit, where members supported one another through professional mentorship, career development, entrepreneurial initiatives and institutional collaboration. 

    National President of MAPOLY Alumni Association, Pastor Ezekiel Obasanya, encouraged executives to approach their roles with dedication and foresight.

    “Our alma mater’s success hinges on our collective participation. We must not only preserve its legacy, but also enhance it for future generations,” he said.

    The seminar featured distinguished speakers, including past national president, Mr. Olalekan Otun, former chapter chairman, Mr. Adebola Fashina, alumni strategist, Mr. Ganiyu Olowu, and former Lagos chapter chairman, Mr. Segun Rufus.

  • Stop toying with our future, Mapoly students warn club

    Students’ of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta (MAPOLY), have warned members of the Abeokuta Club to desist from playing politics with their future.

    The Students’ Union body is telling members of the club not to be a clog in the wheels of  Ogun State Governor Dapo Abiodun’s plans to restore the 40-year-old institution to status quo by reversing its upgrade to Moshood Abiola University of Science and Technology (MAUSTECH), as done by his predecessor.

    In a statement made available to CAMPUSLIFE, MAPOLY  Students’ Union President Samson Omoniyi expressed displeasure at the club’s position on MAUSTECH and MAPOLY.

    Omoniyi accused members of the club, led by its president Tokunbo Odebunmi of politicising the issues surrounding the two institutions.

    CAMPUSLIFE learnt that the club issued a statement where it urged Governor Abiodun not to reverse the law that created MAUSTECH. The club reportedly accused the governor of working against the interest of the Egba, which, according to them, did not have a university.

    “We wish to express our displeasure towards the position of members and leadership of Abeokuta Club, which we strongly believe consists of intellectuals. However, we consider their actions as an attempt to politicise the good intention of the state government,” Omoniyi said.

    He continued: “We want to state in clear terms that if the members of Abeokuta Club or any other group refuse to stop playing politics with our school, academics and life, we won’t hesitate to take them on.

    “The plan by the governor to restore and retain MAPOLY is the best decision and the greatest display of fairness by the governor in the general interest of the state.

    “We believe that democracy can only be strengthened when stakeholders are not biased along religion and ethnic lines in their analysis of issues bordering on national development. Sentiments will only weaken our democracy.

    “It is so saddening that a group that failed to lend a voice when the creation and conversion of these institutions, in a mess, now clamours for the retaining of MAUSTECH at the expense of 40-year-old MAPOLY. It will amount to foolishness to kill a 40-year-old king because a prince was born.”

    “It should be recalled that the motives behind the creation and conversion of Ogun State Polytechnic, MAPOLY and MAUSTECH contributed to the brouhaha that rocked the process which adversely affected academic activities of the institution and the economic fortune of the region.”

    The Student Union stated that MAPOLY students have suffered enough over the fate of the institution.

    “We have suffered enough from the confusion that emanated from the creation and conversion process. We cannot afford to experience such again.

    “MAPOLY, our heritage, must be sustained, strengthened and transformed to improve its quality.

    “We want to commend Governor Abiodun for his swift response to every issue that affects MAPOLY and the education system in general. We also look forward to his intervention on the bad state of the road that links the school’s gate from Iyana-Oloke junction,” the students concluded.

  • ‘Our road is a death trap’

    •MAPOLY staff, students allege neglect of road

    To staff and students of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY), Abeokuta, Ogun State, the road leading to the school is a death trap. With huge craters here and there, commuting on the road is a nightmare, they say. TAIWO KAFILAT (ND2 Mass Communication) captures the pains the road inflicts on motorists and passengers.

    Lecturers, students and commuters are unhappy with the state of the road leading to the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta. They have  described the  road as a death trap. The deplorable state of the Iyana-Oloke Moshood Abiola Polytechnic Road is of great concern to the people.

    ’ The two-kilometre Panseke to Iyana-Oloke stretch, believed to  have been awarded to a contractor by the state government, has been abandoned by the construction company.

    There have been many accidents involving members of the polytechnic community as well as those who ply their trade in the institution on the road. Many of the campus shuttle buses are no exception, as their drivers daily lament the amount they spend on vehicle maintenance, and the risk passengers are subjected to. The drivers also bemoaned the waste of time spent before arriving their destination.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the Ogun State Government though had mobilised the construction company to rehabilitate the road up to the school gate, no one could ascertain why the project was suspended halfway.

    Although MAPOLY management refused to speak on the matter, the government has repeatedly assured that the road would be completed soon.

    Ogun State Commissioner for Works Lekan Adegbite listed    the road as one of government’s ongoing projects, adding that it would soon be completed. Nonetheless, CAMPUSLIFE has observed that no worker is on site yet.

    Many students of MAPOLY told CAMPUSLIFE how the road has become a pain in the neck over the years, albeit with successive governments’ indifference, a development that they say, also affects learning.

    An HND2 Accountancy student Jubril Odebunmi said, “MAPOLY Road being the only road that links the institution from various areas of the city, is really in a bad shape.

    “The bad condition of the road has made transportation to the school difficult. I have observed that some shuttle drivers now avoid plying the road as they claim their vehicles often get damaged.”

    Similarly, an HND1 student, who simply identified herself as Afolashade, also lent her voice.

    Hear her, “Well, the road is not anywhere near the school standard. It is so disheartening that this road has been like that before I got admission into MAPOLY 2014. It’s a pity it has been like this for many years.

    ‘’There was a day I boarded a bus from Panseke heading to school. A pregnant woman who was also a staff of MAPOLY was on board and she was not comfortable all through. She told me this was the pain she had to go through coming to work everyday. So, I will plead with the government to please help this situation.”

    Another student who pleaded not to be mentioned recounted an unforgettable experience she had.

    ‘’I could not forget that day during my first semester in HND 1,” the student began.

    “My Mum had called me during a lecture period to join her. To make it back to school on time I borrowed a friend’s car key. On my way back to school, the car developed a fault right in the middle of the road in front of Gbokoniyi Church, and I could not make it back to class that day.”

    In addition, Alayinde Esther another HND 1 Banking and Finance undergraduate said the bad road made her miss lectures.

    “It (road) has affected me in so many ways,” she lamented.

    “I miss lectures and test which we may not be able to rewrite. Also, the stress we experience on the road makes me weak before getting to class.”

    Mrs Tolani Sodiya, a nursing mother who sells stationeries inside the school campus, narrated how she almost lost her pregnancy due to the state of the road.

    Said Sodiya: “I remember during my pregnancy, I found it difficult to sit comfortably because of my stomach. Most times when I got home, I ended up having pains.”

    An ND 2 Mass Communication student of the polytechnic, Oluwatobi Odeyinka, said the agony commuters experienced on the road could not be described.

    Odeyinka said: “The road is indeed a death trap. Injuries have been sustained many times by students and to worsen the situation, some of the drivers overload their vehicles. This has led to accident.”

    Another ND 2 undergraduate of Mass Communication Bose Akinkunmi, claimed she often gets terrified by the situation of the road.

    Akinkunmi said: “The road that leads to Mapoly from Iyana-Oloke can best be described as a death trap for the people.”

    Akinkunmi continued, “The road is so bad to the extent that, sometimes,` I don’t feel like going to school because I’m afraid the bus might summersault one day.”

    A trader in MAPOLY, Kazeem Kayode, explained how difficult it has been for him to get to his workplace on a daily basis.

    He said: “We all know that the road is bad because our government abandoned it.”

    Also, a trader who introduced himself as Bunkand, said he spends so much on car maintenance.

    “I have a personal car, and oftentimes, I spend more money replacing my shock absorbers. A learner cannot ply this road, otherwise, he will regret it.”

    In his own reaction, President of MAPOLY Student Union Comrade Owo-iya Rasaq, said the bad road as ‘unbearable’.

    He said: “You can see that the road is in bad condition. One of our promises before we resumed office was to reduce the stress in transporting our students from their various hostels to campus.

    “You will agree with me that, the bad road linking Ojere route from Iyana-Oloke is the main problem of transportation in MAPOLY.

    “Recently, our executives in conjunction with some shuttle and taxi drivers went out to fill the potholes with concrete and sand, just to reduce the stress of drivers.

    “However, we have been crying to the government to help us construct the road.”

    However, the Chairman MAPOLY shuttle drivers, Comrade Adesanya Adeshina, insisted that the condition of the road has made them spend large sum of money on maintenance.

    Adesanya lamented that drivers spend an average of one hour on a journey that would have lasted just  15 minutes, or even less.

    He said: “The roads are bad, we expect the government to repair the road. Government knows how much they earn yearly from this institution.

    “Our shuttles have reduced drastically. Most buses have run away due to the bad road.

    “Most truck that ply the roads struggle with the steering and end up causing accident within the vicinity.”

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that drivers who could no longer bear the hardship of the road have moved to other areas, leaving the students with shortage of vehicles.

    Meanwhile, when approached by CAMPUSLIFE Public Relations Officer of MAPOLY Yemi Ajibola and the institution’s Directorate of Students Affair, Townplanner Luke Adelaja  refused to speak on the state of the road.

  • MAPOLY suspends SUG election as committee chair goes missing

    There was tension at the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY) in Abeokuta, Ogun State, following an indefinite suspension of Students’ Union Government (SUG) election.

    The exercise, scheduled for last Thursday at 10am, could not hold due to the absence of the Students’ Union Electoral Committee (SUELECO) chairman, identified as Adeniji.

    Students had gathered at the school’s Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Centre, the venue of the exercise, to cast their votes when it was discovered that Adeniji was not part of the 10-man committee that wanted to conduct the election.

    The development raised concerns among the voters and supporters of one of the presidential candidates.

    The two contenders for the union president are Samson Omoniyi, (aka Heritage), and Akinyemi Akinwale (aka Genesis). Both are students of Mass Communication.

    While Akinyemi’s loyalists were ready to cast their votes in the absence of the SUELECO chairman, Samson’s loyalists withdrew.

    An attempt by other members of the electoral committee to continue with the process met a stiff resistance from curious students, who asked for the whereabouts of the committee chairman. When the committee members could not give an answer, the students staged a walkout and called on their colleagues to boycott the election.

    Akinyemi’s campaign manager, who identified himself as Mandela, accused the opponent of masterminding the disappearance of the electoral committee chairman to disrupt the election, noting that Samson and his supporters knew they could not win a fair contest.

    He said: “Samson and his supporters should be asked questions on the whereabouts of the SUELECO chairman. They went to hide him somewhere and came here, asking for him. They want us to leave here so that they can conduct their own election. No way; we will remain here and election must hold.”

    The Staff Adviser of the Mass Communication Students’ Association, Mr. Lekan Togunwa, who addressed the agitated students, urged them to continue with the voting.

    Togunwa said it was not mandatory for the SUELECO chair to be available, but the students insisted on seeing the ‘missing’chairman before the election could go on.

    Togunwa disclosed that the whereabouts of the electoral committee chair was unknown and his phone number unreachable.

    At noon, the Director of Students Affairs (DSA) arrived in the venue and suspended the election.

    The DSA said: “Due to the absence of the chairman of the Students Union Electoral Committee, I am here on behalf of the school management to announce the suspension of the election till further notice.”

    At press time, the whereabouts of the electoral committee chairman remained unknown. Calls placed to the SUELECO Public Relations Officer (PRO) and the General Secretary were not received.

  • Lady runs off with Falz’s Jacket at MTN Pulse Invasion, Kwara

    An excited young lady grinned in satisfaction as she grabbed onto Falz’s jacket during the Surprise Celebrity Visit of the MTN Pulse Campus Invasion. Popular Nigerian artiste, Folarin ‘Falz’ Falana, had just handed her his jacket, to the screaming delight of the hundreds of people who had thronged UNILORIN to watch what would happen at the Pulse Invasion.

    This was the second time the artiste had appeared on the Invasion train as he had thrilled the students of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta (MAPOLY) and the Federal University of Abeokuta (FUNAAB), in October.

    The Invasion berthed at the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) and was later taken to Kwara State Polytechnic, on Monday, November 12 with the Sales Village experience. Students gathered around the Village for three days to play and have fun as they interacted with various MTN products and services.

    On Wednesday afternoon, hundreds of students and passersby gathered around the Pulse Invasion Surprise Celebrity Venue to watch curiously, for what would happen. Their curiosity was sated when Falz walked into the school to meet a screaming audience waiting for him. He performed chart toppers and the screams of excitement continued throughout the show. The love for the star was apparent when he handed over his jacket to a fan in the audience who wore it like a badge of honour.

  • Protest rocks MAPOLY over suspension of lectures

    All activities were last Tuesday and Wednesday, brought to a halt at the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY) in Abeokuta, Ogun State, as part-time students shut the main gate to protest the suspension of lectures by the school’s chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP).
    The protest followed an indefinite suspension of lectures in part-time classes by the teachers’ union, which declared a work-to-rule action over the non-payment of their salaries and arrears for 12 months.
    The lecturers at their emergency meeting, where the decision was taken, vowed not to return to work until their salaries and arrears are paid by the government.
    The protesters converged in their numbers on the school entrance in the early hours of Tuesday and Wednesday, preventing movement of workers and visitors to the school. Since their lecturers stopped coming to classes, the part-time students complained that they had been rendered useless.
    Some of them, who spoke with our correspondent, expressed displeasure over the decision by their lecturers. They vowed to continue to disrupt activities in the school until its management and their lecturers resolve their differences.
    The part-time students condemned what they termed “preferential treatment” being accorded their full-time colleagues, wondering why ASUP did not extend its decision to those in full-time programmes. They accused the school’s management and ASUP of not giving “appropriate concentration” to part-time programmes
    While expressing their grievances during the protest, the part-time students demanded “immediate resolution” of issues that led to the suspension of lectures.
    Speaking on behalf of the aggrieved students, the protest organiser, Adekunle Sanusi, alleged that the school management used the tuition fees paid by part-time students to mobilise lecturers to teach full-time students.
    According to him, the protest became necessary after the management and the lecturers failed to give them what they deserved, adding that part-time students paid the highest fee in the school.
    Adekunle the protesters would not leave the school gate until the school and ASUP yielded to their demands.
    He said: “We are blocking the school entrance because the school and lecturers teaching us have shown that they don’t care about us. It has been two weeks now that ASUP suspended all academic activities for part-time students. And ever since then, there have been no meeting between the management and the lecturers on when lectures will resume. The lecturers declared work-to-rule for the full-time students, while lectures have been completely suspended for the part-time programmes.
    “We have tried to talk to all quarters to settle all these issues because we don’t want it to look like we are coming to the streets for no reason. But, all efforts proved abortive. We gave them an ultimatum to meet and resolve their disagreement, but they failed.
    “Until our demands are met, we are not going to leave the school gate because part-time programme the major source of Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) for the school. So, it is not right for the school to allow ASUP suspend lectures and watch us suffer, while the same lecturers go to teach our colleagues in the full-time programmes.
    “We believe that if any disagreement happens between the school and our lecturers, we, as part-time students, should not be affected based on the exorbitant fees we pay for our programmes. It is our tuition fees that are being used to pay the lecturers, who are teaching our colleagues in full-time programmes.”
    Meanwhile, all efforts to speak with the school’s Public Relations Officer, Yemi Ajibola proved abortive up till the time of filling this report.
    National Association of Ogun State Students (NAOSS) Social Director, Lukmon Abolade, described the suspension of part-time lectures as an “act of injustice” against part-time students, asking: “How can the management and ASUP treat part-time students who pay the highest fees like that?”
    He urged the lecturers to re-consider their decision, noting that ASUP could not justify its decision when full-time students, who pay lesser, receive lectures.
    Abolade said: “The school should give the part-time students what is due to them. Every well-meaning student should join this protest to express displeasure over the way part-time students are being treated in MAPOLY. We cannot stop ASUP from embarking on the strike, but the lecturers should know that part-time students are also paying school fees, which the management is using to pay them. We believe every student, irrespective of the timing of their programmes, deserves to be treated equally. If full-time students get lectures, let the part-time students get lectures too.”
    A National Diploma (ND) II Business Administration student, Azeez Adegbola, lamented: “We are not going to stop this protest until our lecturers are back to classroom. The management of the school has failed us. How can we be paying that kind of money and the school cannot convince ASUP not to stop lectures? They are using our money to pay full-time lecturers at the expense of ours. For the past two weeks, there has been no lecture for part-time students.”
    Also, Gbenga Shobowale, a Higher National Diploma (HND) II part-time Mass Communication student, said the protesters would continue to hold the school to ransom until the lecturers return to classroom.
    He said: “The management and our lecturers need to meet very fast and resolve their disagreement. We cannot afford to go home, while our colleagues in the full-time programmes get lectures. We will continue to hold the whole school to ransom. They claimed we are going to start examination by December and they are not giving us lectures, unlike our colleagues on full-time. How do they want us to pass? How many years do they want us to spend on our programme?
    “We will not allow the school to rest until they do something about this issue. We must get lectures just like the full-time students, because we have equal rights in the school. When and how are we going to prepare for our examination if lecturers don’t come to classes? We have our various plans after the programmes; the issues between the school and ASUP are affecting our plans. It seems these people take joy in truncating academic calendar at will. This is not done anywhere. We just need to move ahead with our lives. And this is the time we can talk to them to allow us return to lecture rooms.”

  • Ogun state sacks Mapoly Rector

    Ogun state sacks Mapoly Rector

    Following the protest embarked upon by the student of  Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta, the Ogun State Government has sacked the Rector of varsity Prof Oludele Itiola.

    This was shown in a  statement issued by the Secretary to the State Government, Taiwo Adeoluwa which reads ; “Professor Itiola is expected to proceed on his terminal leave with immediate effect, while the new Acting Rector is expected to take over the administration of the institution”.

    The government has also appointed Mr. Ayodeji Salimon Tella as the Acting Rector of the institution.

  • ASUP flays MAUSTECH transition committee

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY) chapter has said it no longer has confidence in the Transition Committee converting the polytechnic to the Moshood Abiola University of Science and Technology (MAUSTECH).

    It is also concerned about the fate of present students of the institution when the new university and the Ogun State Polytechnic begin operation in September.

    In a statement signed by its Chairman and General Secretary, Comrades Kola Abiola and Lekan Adebayo following the union’s Congress Thursday last week, ASUP accused the Committee led by Prof Peter Okebukola of putting its members in the dark about its activities thereby creating an atmosphere of suspicion.

    The union recalled how its members went on strike July 13, when Okebukola directed all workers of the Polytechnic to reapply for employment into the proposed MAUSTECH.

    It sought the intervention of the Ogun State Governor, Ibikunle Amuson, an alumnus, who promised that the union would be more involved in the activities of the Okebukola-led committee.

    However, the statement noted ASUP was shocked that after suspending the strike, members of the committee had been making provocative statements in the media.

    Following this development, ASUP wrote two separate letters on July 14 and 19 to the Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Mrs. Modupe Mujota, to confirm Amosun’s promises but had received no acknowledgment of the letters as at press time.

    ASUP is also urging the committee to clarify certain gray areas about the proposed transition.

    The statement read: ”The major questions which we intended to ask the Committee but which we were not given opportunity are: Has MAPOLY transmuted to MAUTECH? Or is Ogun State Polytechnic a newly created institution? If Ogun State Polytechnic is a new creation, is it registered with the regulatory agency- the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE)? What are the approved programmes of the study for MAUSTECH and the Ogun State Polytechnic? What are the resources on ground to facilitate the approval to commence operation in the Ogun State Polytechnic?

    The union continued: “How is MAUSTECH and Ogun State Polytechnic going to be funded, especially the funding of overhead costs in the short-run? How do they ensure on a sustainable basis, the payment of salaries of over 700 staff of MAPOLY? This is a pertinent question, given the fact that presently salaries are mainly sourced from school fees paid, and especially now that admission is being suspended and even the new University and Ogun State Polytechnic will of necessity admit less number of students (being a new institution of learning).

    “What becomes of the present ND 1, ND 2, HND 1, and HND 2 students of MAPOLY? Is it possible to just move them into the new Ogun State Polytechnic even when we are not sure of which programmes the NBTE would approve for commencement? What happens to the applicants into ND 1, and HND 1 programmes of MAPOLY for the 2017/2018 session?

    “We want to state for the umpteenth time that we are in no way  averse to be upgrading of MAPOLY into a University but we are concerned with leaving an enduring legacy that will stand the test of time”.

  • Workers jittery over coming of MAUSTECH, OGUN POLY

    Workers jittery over coming of MAUSTECH, OGUN POLY

    In September, two new institutions will take off in Ogun State.  The Moshood Abiola University of Science and Technology (MAUSTECH) will take off in Abeokuta; the Ogun State Polytechnic in Ipokia.  The birth of these institutions is giving  workers of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, who have a stake in both the jitters report KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE and ERNEST NWOKOLO.

    Moshood Abiola University of Science and Technology (MAUSTECH), Abeokuta, a product of the recent upgrade of Ogun State’s premier polytechnic, the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY), is yet to commence operation, but a crisis appears to have started.

    Even at conception by Governor Ibikunle Amosun, many questioned the propriety of having another state university when the existing two are reeling under the weight of underfunding and inadequate staffing.

    Critics anchored their misgivings on an earlier decision of Amosun, who shortly after his election as governor for the first term in 2011, moved to scrap the thriving Tai Solarin University of Education (TSAUED), Ijagun, and fused it into the Education faculty of the troubled Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), Ago-Iwoye.

    The pioneer education varsity in the state – nay the country – was established in January, 2005 by the former Governor Gbenga Daniel-led administration, ostensibly to train high-level manpower – teachers and school administrators, among others.

    Amosun almost succeeded in his move to merge TASUED with the OOU. His argument was that the state’s finances were too lean to accommodate proliferation of state-owned tertiary institutions and that the university had also veered from its core mandate of offering teaching or education-based programmes.

    However, following stout opposition and criticisms by the academic staff of the university, students and members of the public particularly, the Ijebu people who host the instituion, the Governor dropped the idea.

    So, when on March 13, Amosun, who had hitherto canvassed paucity of fund as the overriding reason for scraping TASUED, signed a law changing the 38-year old Moshood Abiola Polytechnic to Moshood Abiola University of Science and Technology (MAUSTECH) coupled with its subsequent approval by the National Universities Commission (NUC) earlier this month, stakeholders were surprised.

    Workers’ worries

    The workers of the institution in particular are worried about the speed of the transition (the new university and polytechnic are to take off in September) and its implication on their jobs.  While the technical committee mid-wifing the birth of the university and polytechnic said the workers would not lose their jobs, they are not convinced it will not happen.

    On July 12, members of the MAPOLY chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) went on strike to protest allegations that the technical committee, headed by Prof Peter Okebukola, a former Executive Secretary, NUC, allegedly sacked all 250 workers of the institution and directed them to reapply.

    Okebukola denied the allegation about the strike.  In response to the issue in an email to The Nation, Okebukola restated that none of the workers would lose their jobs. On the contrary, he said the creation of MAUSTECH and Ogun Poly in Ipokia would create new jobs.

    He said: “This is to refute in its entirety the report that the Technical Committee on the newly-established Moshood Abiola University, Abeokuta (MAUSTECH) has ordered the sack of over 250 staff of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY). It is in complete contrast to the position of the Committee that no member of staff will suffer job loss as a consequence of the upgrading of MAPOLY to MAUSTECH and the establishment of Ogun State Polytechnic, Ipokia as the successor of MAPOLY. Indeed, the Technical Committee has no power to sack anybody.

    “We held a meeting with all staff at the beginning of our assignment and conveyed our position on job security. This position has been re-echoed in subsequent meetings with staff unions. It is curious that some persons have taken undue liberty of misinforming the general public with the spread of such fake news.

    “It should delight all staff that the establishment of two institutions from MAPOLY will open new job opportunities rather than shrink the workforce. We urge all staff to be vigilant and shun misinformation that may be peddled in some quarters.”

    When contacted, ASUP Chairman, Kola Abiola, told The Nation on Tuesday that the union’s strike was suspended, not because of the reassurances of the committee but the promise of Governor Amosun that no one would be sacked. He said the committee did not meet with the workers to resolve the strike.

    “We did not meet with the committee; we went to the Governor and the intervention of the governor made us call off the strike.  This is the second week afterwards and we have not heard from the committee.  The governor debunked the allegation; he said he did not send them to do what they are doing.

    “We want to give the Governor a benefit of the doubt that there would be no sack.  We are waiting for the modalities on transiting to the new university to come out,” he said.

    Despite the governor’s assurance, Abiola expressed concerns about the situation on ground lending credence to coming crisis when the institutions are to resume in September.

    While the new university would take off with the facilities of the MAPOLY, which has five schools consisting of 27 Departments, 3-in-1 1,000-seater hall housing the School of Communication and Information Technology and central store for academic materials and other equipment, Abiola said the new polytechnic has no facilities yet.

    He said: “Presently, there are 27 departments in MAPOLY with accreditation from the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE).  The NBTE only gives accreditation for programmes after inspecting physical facilities.  In Ipokia, where the Ogun State Polytechnic is to start in September, there is no structure on ground.

    “There are concerns that lecturers could lose their jobs. Nobody has come to tell us what are the courses accredited in the Ogun State Polytechnic.  For instance, if I don’t want to stay in the university and I want to go to the polytechnic, I don’t know whether my course has accreditation in the new polytechnic, what happens to me?

    “Today (Tuesday), Dr Ebenezer Nkom (a member of the committee) said on OGTV that the new polytechnic will admit ND and HND students in September. The whole of the polytechnic is to start in a model school in Idiroko. The Governor said they will start from Idiroko and move to Ipokia after three months. But there is nothing on ground there now and they say they will finish building in three months.”

    The ASUP Chairman also complained that the lecturers had not been told the modalities to be considered to be absorbed into the new university by the technical committee, which he accused of having a different position from the governor.

    “Nobody has communicated with us. We don’t know the modalities.  All we are hearing is from the television and radio,” he lamented.

    On the contrary, Okebukola said the committee will work with the workers’ unions.

    He said: “We will actively engage the unions and other stakeholders so that the two institutions take-off this academic session. It will be a win-win situation for all. It needs to be stated that the Technical Committee has delivered on its mandate as “midwife” having successfully delivered a set of twins- MAUSTECH and Ogun State Polytechnic, Ipokia. By our mandate, we are to hand over to the Councils of these two institutions as soon as they are inaugurated so that these organs can take on their roles as assigned by the laws of the two institutions.”

    However, he said talks have not happened because the union has not allowed the committee to meet on campus. He said this was delaying setting modalities for transfer of services to the new institutions.

    He said: “The Committee is yet to meet to set any criteria since it was barred from entering the campus. We plan to work with staff through their unions to reach mutual agreement on these criteria.

    “It is curious that some people are crafting incorrect information about such criteria and misinforming the public. For sure, all stakeholders in the discussion will be guided by the minimum standards specified by the regulatory authorities, making adjustments for our local peculiarities in these early days.”

    Abiola also doubts the capacity of the two institutions to absorb all the workers in September.

    “They are saying no one will lose their jobs. But with what is on ground, people will lose their jobs.  When the university starts, it will admit only 500 students or at most 1,500 students if they use influence.  Take the cleaners, how many will they need to clean the university for 500 students?  If they are sent to Idiroko, they will be more than enough to clean the place.

    “This government has less than one year to functionally work. Another government will come and declare the workers redundant,” he said.

    Zonal Coordinator of ASUP, Zone C in charge of South West, Olawale Adetunji, who argued that the government and the Committee have not put the rights of the other stakeholders in their decision, assured that whatever legitimate steps taken by the lecturers would be  backed by  the National body.

    While workers are pessimistic, members of MAPOLY alumni association and the students are not.  The Director of Media and Publicity of National Association Nigerian Students (NANS) Ogun State axis,  Olasunkanmi Akinlotan, said the students hailed the upgrade and appreciated the state for the initiative but said that NANS would not accept whatever that would affect the students negatively.

    Olasunkanmi, a final year student of Mass Communication in MAPOLY, said the current students would complete their National Diploma (ND) and Higher National Diploma (HND) programmes.  He also said the academic staff were assured of job security.

    “The Transition Committee has assured that no staff will be sacked and that all staff will have chose either to lecture in the university or in the polytechnic in line with the NUC standards,” he said.

    The National Secretary, Alumni Association of Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Mr Goke Ishola, told The Nation that the body welcomed the transformation of the institution to a university as a sign of good things.

    Goke said the fear of job loss being entertained by ASUP was unfounded, saying the apprehension was driven by “rumours and fear of change.”

    Goke noted that even though all stakeholders may not have been carried along, the said directive given to the lecturers by the Transition Committee to resign and reply into MAUSTEC was normal and in order.

     

    Benefit to students

    A student, Ifedayo Ogunyemi, also studying Mass Communication, said he was glad the university status would improve the acceptability of the institution’s products in the labour market and make it easier for them to do conversion programmes to get their first degrees.

    “Students are very happy because of the dichotomy between HND and BSc.  I believe when I finish my HND I will be able to return and convert it to BSc.  It means our four years in school will not be just for HND but BSc,” he said.

    Like Ifedayo hopes would happen, Okebukola said current MAPOLY students would get the opportunity to apply to the new university to do their degree programmes.

    “Current students of MAPOLY are to look out for internal advertisement on admission and qualifying criteria so they can take advantage of being among the foundation students of MAUSTECH,” he said.

     

    Surviving the recession

    With the poor economy and limited government funding, Okebukola said the committee has worked out a 10-year plan for MAUSTECH to weather the economic recession.

    He said: “In the Academic Brief of the university, we have projected a 10-year income and expenditure plan which has factored in survival strategies in the time of scarcity. We are anticipating some injection of funds from the Ogun State Government to be supported by other funding sources. Being a new university, its funding needs are not expected to be gargantuan in the early days. Over the next several years, we anticipate that the managers of the university (Council and Management) will be creative and innovative in fundraising.”

    Focus of the new university

    To stand out, Okebukola said MAUSTECH will exploit science and technology programmes to the benefit of the state.

    “Being a university of science and technology, it will steer its programmes at the cutting-edge of these disciplines in its service to Ogun State, Nigeria, Africa and the rest of the world.