Tag: National Library

  • The critical message in Oluremi Tinubu’s National Library Project

    The critical message in Oluremi Tinubu’s National Library Project

    As a very critical part of her 65th birthday celebration, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, the First Lady of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, restructured the usual pomp that attend the birthday celebration of the political class as we know it. Rather than submitting herself to the numerous treats, felicitations and pageantries that would be sure to have been deployed to mark the auspicious occasion, she demanded that anyone who needed to celebrate her should focus their largesse on the furtherance of the National Library project, and possibly its final completion. And that appeal has generated a beautiful sum of N20b. This is all so grand, and noble but unusual. It is an unusual gesture because a member of the political class, rather than the government itself, is the one championing the resuscitation of the National Library project. Maybe it is the government by association, but then the gesture is not the result of an intentional and deliberate policy commitment that enable the government to connect the library to the larger goal of national development. How do we read this strange but commendable gesture into the overall development status of the Nigerian state?

    The current state of the Nigerian National Library speaks tremendously to the possibilities and failures of the national development project in Nigeria. In many nations of the world, from the Library of Congress in the United States to the Bibliotheque de France and also the National Library, Singapore, the national library signals the single repository of books, manuscripts, orature, archival materials that connects cultural heritages, knowledge production programmes, critical ideas and paradigms, historical documentation and national memories. Adolf Hitler perfectly understands this fundamental significance of the knowledge base of any nation. And this is why, in a most pernicious manner during the Second World War, he ordered the massive destruction of books and materials that were considered to be subversive of, or even contrary to, the ideals of the German Third Reich project. And quite fortunately and pragmatic enough, the allied forced, led by the United States thought it significant and strategic to fight back by making the book resurgent from their crematorium.

    This speaks to the indomitable spirit of ideas, ideals and knowledge that books embody. It is in this critical sense that books and library connect a state to not only its historical and cultural knowledges and heritages, but also signal the state’s willingness to project itself into the emerging knowledge and information society that ultimately define the progress and wealth of nations. Libraries connect reading and learning culture, the dynamics of literacy, educational projects, human capital development and the generation of ideas, as well as paradigms fashioned purposely for creative innovation and policies especially in sociopolitical, socioeconomic, development and governance contexts. Libraries therefore connect a state’s willingness to become a legitimate participant in the evolving fourth industrial revolution while also keeping alive its own credentials as an entity that keeps generating culturally and historically relevant knowledge.

    Read Also: I never said Buhari was linked to Boko Haram, Jonathan clarifies

    Knowledge, ideas and books—indeed the entire educational structures—reinvigorate the ways a state keep reengaging its problems, challenges and the solution and resolution frameworks for understanding and undermining them. Education is the fundamental bedrock that instigates individual, collective and national enlightenment and progress. And this therefore ultimately connects not only with the creative policy intelligence that is enabled by the availability of knowledge preserved in libraries (especially as it denotes the repositories of global knowledge, ideas and paradigms), but also how leaders connect with these ideas and knowledge through what they read. When I wrote my op-ed piece on the reading habit of HE Vice President Senator Kashim Shettima, I opened up the possibilities for a nation that an enlightened leadership embodies.

    Unfortunately, Nigeria does not have a national library. Or more precisely, the national library project that was formulated in 1981 has refused to materialize into a symbolic and concrete structural manifestation of Nigeria’s willingness to join the global knowledge society. The idea of the national library was muted in 1981, but it took the next twenty-five years for the idea to get an enabling contract in 2006. And yet forty-three years later, the structure remains a pipedream that refused to take off. And so, while it was all too easy to build the National Ecumenical Centre and the National Mosque within which the dilapidated library structure located, this significant element of Nigeria’s progress has remained uncompleted. This is simply just emblematic of the general institutional and structural dysfunctional experience that characterize the Nigeria Project right from independence to date. Knowledge production and the entire educational structure in Nigeria have faced significant limitations that derive from the myopic inability to connect development with an enlightened human development capital. There is also the tightrope of anti-intellectualism that the Nigerian political class has always been walking in its relationship with the institutions and structures of knowledge production and idea generation in Nigeria. The ongoing adversarial industrial relations between consecutive Nigerian governments and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) over transforming universities into a significant force in nation building efforts in the state is a clear evidence of this a-developmental elite orientation.

    All these dysfunctional issues are surprising given that the Nigerian state is very concerned about both her geopolitical status and credentials as a democratic and developmental state in the world—as the Giant of Africa—and also to achieve a stable and empowering economic growth that measurably improve the life prospect and economic lives of her citizens.                           However, efforts at making the lives of Nigerians better are usually concentrated on purely economic, econometric and macroeconomic indices of development. If reading and education come into reckoning, it is strictly to the extent that they are inescapable to the fruition of any particular human capital development policy. And yet, the quality of a nation’s human capital is measurable only to the extent of the place of an enlightened reading culture, symbolized by a functional and efficient library systems.

    Thus, a state is instigated not only by the economic but also informational and educational resources at its disposal. In other words, the availability and the rate of access to the information resources and the extensive reading rate per capita are the development indices of a society. The number of published books, journals, libraries, readers, writers, translators and publishers of a country are all indices and fundamental criteria of its development. Extending the culture of studying and book reading, developing libraries, publications and distribution of books and utilizing these unrivaled cultural instruments are therefore the requirements and necessities of each society’s growth. This connects the functional and efficient library system to a reading culture that stimulate the young people into the consumption of ideas and paradigms that enable creative and critical thinking.

    Building a Nigerian national library—that possibly will be replicated in all the states of the federation—signals a symbolic aspiration by the government to ground learning and reading as a key variable in the determination of the quality of the human capital that Nigeria needs for her development process. It also determines the quality of Nigeria’s democratic experiment founded on the enlightened status of the Nigerian citizenry. Thus, a lot is riding on Nigeria’s capacity to build a functional and efficient national library as a repository of local, national, regional and global experiences, histories, ideas, paradigms, ideals, perspectives and creative innovation. So, does it matter who lead the crucial initiative to jumpstart and crystallize the national library project as long as it is done? The First Lady, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, saw what should be considered a national embarrassment, and responded to it while also ensuring that the gesture is funneled through government institutions, like the Federal Ministry of Education. Having woken up the nation from its slumber on this unarguably defining project with deep essence, it is now an all-stakeholder national challenge to get the noble gesture by the First Lady concluded and put into use. That seems like a long stretch given the forty-three years of policy and implementation inactivity. And I think we should all support this very unique and very ardent attempt to push a significant dimension of Nigeria’s development effort to bring to life what ought to have been alive and kicking many years ago. 

    However, whether we like it or not, the fact that it is an individual and not the government that is pushing for the realization of this project is an indictment of national proportion. One way to read this is that the National Library project is happening on the sideline of whatever consecutive Nigerian governments considered to be significant policy initiatives that aligned with development visions and implementation frameworks. But then, the redemption comes from the fact that the Nigeria Project, unlike the national library project, is a work in progress. And this allows for the government to pick up where there is any glaring historical and political failure and provide redemptive policy reclamation and reconstruction. I think this is the most important lesson that Senator Oluremi Tinubu’s gesture towards the National Library project has provided us. The government and other stakeholders cannot afford to have this project to remain at the individual level. This gesture has therefore become an instigator in terms of what the citizenry can do to push the government to implementing the general will. And this is even all the more crucial because it is coming from a bona fide member of the government itself. This then implies that the government is now instigating itself to action on behalf of the Nigeria Project.   

  • First Lady raises N20.4b for National Library project

    First Lady raises N20.4b for National Library project

    First Lady Oluremi Tinubu has raised not less than N20.4 billion for the ongoing National Library project.

    Her target is to rake in N100 billion from donors by December.

    Senator Tinubu, who announced the development yesterday at Aso Villa, initiated the idea to mark her 65 birthday.

    She turned 65 on Sunday.

    Some days to her birthday she urged Nigerians desirous of sending her gift, cakes, newspaper advertorials and others to convert them to donation into an account she opened to raise funds for the completion of the abandoned National Library Project.

    She reaffirmed yesterday that the account whose signatories are Minister of Education and the National Librarian, will be closed by the end of December and the cash raised, transferred for the project.

    The National Library project was initiatedin 1981 by Second Republic President Shehu Shagari . It has since been stalled.

    She spoke at a lunch with State House reporters accompanied by Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Mr Bayo Onanuga; Wife of the Vice President, Hajia Nana Shettima, Wife of the House of Representatives Speaker, Hajia Fatima Tajudeen-Abass and Wife of the Deputy Senate President, Hajia Laila Barau.

    She explained her motivation to raise funds for the project among others.

    The First Lady said: “My role is only to help drive support for the cause. This is a national project, and I believe Nigerians can come together to make it happen,” she explained.

    Read Also: Emefiele urges court to foreclose prosecution in alleged procurement fraud trial

    Mrs Tinubu, a former teacher and senator who served for 12 years on the Senate Committee on Education, said her upbringing had instilled in her the value of libraries.

    She described the National Library project as a legacy initiative close to her heart.

    “From a humble background, the library played a role in my life. This is not just about a building; it is about preserving knowledge for future generations,” she noted.

    The First Lady underscored her long-standing dedication to philanthropy and fundraising for national causes.

    She recalled raising N50 million for the completion of the National Sickle Cell Foundation Centre during her 45th birthday, and N200 million for the New Era Foundation at her 50th birthday.

    “This is not the first time I have raised funds for causes close to my heart,” she said, pointing to her history of initiatives that have since become fully operational and beneficial to society.

    Addressing speculations that her current effort may have political undertones, Mrs Tinubu dismissed such claims as misplaced.

    “What is wrong with drawing attention to areas of need and inclusion? Helping to rebuild does not have a political undertone—it’s our duty as citizens to contribute meaningfully to society. I even donated to the post-war rebuilding of schools in Liberia,” she stressed.

    Urging Nigerians to adopt a spirit of service, Mrs Tinubu cited the words of U.S. former President, John F. Kennedy: “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.”

    She added: “Like President Kennedy said, let both sides explore what problems unite us instead of what divides us. This should guide our actions.”

    Drawing inspiration from the biblical exhortation in Isaiah 58:6, she said her lifelong commitment to philanthropy and public service was rooted in her faith.

    The National Library of Nigeria project, approved with funding in subsequent years after its 1981 launch, has faced multiple delays and cost escalations—from N8.2 billion in 1981 to about N23 billion by 2023.

    “With this administration ready to take the bull by the horns, I believe the library can be completed within two years, with the support of Nigerians,” Mrs Tinubu said.

    She described the building as more than a project, calling it “a national treasure that will serve generations to come.”

    The First Lady explained that donations have already surpassed N20.4 billion, noting contributions from a broad spectrum of Nigerians and institutions.

    She expressed appreciation to President Tinubu, Vice President Kashim Shettima, and his wife Hajia Nana, wife of the late President Muhammadu Buhari, Hajia Aisha, several former First Ladies, the Senate President and his wife, Nneoma, the Speaker of the House of Representatives and his wife, members of the National Assembly, the Nigeria Governors’ Forum and governors’ spouses, security chiefs and their wives, as well as prominent business leaders including Aliko Dangote, Abdulsamad Rabiu, Arthur Eze, Tony Elumelu, and Femi Otedola.

    “A Grain of Sand Can Become an Ocean”

    She called on all Nigerians to see the library project as a collective duty.

    “A grain of sand and a drop of water can become a mighty ocean. Together, Nigerians can transform the country,” she declared.

  • National Library secures full accreditation for CALIM to run diploma programme

    National Library secures full accreditation for CALIM to run diploma programme

    The National Library of Nigeria (NLN) has secured full accreditation from the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) for the Centre for Advanced Library and Information Management (CALIM) to run a diploma program.

    The organisation also announced the matriculation of the third set of diploma students and the remodeling of the Centre with standard hostel accommodation.

    The National Librarian and Chief Executive Officer of NLN, Professor Chinwe Veronica Anunobi, said this during an interactive session with staff of the organisation to commemorate her fourth anniversary in office.

    “These milestones are anchored on our 8-point agenda and aligned with the five strategic objectives of the 2025–2030 new strategic plan. This strategy represents the NLN’s journey in fostering literacy, education, research, cultural preservation, and access to knowledge,” Prof Anunobi said in a statement signed by the Assistant Director, Information and Public Relations of the National Library of Nigeria, Vershima Orvell-Dio.

    Read Also: FG revokes 1,263 mineral licenses over non-payment of fees

    Reflecting on her stewardship over the past years, Prof. Anunobi highlighted notable achievements including sponsorship of 118 staff for capacity-building training covering professional and specialised competencies, recruitment of 94 new staff to replace exited personnel, enhancement of outsourced staff salaries, and provision of welfare support to ailing staff.

    Others were successful 60th anniversary celebrations featuring a landmark road walk to the NLN headquarters under construction, development of a new strategic plan 2025–2030, to replace the 2020 – 2024 plan, continuation of the International Digital Literacy Training, and the production of 141 certified graduates.

    The National Librarian also unveiled key initiatives for the coming year, including digitising Nigeria’s cultural and historical heritage and delivering cutting-edge educational tools, expanding digital access through a robust virtual platform, and promoting storytelling, creativity, and literacy through national and regional programs.

    Prof. Anunobi expressed optimism for the early completion of the permanent headquarters, improvement in budgetary allocations, the delivery of an operational bus, expansion of directorates to enhance productivity, and the forthcoming launch of the National Library of Nigeria Fund.

  • ‘National library preserves 5 million titles for posterity’

    ‘National library preserves 5 million titles for posterity’

    The Chief Executive/ National Librarian, Prof. Chinwe Anunobi has said more than 5 million titles in 13 million volumes of intellectual resources across the country has been preserved by the National Library of Nigeria.

    Prof. Anunobi disclosed this during a news conference in Abuja to mark the library’s 60th anniversary and also unveiled a five year strategic plan 2025-2030 as well as new logo.

    Anunobi highlighted the library’s achievements, including the issuance of 1.5 million International Standard Book Numbers (ISBN) and over 20,000 International Serials Numbers (ISSN).

    She said: “NLN is primarily established as the nation’s memory with the responsibility of collecting all intellectual resources published and unpublished in Nigeria, by Nigerians about Nigeria and preserve them for posterity.

    “Presently the NLN has preserved over 5 million titles in over 13 million volumes of resources stored in various locations all over the country inclusive of 2.5million titles and 7.5million volumes resources of Nigerian origin.

    Read Also: National Library seeks reintroduction of reading hours in schools

    “From the first National Bibliography of Nigeria (NBN) produced, NLN has consistently produced over 20 editions which serve as both reference material and cataloging tools for Nigerian resources nationally and internationally.”

    Anunobi said that the library had also established over 100 literacy centres and reading clubs, promoting good reading culture among citizens.

    She added that the National Library’s 2025-2030 strategic plan would be unveiled during the anniversary celebration today in Abuja.

    She said: “It is also a pointer that going forward the NLN must design education, research and cultural development programmes that will not only attract the youths, but transform them as a very important and valuable asset of this Nation.

    “We will not be found wanting in the global information concerns including open access and knowledge sharing, enhancing discoverability and user engagement, building a smart library infrastructure, competence transformation and capacity building, strengthening collaborative networks, while we envision a sustainable future.”

    Prof Anunobi said over the past six decades, the national library has evolved in her foundational vision as a dynamic repository of Nigeria’s knowledge and cultural heritage, offering a sturdy backbone for education, literacy, research, and intellectual heritage preservation.

    “The journey has been both challenging and rewarding, one that is marked by the unwavering commitment to preserve the Nation’s knowledge storehouse, fostering reading and literacy, and serving as a platform for access to knowledge for Nigerians from all walks of life for personal and national development.”

    The National Librarian also emphasised the need to promote the culture of reading among Nigerians, saying the NLN has the foundational mandate to ensure that the information resources that are collected and preserved are read for enhanced literacy and sustainable development of the country.

    She said: “It is also cheering that NLN has had personal engagements with over 1 million Nigerians in her effort to ensure that Nigerians across all age, gender, occupations, and class understand and embrace the culture of reading towards sustainable development.

    “This we have achieved through our readership promotion and establishment of over 100 literacy centres and reading clubs as well as visits to hospitals, correctional centres, skills acquisition centres, motor parks, schools, etc. Since 2022, we have taken the campaign to the hard to reach communities (the underserved) where the rate of illiteracy is becoming endemic.

    “This is necessary as Nigeria cannot afford to leave anybody behind in her developmental strides.”

  • National Library seeks reintroduction of reading hours in schools

    National Library seeks reintroduction of reading hours in schools

    The National Library of Nigeria has called for the reintroduction of reading hours in timetables of schools nationwide.

    The agency said the proposal, alongside many others, forms part of the plan to ensure that there is no dearth of reading culture in Nigerian society.

    The Chief Librarian, Prof. Veronica Anunobi, stated this during the launch of the 2024 Annual Readership Promotion campaign which was declared open by the Minister of Education, Prof Tahir Mamman in Abuja with the theme: ‘Reading Without Boundaries: A Renewed Hope.’

    She said: ‘In a bid to “Catch Them Young,’ this campaign prioritises pupils and students in secondary and primary schools, as well as those in Hard-to-Reach Communities.

    “In previous campaigns, we have reached Internally Displaced Persons camps, Nigerian Correctional Centers, artisans, market groups, hospitals, and motor parks, underscoring our commitment to making reading accessible to all segments of society thereby engendering inclusivity.

    “Our efforts in reinvigorating reading among Nigerians are multi-faceted. We are advocating for the institution of a National Reading Day and the reintroduction of reading hours into the timetables of all basic and secondary schools across the country.”

    Read Also: Minister pledges to complete 17-year-old abandoned National Library building

    She added: “Additionally, our state branches are actively establishing reading clubs nationwide (94 reading clubs are already active with more coming before the end of the year).

    “We are also modernising the outlook of our branches to create inviting and attractive reading environments, implementing new prototype buildings while renovating existing ones.

    “These branches are not only stocked with Nigeria’s intellectual heritages through legal deposit publications but also with resources tailored to the needs of their host communities, based on thorough community needs assessments.

    “Furthermore, our branches serve as reading hubs, both physically and virtually, with access to a wide range of online resources available 24/7, ensuring that Nigerians can engage with reading materials at any time while reading beyond boundaries.”

    Prof Mamman reaffirmed the Federal Government’s commitment to completing the headquarters of the National Library of Nigeria.

    The minister did not however state the timeline within which the project would be completed.

    According to the minister, the theme aligns with the government’s ‘Education for Renewed Hope’ roadmap, aiming to make literacy a deeply ingrained culture in Nigerian society.

    Mamman, who was represented by the Director of Special Duties in the ministry, Zubairu Abdullahi, underscored the importance of reading in unlocking an individual’s potential, innovation and national progress.

    The minister said the campaign’s primary focus is breaking down barriers to reading, ensuring everyone has access to reading materials, regardless of background, age or location.

  • National Library launches application to aid ISBN/ISSN issuance

    The National Library of Nigeria (NLN) has launched a new application for international standard numbers (ISBN and ISSN) issuance.

    The application was launched at the just-concluded Nigeria International Book Fair (NIBF) at the University of Lagos (UNILAG).

    This, according the Chief Executive Officer of the National Library Of Nigeria, Prof Lenrie Olatokunbo Aina, “is to make it easier for book publishers, authors and other interested persons or organisations to apply for and obtain international standard numbers (ISBN and ISSN) for their publications within 24 hours, regardless of the time and their location, without necessarily having to physically visit any of our offices”.

    In line with the theme of this year’s book fair, Optimising New Technology in Book Development and Distribution for the Promotion of Book in Africa, NLN held a sensitisation workshop for publishers and authors on digitalisation of ISBN and ISSN.

    The application, he said, “also makes it possible for both the National Library of Nigeria and publishers to track the level of legal deposit compliance, precondition for further issuance of new standard numbers”.

    The new approach to this and requirements were announced participants at the workshop at the fair.

    “With this new application, we have reduced the burden of time and effort. Now, all that you have to do is log on to our website, www.nln.gov.ng navigate to the page, and commence the easy-to-follow process that would lead you through obtaining the standard number you need, right in your home or office, be it at night or in the day time.

    “For the ISSN, you publishers will be able to search for the availability of the title the intend using for your journal, and if it has not been used by another publisher, you can go ahead to submit the relevant documents showing evidence that the intended journal meets the basic requirements, after which you may go ahead to pay the administrative fee and the numbers would be assigned to you via registered email for the journal,” Prof Aina said.

  • Libraries in poor state, turned to social events centres

     

    Some libraries in the country have been turned into social event centres to generate revenue for basic maintenance following decades of neglect, a survey by our reporter has shown.

    Our correspondents, who visited some libraries in some states in North-Central Nigeria, observed that many of them were desolate with neither workers nor readers on sight.

    At the National Library in Jos, our reporter  observed that weeds had taken over the vicinity, while a part of the fence had collapsed.

    Our reporter  also saw banners of various events slated to be held at the expansive premises of the library.

    Miss Ruth Davou, a teacher, whose residence is a few metres away from the facility, told our reporter that the library was always used for wedding receptions on Saturdays.

    “From what I have heard, many people prefer to hold the wedding receptions in the library premises because the charges are cheap.

    “A friend of mine, who held her wedding reception here in March, paid N15,000. I think that is cheap and affordable,’’ she said.

    Davou said that the library had been “quite lonely’’ for a very long time, and expressed surprise that wedding receptions had become a daily routine at the premises.

    “Ìn the past, most readers preferred to visit the libraries on Saturdays because that is the best day for research activities.

    “The situation is different now because instead of the quiet Saturdays, we now have noisy Saturdays in the neighbourhood,’’ she said.

    She advised the Federal Government to fund the libraries to make them assets to people searching for knowledge.

    Efforts to speak with the management of the library proved abortive, but a security personnel, who craved anonymity, claimed that the workers had been on strike “for some time now”.

    Miss Wandoo Mac-Ikpah, a 400-level Mass Communication student of the University of Jos, equally has expressed disappointment at the poor state of the national library, but added that the university library was not any better.

    “I used to visit the National Library when it was functional, but I stopped at a point because most of the books there are outdated.

    “I prefer to use facilities at the cyber café even though the internet connectivity is usually epileptic.

    “ Since fire gutted our school’s general library last year, we have been patronizing the smaller library at the main campus of the university, but it does not have materials we require for modern researches,’’ she said.

    She said that the institution had often offered lessons on how to use the library but that using the school library had proved rather difficult because it lacked basic infrastructure like chairs, tables and a strong network to access materials through the internet.

    She further said that the computers were grossly inadequate and hardly sufficient to meet the rising needs of the students.

    Like Mac-Ikpah, many other library users and managers in Minna, Niger State, have decried the state of libraries in Nigeria and called for improved funding for the sector in view of its relevance to intellectual growth.

    Read Also: New libraries for three Edo rural school

    Mr Makji Dajwal, a lecturer in the information and library science department of a Polytechnic, while decrying the state of dilapidated reading structures in some public libraries, accused government and the private sector of abandoning the libraries.

    “The situation is worse in the rural areas. There, no one cares about the libraries at all. I find the situation appalling,’’ he said.

    “Some libraries have electronic and media equipment but a lot of the items are outdated; the Niger State Public Library Board has logistical support for mobile library initiatives in rural settings but this initiative is yet to take off,’’ he said.

    He said that the state library was more lively with an average of 100 regular users weekly, but lamented that the state lacked adequate public library legislation.

    “The most shocking aspect is that the state does not even recognise the Nigerian Library Association,’’ he said..

    Dajwal called for technical support, especially in the areasof electronic libraries and new library technologies.

    He also suggested an urgent need to review the Library and Information Science Curriculum in library schools to meet the needs of the 21st century library and information science worker.

    A post-graduate student, Miss Deborah Yunusa, however attributes the collapse in library services to the lack of current materials and basic infrastructure in the libraries.

    “If we want to resuscitate our libraries, we must create a serene environment for library services

    “ An enabling environment is necessary to get satisfaction when using the libraries. Those concerned should renovate the structures and also organize capacity building for library workers to improve service delivery,’’ she said.

    She however, expressed the hope that libraries in the country would soon become active in view of the recent announcement by Prof.  Lenrie Aina, the National Librarian, that the federal government had approved N1.8 billion for the expansion and renovation of national libraries nationwide.

    Meanwhile, Miss Doorshima Iorchir, a 100 level student of Benue State University, Makurdi, has applauded the institution for giving adequate orientation to its new students on how to use the library.

    “Aside the orientation exercise, the institution also has a course dedicated to the use of library for research and other academic activities. I find this very encouraging,’’ he said.

    Mr Donald Hile, a lecturer in the Department of Physics, Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi, also says he is happy at the state of ibraries in the institution.

    “The institution has a good and functional library with qualitative facilities.

    “The library has quality books and is equipped with modern communication gadgets,’’ he added

    The lecturer challenged the students to access facilities at the library to ease discoveries in their various disciplines and be abreast of current trends in their areas of study.

    But while the libraries in the school are encouraging, the situation is different in other parts of Benue.

    Mr Damian Daga, a writer based in Makurdi, told NAN that the libraries in the state were not good for people seeking to consult them for their researches.

    “The association of authors has been making frantic efforts to ensure that libraries do not lack current books. We have been trying to ensure that those seeking information are not disappointed.

    “We have engaged ourselves in researches so as to come out with quality books because they are very scarce in the libraries,’’ he said.

  • Senate decries non completion of N48b national library 11 years after

    Senate decries non completion of N48b national library 11 years after

    The Senate on Tuesday described as unacceptable the failure of the federal government to complete the National Library after 11 years.

    The upper chamber resolved to urge the government to prioritize the funding and completion of the permanent site of the National Library of Nigeria in order to mitigate losses accruable to the project;

    It also mandated its Committee on Education to meet with the Ministers of Education and the Federal Capital Territory and the National Librarian/Chief Executive Officer of the National Library of Nigeria to adopt an appropriation strategy that would ensure the completion of the project starting from the 2018 Appropriation Bill.

    It further advised the Government to be more strategic in the award of contracts with a view to embarking on only projects that can be adequately financed to the tune of its budgetary appropriation.

    The resolutions followed the adoption of a motion entitled “The preventable economic loss and national embarrassment arising from the failure of the federal government to complete the National Library after 11 years, “sponsored by Senator Olugbenga Ashafa (Lagos East).

    Ashafa in his lead debate noted that the National Library building project was conceptualized by the Federal Government in 2002 but awarded in 2006 to Messrs Reynolds Construction Company (RCC) at the sum of N8.590 Billion with a project timeline of 22 Months.

    He said that while the company commenced work on the project in April 2006, it could not proceed due to the failure of Government to release sufficient funds for the completion of the project, leading to its being revised three times over the period.

    Ashafa observed that a comprehensive report recently detailed the pitfalls of the project as follows:

    “That after a series of false starts leading to the initial suspension of work on the project, sometime in 2009, the project scope was reduced from the initial 8-floor plan to 5 floors and the contract sum of the reduced scope was reviewed upward to N17 billion from the original sum of N8.590 billion;

    “The Bureau of Public Procurement issued a compliance certificate of ’no objection’ on the review and the Federal Executive Council approved the revised sum. The completion period for the revised project was made 21 months effective from July 2010. The project could not be completed again due to paucity of funds; and

    “That in 2012, the presidency requested for the return of the project back to the full scope. A presidential anticipatory letter with reference number NLO/C.62/Vl/66 was sent to NLN (National Library of Nigeria) dated October 11, 2012, with a directive to CIA to instruct the contractor to revert to full scope.

    “By then, the contractor was about concluding arrangement for roofing at the fifth floor. The initially reviewed sum of N23.153 billion for the full scope was submitted by the consultants to the Ministry of Education but it was never processed.

    “In February 2013, the contractor requested for the extension of time and reviewed the contract sum upward to N48 billion.

    “Observed that despite the importance of this National Library, the project has been poorly funded since its inception.”

    The Lagos East lawmaker listed the allocation to the project between 2008 and 2015 as reported as follows: i. 2008N2, 269,197,198. 00 appropriated N1, 217,401,308.05 was released;

    2009N2. 4 billion budgeted and N2, 367,968,402 14 released; 2010 N18 billion budgeted N708, 301,501.34 was released; 2011 N758, 549,771.00 was earmarked but N491, 230,136.70 was released; v. 2012 N2 billion budgeted and N1, 081,448,443.00 was released; 2013 N4 billion was budgeted and N3, 164,726,518.19 was released; 2014 N22 billion was budgeted and N555, 697,923.52 was released; and 2015 N1.4 billion was budgeted, but N7 million was released.

    Ashafa said that the Senate should be worried that the continuous failure to properly fund the project within the specified period would cause the government losses modestly estimated to be in the range of 40 to 50billion naira and that if this failure to fund the project expeditiously continues, it might cost the Government even more in the long run.

    He also the Senate should be disturbed that 57 years after the birth of Nigeria and with trillions of naira sunk in the development of Abuja, the National Library of Nigeria still operates from a rented building because it does not have a permanent site;

    He said that the National Library is of critical importance to the country because it would serve as an important intellectual monument, representing the value placed on information, learning, knowledge, culture and history amongst others.

    He added: “Further disturbed that the failure of prioritization of this project by successive governments, is a direct reflection and metaphor for the almost inexistent premium we place on knowledge and intellectual capital as a country. This trend must stop and we must rise once again to the occasion;

    “Concerned that in View of the population explosion taking place in Nigeria, we no longer have the luxury of relegating knowledge and information amongst the populace.

    “1n the world that we are living in now, knowledge is the new black gold and we must not only diversify our economy into agriculture and solid-minerals but most importantly migrate wholly into a knowledge-based economy. In achieving this, Government must be focused on providing public access to quality knowledge and information;

    “Worried that the future of generations yet unborn is in jeopardy, as a failure to properly fund the National Library Project would greatly affect the capacity of the country in the area of proper documentation of historical documents, artefacts and archiving in general. Our heritage as a people is now at risk of extinction if we don’t move now.

    He said that the Senate should be disturbed that “this failure of strategic planning is not peculiar to the National Library Project alone but has become the bane of various capital projects across the country, amounting to a significant number of abandoned projects and preventable economic loss.”

    Other senators who contributed to the debate expressed disappointment that the projected remained non-completed years after it was initiated.

  • Young readers stewing at National Library, Benin

    SIR: Young boys and girls are experiencing challenges with studying at the National Library, Iyaro, Benin City. First, there is hardly any space for them to study, and therefore most of them huddle under the trees on the premises to study.

    Second, and most important, is that the few who manage to get a space inside the library study with tears and sweat. Yes, there are fans but power only comes on after 3pm or 4pm when these helpless kids are done ‘studying’ and headed home.

    I do not see how these children will be able to appreciate the importance of the provision of electricity when they take over the mantle of leadership if they have been groomed under this very harrowing condition.

    Let those in charge, Federal Ministry of Education, BEDC, kindly look into this.

     

    • Bob Etemiku,

    Abuja

  • Minister urges contractor to complete National Library next year

    The Supervising Minister for Education, Ezenwo Nyesom Wike, has urged the contractor handling the 12-storey library complex of the National Library of Nigeria to ensure that it is completed by the end of next year.

    The minister spoke yesterday in Abuja during an inspection visit to the site of the library complex.

    He said the Federal Government was committed to funding the project until it is completed to ensure that Nigerian students, academics and the public have access to library services of world-class standard.

    Wike noted that though the contractor handling the project was internationally recognised, he would still supervise the work alongside a ministerial committee established to ascertain that the contractor delivers the work on schedule.

    He said: “I am satisfied with the pace and quality of work. We shall, however, continue to monitor the contractor to ensure that he delivers the work on schedule.”