Former Dean, Faculty of Agriculture, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Prof. Adesina Aderibigbe, has debunked an online report, which said he was indicted for stealing by the school Governing Council. He said he was neither indicted for stealing from the university’s Agric Farm nor arrested by its security at the gate as being rumoured.
Prof. Aderibigbe, an Animal Nutritionist, told reporters that the report by one Concerned Integrity Group on the thebriefng.com, an online news site, whose address cannot be verified, was false and sponsored by some elements within the OAU campus to tarnish his integrity.
According to Aderibigbe, the report was done to stop him from winning the election into the Joint Council and Senate Selection Board (JCSSB) for the appointment of a new Vice-Chancellor. He said he was, however, happy that he emerged victorious among the four contenders.
He said: “I have never been indicted by the university’s Governing Council or any committee in the university or anywhere else. Rather, my efforts and those of other faculty deans were commended by the Council, which consequently approved a sum of N30 million for the farm. Even the former VC, Prof. Roger Makanjuola, on August 24, 2005, wrote me a letter, Ref. No. VC90/Vol.VI/6, to congratulate me on my various achievements as the dean during that period.
“The false story on my person was targeted at stopping my election into the JCSSB for the just concluded VC’s appointment. However, my colleagues knew my track record, character and integrity and voted overwhelmingly for me despite the massive circulation of the false online story a day before the election in Senate. The evil perpetrators failed in their attempt to stop me from winning one of the two Senate spots. Subsequently, I discharged my responsibility creditably well during the VC selection process to the unprecedented satisfaction of all the 21 applicants, members of OAU community and Nigerians in general.
‘’I want to use this opportunity to clear my name and hard earned reputation and integrity, which the faceless and cowardly “Concerned Integrity Group “attempted to rubbish, but failed woefully. I am very happy that the sponsors of the false story did not achieve their goals.”
Aderibigbe said his initial reaction was to ignore the story, but he had to rescind the decision following the advice of colleagues and family members. “The entire story is fake and unfounded. It was meant to achieve an evil purpose, but they have failed woefully,”he said.
He said no amount of blackmail and sponsored stories by some disgruntled elements within and outside the university would stop him from being focused and doing what is right, fair and just.
“In fact, winning the election despite the false and evil publication, was like a double vote of confidence in me by my distinguished colleagues in the Senate, for which I am very grateful. I thank God for making me not to disappoint them during the selection process. I will remain resolute to maintain my honour and integrity always.”
He said he has instructed his lawyer to begin legal process against the operator of the online site, who he accused of not verifying the story before running it online.
“I want to assure my colleagues, students and family members that no amount of falsehood through whatever means will deter me from standing on the side of truth, fairness and justice. It took me decades to build my career and hard earned honour and integrity. I will continue to uphold the truth in any circumstance and defend my integrity always. The false and malicious online story against my person failed woefully to achieve its aim,” Aderibigbe concluded.
Former Dean, Faculty of Agriculture, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Prof. Adesina Aderibigbe, has debunked a report in an online medium which alleged he was indicted by the Governing Council of the institution. He said he was neither indicted for stealing from the Agric. Farm nor arrested by the university security at the gate as was being rumoured.
Prof. Aderibigbe, an Animal Nutritionist, told reporters that the report by one Concerned Integrity Group on the thebriefng.com, an online news site whose address cannot be verified, was false and sponsored by some elements within OAU to tarnish his integrity.
According to Aderibigbe, the spurious publication was planted to stop him from winning election into the Joint Council and Senate Selection Board (JCSSB) for the appointment of a new Vice-Chancellor. Nonetheless, Aderibigbe is happy that he emerged victorious among the four contenders.
He said: “I have never been indicted by the university’s Governing Council or any committee in the university or anywhere else. Rather, my efforts and those of other faculty deans were commended by Council, which consequently approved a sum of N30 million for the farm. Even the former VC, Prof. Roger Makanjuola, on August 24, 2005, wrote me a letter, Ref. No. VC90/Vol.VI/6,to congratulate me on my various achievements as the dean during that period.
“The false story on my person was targeted at stopping my election into the JCSSB for the just concluded VC appointment. However, my colleagues knew my track record, character and integrity and voted overwhelmingly for me despite the massive circulation of the false online story a day before the election in Senate. The evil perpetrators failed in their attempt to stop me from winning one of the two Senate spots. Subsequently, I discharged my responsibility creditably well during the VC selection process to the unprecedented satisfaction of all the 21 applicants, members of OAU community and Nigerians in general.
‘’I want to use this opportunity to clear my name and hard earned reputation and integrity which the faceless and cowardly “Concerned Integrity Group “attempted to rubbish, but failed woefully. I am very happy that the sponsors of the false story did not achieve their goals.”
Aderibigbe said his initial reaction was to overlook the story, but had to rescind that decision following the advice of colleagues and family members. “The entire story is fake and unfounded. It was meant to achieve an evil purpose, but they have failed woefully.”
He said no amount of blackmail and sponsored stories by some disgruntled elements within and outside the university would stop him from being focused and doing what is right, fair and just.
“In fact, winning the election despite the false and evil publication, was like a double vote of confidence in me by my distinguished colleagues in the Senate, for which I am very gratefu. I thank God for making me not to disappoint them during the selection process. I will remain resolute to maintain my honour and integrity always.”
He said he has already instructed his lawyer to begin legal process against the operator of the online site who he accused of not verifying the story before running it online.
“I want to assure my colleagues, students and family members that no amount of falsehood through whatever means will deter me from standing on the side of truth, fairness and justice. It took me decades to build my career and hard earned honour and integrity. I will continue to uphold the truth in any circumstance and defend my integrity always. The false and malicious online story against my person failed woefully to achieve its aim,” Aderibigbe concluded.
If any OAU Student were asked to choose which was better, between being sucked to death by losing blood or losing foodstuffs to rats every night; a typical OAU student will rather go for the latter. At least it is better, losing foodstuffs to the destructive tendencies of rats since they will surely respond to poison where fumigation of bed bugs is irresponsive.
The recent infestation of bed bugs and the clamor by affected students of the prestigious Obafemi Awolowo University is one situation stronger than the cry of hunger from the camps of IDPS or Meningitis pandemonium as history persists to knock on the door when only two years ago, on the 29th September 2015, the University of Lagos was shut down by students due to the influx of bedbugs, rendering habitation on Campus hazardous.
For Dahunsi Paui, a 500-level Medical Rehabilitation student of the College of Health Sciences of the Obafemi Awolowo University, it was a rosy welcome to the embers of the institution widely renowned for learning and culture, on the eve of his resumption that those heinous insects struck.
He was quoted thus: “this bedbug rise is really bad! I came back to school just to lie back on the bed and I felt a bite on my neck! I stood up immediately to see bedbugs! The school should do something about it.”
While others might think there maybe be redemption for the extermination of bedbugs in the various Halls of Residences in the institution, Praise Moses, a 300-level student of the Faculty of Arts and Olabode Tokunbo, a 300 level student of Sociology and Anthropology department beg to differ.
“There were days I had to go to academics to sleep, just because of bedbugs. My friends in ETF hall used (Not sure about now though) to go to other rooms to sleep. Everywhere is infested; even God cannot save us because OAU is too filthy for him. Only a meticulous cleanup of the hostels will do,” Praise added.
Tokunbo while narrating his experience stated that the fear of bedbugs is the beginning of wisdom. “Personally,” He stated, “during my part 2 first semester, I could recall how I was incessantly falling ill unknown to me that it was as a result of bedbug usually coming to feed on me while I was having my sweet siesta, meanwhile I always thought it was malaria as a result of mosquitoes. Fast forward to second semester part 2, and I can count how many nights I passed in my room for the fear of bedbug. And it’s that same reason amongst others for my failing to resume but I have no option than to just resume.”
The bedbug infestation has continued to generate several reactions from both fresh and stale students alike. Many students have continued to beckon on the management to find lasting solutions to the menace, as well as construct new hostels and properly fumigate its bushy environments. Lawal Ayobami Victor has blamed the management of the institution of irresponsiveness whilst urging other students to engage in a solidarity stance in bettering the adverse welfare conditions.
“Let people take some level of responsibility if the management is refusing to do something. After all, it’s not the management that those things are biting. In Nigeria, University management has seized to be in existence in matters relating to students’ welfare, but they are just there for other reasons- Pocket infrastructure.”
While Ayobami Victor is not wrong in terms of his contribution as he nursed his grievances on the issue long overdue; strong indications from the past are sure to resurface again if care isn’t taken to avoid history repeating itself over and over again.
Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, has been awarded $2 million by the Cancer Research Institute (CRI) in the United States, for research into treatment of the disease.
The head of CRI medical research team Dr. Peter Kingham, broke the news during a courtesy call on the Acting Vice-Chancellor, Prof Tony Elujoba.
He said the award was aimed at appreciating the management of OAU for its support to cancer researchers at the university’s College of Health Sciences that has been collaborating with other researchers from CRI to find a cure for cancer.
In a statement, OAU’s Public Relations Officer, Abiodun Olarewaju, recalled how the synergy between the two institutions began in 2010, adding that a 10-year plan, which could have probably led to the cash award was attained within a few years.
Kingham praised the dexterity of his colleagues at OAU, saying they were committed to finding cure to one of the leading causes of death.
Elujoba assured the CRI delegation that the donation would be judiciously used.
He challenged researchers to find a cure for cancer, which has hitherto defied cure, adding that the team should work toward making people seek help early enough instead of resorting to other means that would compound or worsen their conditions.
OAU College of Health Sciences Provost, Prof Adesegun Fatusi, said the CRI delegation visit is to further cement the research-and-training relationship that was established seven years ago to help mankind live well and long.
Prof. Eyitope Ogungbenro Ogunmodede has emerged the Vice Chancellor of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ife, Osun State.
The Chairman of the institution Governing Council, Dr. Yemi Ogunbiyi, made the announcement on Monday.
21 applications were screened for the position.
Born on January 23, 1957 in Owo, Ondo State, Ogunmodede is a Professor of Dentistry and former Dean of Faculty, College of Health Science, at the institution.
Prof. Ogunmodede, who spoke with journalists after he was announced as the new vice chancellor of OAU, solicited the support of staff and pledged total commitment, determination, hard work, quick consultative decisions, direction, impartiality and conscious enhancement of team approach.
Obafemi Awolowo University Muslim Graduates’ Association (UNIFEMGA), an association of Muslim alumni of the university, is set to hold its annual public lecture/luncheon in Lagos on Sunday. It is themed: ‘Strategic imperatives and opportunities for investments and wealth creation by Nigerian muslim professionals in Lagos”
The event, which holds at the De Renaissance Hotel, Alausa, Ikeja, between 10am and 2pm, aims to sensitise members of the public on important issues beneficial to their needs.
Permanent Secretary, Office of Overseas Affairs and Investment (Lagos Global), Lagos State, Alhaji Abdul Ahmed Mustapha will be the guest lecturer, while Chairman of Access Bank, Mrs. Mosun Belo-Olusoga, will chair the occasion.
A statement by the chairman, organising committee, Mohammed Buari, stated that this year’s topic is driven by the need to diversify Nigeria’s economy from crude oil, encourage participation of Muslim professionals in entrepreneurship and create alternative sources of income, amongst others.
Over 200 participants across different industries and business interests are expected, the statement said, adding that the organisers believe it would create a good learning experience and networking platform among attendees.
Formed over 20 years ago to educate, enlighten and address societal problems, the association is committed to all-round human development based on Islamic values.
A row has broken out over the students union election at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State. Some students accused the management of meddling in the poll. But others described the election as free and fair. GABRIEL OGUNJOBI (400-Level Social Studies Education) reports.
Mixed feelings have continued to trail the Students’ Union Government (SUG) election of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State. Some students alleged that the elections were “tactically rigged” in favour of some candidates seen as management’s stooges. Others said the process was free and fair, urging students to accept the outcome in good faith.
The election, which held penultimate Thursday, produced Ibukun Oyekan, a 400-Level Medicine and Surgery student, as president. Ibukun polled 1,168 votes to defeat his closest rival. Tosin Jacob garnered 2,002 votes to become the Vice President-elect.
The atmosphere on the campus was tense in the build-up to the election. It was a serious battle among students in different political camps. The electioneering was marred with accusations and counter-accusations, as candidates struggled to outdo one another. In what was seen as a mischief, some candidates dubbed their opponents as management’s puppets, raising concern among neutral students on the management’s involvement in the conduct of the election.
The students’ suspicion was heightened by a report that management released N1 million to support the electoral process. Apparently disturbed by the development, some students vowed to mobilise voters against candidates perceived to be favoured by the management.
Former Deputy Speaker of the union Oluseun Olowofoyera accused the Electoral Committee Chairman, Olusola Falade, of favoritism, saying the committee openly endorsed a candidate. But, he could not support his claims with proof.
Gbenga Ogunrinu, an Economics Education student, said the election results were “grossly distorted”, adding that the process was far from being free and fair.
He said: “We could all feel the pressure from the management on the electoral committee to get its candidates elected. There was a tactical rigging by people, who wanted their candidates to win at all cost. I am glad that students showed uncommon will to reject some of these favoured candidates.”
A 300-Level Zoology student, Nafiu Ishola, said the election was fair to “a large extent”, since no candidate had forwarded a petition to the electoral committee on the results. He said the claim of malpractice was aimed at discrediting the process.
The election has come and gone; students seem to have put the outcome of the process behind them. Some have started to set an agenda for the elected leaders, raising expectations that the incoming leaders would step up the union’s welfare programmes.
Gbenga, a 300-Level student, felt the union did not live up to its billing in the previous administration. Expressing optimism on the readiness of the incoming executives to change the course of things, Gbenga said the president-elect would bring his competence and integrity to bear in returningthe past glory of the union.
Nafiu set three agenda for the incoming leaders. According to him, the union must ensure that the school maintains a stable academic calendar, attend to students’ welfare and communicate its monthly activities to students.
The Vice President-elect, Tosin, hailed the students for choosing her despite her bland performance during the manifesto. She said the collective interest of the union would supersede individual interest, adding that the union would uphold the values bequeathed by the previous leaders.
Other elected officer included General Secretary, Boluwajaiye Adeoluwa; Assistant General Secretary, Oluwaseun Oyebanjo; Financial Secretary, Kehinde Omisakin; Public Relations Officer, Simon Okediji; Welfare Secretary, Adekanmi Ajiboye; Director of Socials, Adedayo Afolabi and Michael Adewunmi, Sports Director.
Many public tertiary institutions lack sufficient hostels to accommodate their teeming students. CAMPUSLIFE reporters visited the hostels of various institutions and discovered that the blame for the state of the hostels is shared by the management of the institutions and the students.
MANY students of tertiary institutions depend on campus hostels because they are cheaper than off-campus accommodation.
But only a few public tertiary institutions can boast of adequate hostels. Fewer still can boast of hostels which are in good condition.
A visit by CAMPUSLIFE to some hostels run by the Federal University of Technology, Minna (FUTMINNA), University of Lagos (UNILAG), University of Benin (UNIBEN), Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), Federal Polytechnic, Bida, University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN), Federal Polytechnic Offa (FEDPOFFA), revealed that their facilities are in bad shape.
UNILAG
By Babatunde Kawthar
Though the University of Lagos (UNILAG) has 13 undergraduate halls of residence, it can only provide accommodation for about 20 percent of its students.This problem has put a lot of pressure on its hostels as majority of its students have resorted to squatting with their colleagues. As a result, the hostels are congested.
The male halls are more congested than the female halls because men find it easier to squat. Also, two male undergraduate halls are under renovation.
A room in a male hostel allocated to only eight students can be inhabited by 20 students. According to Jude, a final year student, the least number of occupants in any room he had ever stayed in is twice the number of those allocated to the room officially.
“See, once you get accommodation, just know that the least you can be in that room is twice the original occupants. In extreme cases you can even have multiples of four,” he said.
The pressure is evident in the condition of the rooms, the kitchenette and rest rooms. The halls are dirty.
“I can never stay in Makama Hall. Yes, many of UNILAG hostels are dirty but the condition of Makama is worse,” a female student lamented.
Chuma, a resident of Eni-Njoku Hall, said he watches what he eats to avoid using the hostel toilets.
“I can’t eat just anything; the toilets are too dirty and I have to avoid anything that will upset my stomach. The smell from the toilets can make you throw up,” he said.
The situation of the toilets in these halls, many believe, can be reversed if there is constant water and power supply to the halls. But some students do not think so. According to them, the neatest halls actually have inadequate power supply.
Students without bed spaces sleeping in a classroom
Adam, a year four student, said: “Biobaku and Kofo seem to be neater than most hostels and they rarely have light, unlike Moremi and other hostels on campus with better power supply. I think the neatness of the hall is dependent on management.”
While the institution has banned squatting by ensuring only legal occupants are allowed into halls of residence, this policy has proved ineffective. Off-campus halls, which could serve as alternatives, are too expensive for some students. This makes them to sleep in classrooms and areas designated for overnight reading. Faculties of Engineering and Environmental Sciences are the rendevous for these students.
Besides squatting, CAMPUSLIFE observed that many halls are not well managed with maintenance rarely done.
Except in extreme cases, such as when the the students protested to draw the attention of its management to the problem of bedbugs, and the institution was forced to fumigate all its halls of residence and change the mattresses, the halls management prefer to do surface maintenance. For instance, the outside walls are repainted to give the impresion that renovation was being done than fix the toilets and bathrooms.
Also, some halls lack fire extinguishers and fire alarms. While this does not make the hall completely unsafe, it puts residents at risk. A resident of Kofoworola Hall said: ‘Some days ago, there was a small fire outbreak caused by electricity, water could not be used to quench it. Students had to scream to call the attention of the hall officials. This is something we could have quenched with a fire extinguisher.’
UNILAG prides itself as institution of first choice for students and the nation’s beautiful bride and hence must strive for excellence in all aspects, including students’welfare. Certainly, students said, it could do more to improve the conditions of its halls, and should not while doing this, convert the halls to postgraduate halls or make them unnecessarily expensive as we have seen in some cases.
OAU
By Gabriel Ayodeji
Living in the halls of residences at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) is an exercise in endurance. Students are at the receiving end of the good and the bad. One reason is the large population of hostel residents. There are about 35,000 students in OAU with about 11,000 residing in the school’s hostels, which include four for the males, four for the females and one for the male and female Postgraduate students.
As one of the second generation institutions in the country, having being built in 1963, OAU has most of her public facilities erected over 50 years ago. Many of these, including the hostels, are poorly maintained.
CAMPUSLIFE discovered that some rooms in Moremi, Fajuyi and Awolowo Halls of Residence were abandoned for years, following a fire outbreak.These rooms have remained unrenovated ever since, despite the pressing needs for more hostels on campus.
The pressure of population on hostel facilities is a threat to hygiene. Students cook indiscriminately in spaces not meant for such, leaving the drains clogged and the surroundings messy.
One of the burnt hostel rooms yet to be repaired at OAU
An Estate Management student, Ahmed Jinadu, attributed the dilapidation of the hostels partly to population explosion.
“The contractors that built OAU in 1960s never envisaged the population we have in the halls of residence. In a way, this makes cleaning of backyards and corridors quite strenuous as students were never meant to cook at their backyards – as it is done now – causing an accumulation of liquid and solid wastes in the hostel because of overpopulation,” he said.
Apart from inadequate accommodation, utilities, such as water and power, are a luxury. Two out of three pumping machines at the University’s Dam are damaged leaving the institution with just one machine which can efficiently work for eight hours. With most of the reservoirs in the halls disconnected from pipelines, water has become erratic in the past three years because it takes little time for the functioning reservoirs to get empty.
Ogunrinu Gbenga Oladayo, a Student’s Union executive, described the maintenance culture as ‘poor’, blaming the university’s management for its awful disposition towards the dilapidation of the facilities.
“After the tenure of Prof. Rogers Makanjuola as Vice Chancellor, the eras of two VCs afterwards before the emergence of the Acting Vice Chancellor, Prof Anthony Elujoba, marked the periods of setbacks for the institution. The huge amount of money allocated by the Federal Government for the maintenance of hostels and implementations of other projects were diverted into personal purses at the detriment of students,” he claimed.
UNN
By James Ojo
Overcrowding is a problem at the University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN).
Eruesegbefe GodsRay, a resident of Eni-Njoku, a male Hostel, said sometimes 12 students were forced to stay in hostel rooms meant for fewer than that number.
“They should address the issue of overcrowding in the hostels. In a particular room, you can see up to 12 students,” he lamented.
Though the female hostels are slightly better, Nkem Jika said about seven students stay in a room in Akpabio, a female hostel.
“Seven or six students in a room makes it congested,” she said.
But the students commended the school management for regular supply of electricity and water. However, they lamented the poor state of the hostel toilets as well as the environment, which they said was usually unkempt.
Hinweokwu Ugwuanyi, who stays at Nkrumah Hall (female hostel), said the toilets are hardly clean.
“The only issue we have in the hostel is the toilet end. Most times, the place is messed up. But in other areas, they are really trying. There is constant light and water,” she said.
Eruesegbefe said the lack of water supply in the hostels affects the toilets cleanliness.
“The toilets are few. Sometimes, everywhere around the hostels are messed up. They should put an overhead tank so that they can be flushing directly,” she said.
Juliet Ozioko, a resident of Akpabio Hostel, said the toilets are dirty because of cleaners’ inability to do work well, and poor tiolets habits by students.
“On the side of toilet facility, it is appalling. Cleaners do not clean the toilets well and some students do not even help matters. You will see some girls pouring faeces on the floor of toilets, thereby messing up and stinking. It is bad for our health,” she said.
Juliet also said water is not available in all hostels, adding that power supply is inadequate.
“The four necessities of life are food, water, light and toilet facilities. However, in UNN not all of these are made available to the students. In the area of water not all hostels enjoy the privilege of having adequate water supply. Hostels, such as Akintola, Akpabio and Okpara, have steady adequate water supply while others do not.
On power supply, she said: “When students really need it to read at night, it is not provided but during the day when we are at lecture halls, it is there wasting.”
Ebong Solomon, a resident of Alvan Ikoku male Hostel, described the state of facilities in the hostel as “very poor”.
“The school needs to do more. The vice chancellor has been trying to improve the facilities but the pace of the refurbishing must be increased. Security has been beefed up by putting iron doors in all the rooms in the hostel but the general outlook or appearance of the hostel must be improved. The electrical connections must be fixed. The hostel needs to be painted after several decades,” he said.
FUTMINNA
Abdulsalam Mahmud
When students of the Federal University Minna talk about their hostels, the poor state of toilet facilities is tops their minds.
CAMPUSLIFE visited the ‘Block A’ Male Hostel of Gidan Kwano Campus. The facility is in a state of disrepair. But the students are to be blamed for bad toilets habit.
The toilets and bathrooms compartment on the second floor of the hostel block were poorly lit. The floor is slippery – the result of repeated urination and excretion. Worse still, it smells. A tall student, was seen urinating on the corridor without entering the toilet.
Another student, who was waiting to use the bathroom, hissed in disgust, his mouth covered with a handkerchief, to keep out the offensive smell from assaulting his nostrils.
“I no no why some guys no go ever get sense,” he said in disgust. “Person don big, but go still dey behave like animal’’, he lamented as he made his way to find a relatively clean toilet.
Meanwhile, a chocking smell of fresh excreta from the deserted bathroom hit the toilet area.
In virtually all the toilets on the block, an army of flies was seen perching on the urine-soaked cistern, lobbies and faeces-embellished toilets’ floors, even as a foul, and toxic odours emanated from indiscriminate urination.
Usman Mustapha, an engineering student who resides in the hostel, decried the deplorable condition of the toilets, adding that lack of functional water system and bad toilet etiquettes by some students had made them unsafe for use.
He said: “It is quite unfortunate and worrisome that students, who ought to have common sense and be properly cultured, misuse the toilets. On several occasions, I have seen mature students urinating right at the entrance lobby, instead of going inside toilets. At times, if you are not lucky, a mountain of faeces will greet you by the time you enter to shower in the bathroom.
FUTA Minna
“In fact, those of us whose rooms are close to the toilets and bathrooms are the worst hit, as the offensive smells of urine and excreta that pervade our rooms cause discomfort.”
Usman lamented that some cleaners employed to tidy the toilets do not do their work well. He also pleaded with the university management to build more toilets and renovate the damaged ones.
“There is need for cleaners to be adequately provided with vital cleaning instruments, sanitisers and detergents to aid their work,’’ he added.
The experience is not different for Patience Uzor, who stays in a female hostel on the Bosso Campus of the university. She said that some students dread taking their baths and using the hostel’s toilets because they are filthy.
She lamented that the floors of some toilets are littered with blood-stained sanitary towels, urine and excreta. She blamed the school management for the problem.
“It is true that students contribute to the deplorable state of the toilets through improper and unhygienic handling of the overstretched toilet facilities. However, the school management cannot be exonerated either.
“The fact that most of our toilets’ lightings are not functioning, regular supervision of cleaners is not done, and some toilets’ doors are damaged, corroded and having cracked walls show the indifference of the university management towards students’ good health. A visitor coming to the hostel toilets for the first time doesn’t need a soothsayer to tell him that they haven’t being a beneficiary of any renovation work since they were built,’’ Patience said.
A top management staff member, who refused to be named because he was not mandated to speak on the issue, however, said that students who reside in campus hostels should not treat their hygiene with kid gloves.
He said: “They say charity begins at home. Students, who misuse hostel toilets, can be described as uncultured. They lack good morals and proper upbringing right from their homes. The questions are: Are they exhibiting the same attitude in their various homes? Do some of them have cleaners or maids who tidy their toilets and bathrooms at their home? What about the off-campus students? Who clean their bathrooms and toilets? I think it is high time our youths and students had value-reorientation. Let them develop a culture of properly maintaining facilities which the university management has provided for their own use and benefit.’’
UNILORIN
By Toyin Ali
At the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), the number of students who live off campus are more than those on campus thanks to insufficient hostel accommodation.
At the University’s main campus, six hostels are owned by the school management while the rest are owned by individuals. Of the six hostels, five are occupied by female students. Only one is meant for the males.
The only exception is the College of Medicine, which has all its hostels owned and controlled by the university management for students studying Medicine, Physiology and Anatomy. Most of them stay on campus.
For non-medical students, especially the males, living on campus is not a tea party.
Ali Adediran, a Law student, complained about the condition of the male hostel.
He said: “Although the Student Affairs unit is trying its best to put the only male hostel in the best condition but the situation of things keep aggravating. For instance, the hygiene of the hostel environment and convenience is nothing to write home about.
“Most times, the convenience will be left untidy, with mole of faeces occupying everywhere. The issue of water supply also surfaces sometimes when the water taps dry off. However, I wouldn’t fail to recognise the effort of the management to fix issues on time.”
But female students fare better. Ololade Omobola of the Faculty of Physical Science, gave a pass mark to the University Management for putting in place necessary measures to cater for the affairs of the female students.
However, she lamented that issues are not addressed on time.
“For instance, Block B of the Lagos Hostel has light problems. That has been the situation for the past few days. In addition, there is occasional case of laptop theft and general mismanagement of hostel property,” she said.
Maryam Adesina, a Law student, resides in one of the private hostels on campus. She gave a good account of its management. She, however, raised issues about the high cost to students.
UNIBEN
By Ezekiel Efeobhokhan
But for the population burden, many students say the hostels at the University of Benin (UNIBEN) are in a fair state.
The hostels were initially designed to accommodate eight students in a room but illegal occupants, popularly known as squatters, could double the number.
The toilet facilities, windows and doors were recently renovated by a former Students Union president, Raymond Omorogbe. However, work has stopped since his tenure ended but the students are still expecting the continuation of his good work
“The hostel condition in Hall 4, though not perfect, is better than when I first got admission,” said Mathew Osagbovo, a final year Agricultural Science student. “But this vice chancellor has done lots of renovation in the hostels and this has brought the hostel to its present manageable state.”
When asked to rate the state of the hostels, another final year student, Peter Irabor, of Geology, scored it 40 per cent. He said the hostels are over populated because the management refused to build new hostels.
Others, however, blamed the management for lack of maintenance culture.
“We pay more than N8,000 every session as maintenance fee, where does the money go to. Yet, we have overgrown grasses, dirty water and some lockers don’t even have doors,” said a female student who simply gave her name as Keffi.
The only hostel with a perfect condition is the newly built NDDC hostel, allocated only to Medical, pharmacy and nursing students. CAMPUS LIFE learnt that renovation was ongoing in the existing clinical hostel.
Public Relations Officer of the university, Mr. Michael Osasuyi, said with two female hostels under construction, the problem of congestion would soon be a thing of the past.
On hygiene, he said the students have a large part to play in sustaining the recently-renovated hostels.
“The hostel may be dirty and unusable but that may be due to congestion which will soon be a thing of the past. But the students should be able to learn how to maintain the school’s property as this can go a long way for the sustenance of hostel facilities,” he said.
FEDPOFFA
By Jennifer Umeh
The hostels of the Federal Polytechnic Offa (FEDPOFFA), in Kwara State are relatively new, given that it is not too long since the institution moved to its permanent site.
However, the students are yearning for cleaner surroundings and regular electricity supply.
‘’We do not have regular electricity in our hostel apart from the electricity supply, the institution complements it with five hours of electricity supply through its main generator. Water is also pumped during this period,” said a student who does not want to be named.
The overpowering pall of inactivity that supervened in a critical hierarchy of Obafemi Awolowo University beginning from last July has just been lifted. A new Governing Council has been constituted by the tardy federal government some seven months after the one headed by Prof Rowland Ndoma-Egba was hastily and unjustly dissolved by President Muhammadu Buhari in the wake of the largely misplaced discontentment indecently expressed by the soppy members of the Non-Academic Staff of Universities (NASU) and Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU) in the university against the appointment process of a new Vice-Chancellor by that Council.
Having unreflectively responded to the choreographed elegy of victimhood and impropriety waxed by those unions, the government also went ahead to announce the suspension of a process that had already been concluded and in the end debarred Prof Ayobami Salami from continuing in office as the validly appointed 11th substantive Vice Chancellor of the institution. In the absence of a Governing Council, whose responsibility it is to hire and fire VC (substantive or acting according to the universities [Miscellaneous Provisions] Act 2003), the federal government via the Federal Ministry of Education instructed the Senate of the university to select one of its members to function as VC in an acting capacity. Prof Anthony Elujoba received the nod of his colleagues for the job and has been directing the affairs of the school since 21st July, 2016, when he assumed office without a Governing Council discharging its responsibilities for the good management, growth and development of the university.
Like the dissolution of the Ndoma-Egba-led Council, the refusal of the government to reconstitute another Governing Council post-haste contravened the provisions of the Universities Autonomy Act. Section 2A of the Act expressly states that ‘The Council so constituted shall have a tenure of four years from the date of its inauguration provided that where a Council is found to be incompetent and corrupt it shall be dissolved by the Visitor and a new Council shall be immediately constituted for the effective functioning of the University.’ (My emphasis)
A professor of Law, Ehi Oshio, amplifies the significance of this provision thus: ‘This express provision for immediate constitution of a new Council to replace the dissolved one has important legal implications for the University system. The provision is couched in the legal imperative “shall”. The phrase “shall be immediately constituted” leaves no room for delay; the law commands the government to reconstitute a dissolved Council within the shortest time possible. Indeed, this implies that Government should be ready with a list of members of the new Council before announcing the dissolution. In this way, the dissolution and reconstitution should be announced the same day.’
But since ‘the effective functioning of the University’ is less of a primary concern to the government, it becomes easier for it to freely pick and choose when it comes to obeying the laws guiding the affairs of tertiary institutions. The unfair and knee-jack response of the government to the OAU imbroglio did rob it of the initiatives to proffer sustainable solution thereafter. In truth, the government was wrong to think that its non-constitution of a new Governing Council after the disbanding of the one whose tenure had not ended and that was not proven to be corrupt and incompetent would erase its record of injustice in the OAU impasse.
Conversely, now that the government has ‘graciously’ empanelled a new Council for the university, it is important to remind Abuja and its advisers that the conclusive appointment of Prof Salami as VC, which it ill-advisedly suspended, has not perished with the dissolved Council. A good number of the inhabitants of that university are strongly convinced that the frozen appointment of Prof Salami is a grave injustice that will continue to make lasting peace impossible if it is not allowed to take effect.
The noised claim of rigging in the process that threw him up was contrived by some bad losers. The alleged fault against that process was equally deliberately advocated by the insecure leaderships of NASU and SSANU who believed their own lie that a Salami administration would sentence them to a hardscrabble life. Even the report of a Visitation Committee set up by the National Executive Council of the Academic Staff Union of Universities to look into the matter absolved the Governing Council of any wrong interference, stating unequivocally that ‘the Governing Council followed the process of selection of Vice Chancellor to its conclusion’. It is instructive to note that not a single member of the Joint Council and Senate Selection Board (JCSSB) has come forth to validate the groundless assertion of the non-academic unions and a trifling band of academics that the disbanded Governing Council hijacked its role. Even the case instituted in court by the two non-academic unions against the process, and which the government glibly referenced in suspending a completed exercise, had since been struck out by the Federal High Court in Osogbo for lack of jurisdiction.
Accordingly, the new Governing Council’s first duty is not to begin another process for the appointment of a substantive VC. In any case, the announcement by the Ministry of Education used the word “suspended”. There is already a substantive VC in the person of Prof. Salami who should be allowed to take over. It would amount to beginning its duty of ensuring the good management, growth and development of the university on a wrong note if the new Governing Council ignores this. The new Council has a responsibility to provide a leadership informed by an undiluted fealty to justice and equity. To heal the wound of division and mistrust festered by the misguided action of the government, the new Council must seek to be fair in its operations. It must do right by all. It must demonstrate to all that it understands the centrality of justice to the progress, peace, and prosperity of a community. The march towards justice must not be impeded.
Above all, the OAU new Governing Council must avoid the self-serving counsels and anecdotal tales of the non-academic unions. They are faultily sold to the belief that it is in their place to decide who governs OAU.
Here is wishing the OAU new Governing Council headed by the sound and savvy Dr Yemi Ogunbiyi success as it settles down to real work.
Alawode writes from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife.
The Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, commenced her 42nd Convocation Ceremonies for undergraduates and postgraduate students on Wednesday with 6827 students graduating.
The Acting Vice Chancellor of the institution, Professor Anthony Elujoba who presided over the ceremony gave an very insightful lecture on “The philosophy of doing things right.”
He remarked in his lecture that most of the problems encountered, not only by the university but the country is the failure in doing things right which has been the source of most problems.
While highlighting his numerous challenges as well as the successes during his administration, he stated that he belonged to no camp as he prefers to assume a neutral stance.
“I belong to no camp, nor party. Everyone is my friend. I have no foe. It has been a sleepless challenge to serve as VC for the past four months. However, we need to put the past behind us and look forward to growth whilst making truth and faith our watchword, “Professor Elujoba stated.
He also stated that the university had been peaceful and accountable under his four month watch and pleaded for peace and cooperation amongst sister unions for the purpose of a smooth transition at the end of his six months acting tenure.