Tag: Scholars

  • Nigerian scholars in Morocco, Hungary, others appeal to FG on payment of stipends

    Nigerian scholars in Morocco, Hungary, others appeal to FG on payment of stipends

    The Union of Nigerian Bilateral Education Agreement Scholars (UNBEAS) yesterday, appealed to the Federal Government on payment of stipends for Nigerian students studying abroad under the Bilateral Education Agreement (BEA) scholarship.

    They appealed to the Tinubu-led administration to help in the payment of outstanding stipends from September to December 2023, and the full supplementation shortfall from March to August 2023.

    The BEA scholarship is for the purpose of education exchange between Nigeria and the partnering countries.

    Read Also: Nigerian scholars in Morocco, Hungary, others appeal for payment of stipends

    The Federal Scholarship Board is supervising the scholarship under the Federal Ministry of Education.

    The scholars had been owed for several months with a number of them confirming to our correspondent that they had resorted to taking loans to survive.

    In 2024, the Federal Ministry of Education announced a slash in allowances for foreign scholars, attributing the allowance cut to economic crises.

  • Scholars, experts eulogise new book ‘Impactful Public Relations in Customs Management’

    Scholars, experts eulogise new book ‘Impactful Public Relations in Customs Management’

    The Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR), Centre for Crisis Communication, and scholars commended a new book “Impactful Public Relations in Customs Management” at the unveiling during the 2nd Economic Confidential Public Lecture in Abuja this week.

    The 12 chapters offer guidance on effective public relations practices, covering various topics, including stakeholder engagement, media relations, event management, social media engagement, crisis communication, lobbying, corporate social responsibility, and reputation management.

    The publication, by Kabir Abdulsalam and Maryam Na’Allah (of PRNigeria and Spokespersons Digest), has a blurb by Vice President Kashim Shettima who said: “This book demonstrates how effective PR strategies can drive positive change and bolster reputation as exemplified by Nigeria Customs Service CG Bashir Adewale.”

    NIPR President, DR. Ike Neliaku praised the book’s clarity and use of real-world examples, making it an essential resource for PR professionals, customs officials, communication students, researchers, and others interested in understanding the role of public relations in leadership and management.

    The Chairman of CCC, Major General Chris Olukolade (rtd) hailed the innovative leadership of CG Adeniyi, a Fellow of the NIPR, who has leveraged public relations tools to elevate the customs service and inspire budding communicators and leaders on the importance of strategic communication.

    “This is a comprehensive guide to effective communication strategies, with practical case studies from a respected institution. It will surely equip readers with valuable tools for effective public relations practice,” the retired General Olukolade added.

    Read Also: Gov Otti offers scholarship to six children of slain police inspector in Aba

    Reviewed by Prof. Okey Ikechukwu, the book highlights Adeniyi’s achievements in leveraging public relations to elevate the Customs Service. In his remarks, Ikechukwu recommends it to faculties of mass communication, business, public administration, human capital development and leadership institutions.

    Okechukwu, represented by Managing Editor (North), The Nation, Yusuf Alli, said: “Mr. Adeniyi is a testament to the ‘God Factor’. He has dedicated his life to refining and reshaping the Customs Service, This book is an engaging account of how public relations and customs management intersect, offering valuable lessons.”

    Dr Sule Yau Sule, senior lecturer of Mass Communication, Bayero University Kano, described the publication as proof to the Comptroller General Adeniyi’s impactful legacy and serves as an inspiration for future leaders in using public relations to drive transformative changes.”

    Yushau Shuaib, CEO of Image Merchants Promotion Ltd, PRNigeria/Spokespersons Digest publishers, said: “The book is a complete guide to successful PR strategies. The authors explored key elements, including media relations, crisis communication, and social media engagement, using practical case studies from the CG.”

  • Pay scholars their money

    Pay scholars their money

    • The Federal Scholarship Board made a mistake to slash money for scholars abroad

    This is not the first time this will happen, although the news is a new dimension to the malady. Students who go outside the country to further their studies continue to be an endangered species. Whether it is state governments who would or could not meet their obligations, or Federal Government agencies who do same, the scholar faces a distinct fate. They are stranded.

    This time, it concerns the Federal Scholarship Board (FSB), and not only will it not meet its obligations to the scholars, it has changed policy midstream.

    The government reached a decision to slash the scholars’ allowances. It was contained in a memo signed by the Director of the FSB, Ndajiwo H.A., on behalf of the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman.

    “After due consultations, the Federal Scholarship Board has come up with adjustments in line with budgetary provisions in the payment of BEA scholars’ supplementation allowances for the 2024 academic year,” the memo, dated July 23, 2024, and addressed to the scholars’ association, read.

    According to media reports, each student now gets $3,090 ($2,640 + $450) instead of the $6,450. Only medical students will get an extra $500 to raise their entitlements to $3,590.

    Breaking down the math, one of the sources rolled it out thus: “(500×12)+ 250 + 200 + (500) = $6,450 and $6,950 (for non-medical and medical students respectively) slashed to (220×12)+ 250 + 200 + (500)= $3,090 and $3,590 (for non-medical and medical students respectively).”

    One of the affected scholars said, “Seeing that only supplementation was touched (others that concern us are still constant), that’s a 56% decrease.”

    This affects scholars across the world, including Europe, North America and Africa. Even at that, they have not been paid for over a year.

    Ronald Donald, one of them was reported to have said, “Firstly, students have stayed 13 months without stipends, just promises upon promises. Now, the only thing the FSB could come up with is to reduce the stipends. Let me give you an idea of how living in Russia and Morocco looks like.

    “In Russia, a student needs a minimum of $300 to survive. The bus fares are expensive, and the hostel prices are up. Bread used to be sold for 70 rubbles is now 120 rubbles. In Morocco, the students don’t have hostels provided for them. As such, they rent apartments (at a starting price of $200 a month).”

    The experience varies from nation to nation. For instance, the embassy in Russia gives out loans to students under strict conditions, including the clause that they take the money back when FSB remits.

    Since the FSB cannot be relied upon, scholars have resorted to self-help. Some obtain loans, while others seek other means of making money.

    “Yes, several students took loans from even loan sharks because no one in this economy would loan millions to a student that doesn’t have a definite payback period or collateral,” said another student.

    According to one other testimony from the scholars, “We were under the agreement to be paid $500 per month and we have not been paid since June 2023 which has resulted in students engaging in exploitative illegal labour such as washing plates, and construction. I personally have worked in a soap warehouse and restaurant for 12 and 14 hours at a stretch, respectively, with reduced pay against the agreement and host country’s visa.”

    Parents have also had to step in when they can with implications for the value of the naira.

    “A few months ago, after several agitations and representations by our parents, our parents were encouraged by the FG to take loans to the tune of millions because of the exchange rate and the rising cost of living in our host countries to send to us for our survival, with the promise that the situation will be sorted out and our stipends would be paid. Suddenly, yesterday, they released a memo slashing our stipends by 56%. How are we to pay back the loans or even survive?”

    Read Also: Economy can’t improve without innovation, fabrication – Kano scholars 

    This turn of events does not reflect a country that values education. If our country would need enlightenment to grow, it will only happen when young minds flourish. Two, this sort of failure of agreement does not encourage patriotism. When such students complete their education, they may think twice about serving the country. It widens the disconnect between citizen and government, and leads to corruption. It also encourages the flight of talent from the country because they become indifferent to national progress but personal fortune wherever they can get it.

    The concept of scholarship is laudable, and it is done by governments all over the world, and it ought to enjoy priority in any government’s budgetary wisdom. The idea of slashing it reflects a lack of understanding of the value of education.

    Governments are not compelled to train Nigerians abroad. If budget is an issue, why not give them scholarship at home, except on subjects not offered in our tertiary institutions?

    We urge the FSB to restore the budget and oblige their agreements.

  • Fed Govt slashes allowances of stranded scholars abroad by 12.7%

    Fed Govt slashes allowances of stranded scholars abroad by 12.7%

    The Federal Government has slashed the allowances of foreign scholars studying under the Bilateral Educational Agreement (BEA) Scholarship and currently stranded in Russia, Morocco, and Algeria, among others, by 12.7 per cent.

    The government, which convened its decision to the scholars through the Federal Ministry of Education (FMoE), attributed the development to the current economic crises.

    Nigerian students studying in Russia, Morocco, Algeria, China, Hungary, and other countries, on the Federal Government’s scholarship, have lamented their unpaid stipends for eight months running.

    The BEA scholarship is for education exchange between Nigeria and partnering countries, while the Federal Scholarship Board is supervising the scholarship under the Ministry of Education.

    Read Also: Tinubu not opponent of protest but violence, says minister

    The government’s decision to slash the allowances was conveyed in a July 23 memo signed by the Director of the Federal Scholarship Board, H.A. Ndajiwo, on behalf of the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman.

    It reads: “After due consultations, the Federal Scholarship Board has come up with adjustments in line with budgetary provisions in the payment of BEA scholar’s supplementation allowances for the 2024 academic year.

    “The monthly allowances were slashed from $500 to $220; the graduation allowance from $2,500 to $2,000; and the PG research allowance from $1,000 to $500. The total amount initially payable to each student was $5,650, but it will now be $4,370 per scholar.

  • Scholars seek solution to governance crisis

    Scholars seek solution to governance crisis

    Scholars have just embarked upon a study to unravel the country’s governance crisis. Its outcome will be unveiled in March next year to coincide with the 75th birthday anniversary of Olawale Oshun, Chief Whip of the aborted Third Republic. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI, who monitored the roundtable dialogue organized to launch the initiative, reports

    The serene and idyllic setting of Ijebu-Imushin, in Ijebu Northeast Local Government of Ogun State, was the venue for the event. Ijebu-Imushin is the hometown of the Chief Whip of the House of Representatives during the aborted Third Republic, Hon. Olawale Oshun. The date was Tuesday, March 26, 2024, and the gathering was a one-day roundtable dialogue on the “Governance Crisis in Nigeria”, to mark the 74th birthday celebration of Hon. Oshun.

    Scholars dominated the gathering and it was put together by renowned sociologist, Prof. Lai Olurode under the auspices of the Wing Bridge Educational Foundation, Iwo, Osun State. It was a happy day for the celebrant, a writer and a nationalist who has shown so much concern about how the country has been drifting in recent years. Oshun who is also the National Chairman of the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) said he was elated to be honoured by such an assemblage of distinguished scholars from across the Southwest geo-political zone.

    Last Tuesday’s roundtable is just the beginning. The scholars that presented papers at the occasion merely gave a synopsis of their ongoing research about the current socio-economic situation in the country and are expected to continue working on the assignment. The outcome of the research will be put together in a book form to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Hon. Oshun’s birthday next year.

    The host set the tone for the discussion in his welcome address when he said Nigeria has reached a critical point that requires an urgent intervention to prevent the situation from degenerating further. He said the authorities should allow autonomy to come in an organized fashion, rather than haphazardly.

    The ARG chairman recalled that he grew up knowing and experiencing a country that catered for Nigerians, where a citizen did not have to know anybody to get admission to any university of their choice or secure a befitting employment, whether in the private or public sector, because of the system at the time. He regretted that Nigeria of such a setting no longer exists.

    Oshun attributed the current sorry state to the faulty presidential system of government, which he said has deprived Nigerians the full participation in how they should be governed or the demand for accountability and responsiveness from their leaders.

    Prof. Olurode said he and his colleagues chose to celebrate Oshun on his birthday because the ARG chieftain has been committed and selfless in his approach to politics. The idea, he said, is to encourage him to do more. The professor of sociology said: “Oshun is a committed democrat; his preoccupation has always been to change the narratives; to make sure that there is a synergy between the state and the society.

    “He is also a committed community leader who has done tremendously well for his community. He has done well for himself and believes in giving back to the community. He has several programmes on the platform of his foundation that help to encourage and nurture talents in young people in schools in and around Ijebu-Imushin and beyond, including their teachers. For instance, he gives awards to encourage teachers to put in their best in their jobs.”

    The renowned sociologist whose paper is titled, “Nigeria: a Paradox and a Silver Lining”, listed some of the reasons the country is not moving forward, including the lack of internal democracy among the political parties, particularly the unregulated use of money in the leadership recruitment process.

    However, he identified some silver linings that can be used to consolidate the gains already made. He said: “These are the decentralisation of governance and security institutions; shedding fat; moving from vertical and overbearing relationships to a horizontal and equitable and truly federal arrangement; doing away with Nigeria’s military hierarchical and dictatorial approach to governance.”

    In his presentation, which centres on state police, Prof. Azeez Olaniyan said Nigeria is the only federation that operates a centralized policing system. The lecturer at the Federal University, Oye-Ekiti (FUOYE), Ekiti State, cited the pathetic situation at the Central African Republic (CAR), where 80 per cent of the country is in the hands of rebels as an example of countries he categorized as failed states.

    He added: “Where do we categorise Nigeria: failing or failed state? We cannot say Nigeria is a failed state; otherwise, we would not be able to gather here. But, the truth is that Nigeria is weak. We have cases of insecurity all over the country and it is getting worse by the day — this is mainly because we do not have enough men in uniform.”

    With the determination of the current government to address the security situation in the country by de-centralising the policing system, Prof. Olaniyan also expressed fears about the possible abuses of state police by governors.

    Dr Akeem Bello, a lecturer at the Bamidele Olumilua University of Education, Science and Technology, Ikere-Ekiti, Ekiti State, said everyone in the society can make a difference; because governance is a collective responsibility of leaders at all levels in society. He said nearly everyone in Nigeria is a character coach because they are in the habit of criticizing others, particularly those in government. “But, in their private life or their various offices, they exhibit the same character traits they severely condemn in others,” he added.

    Prof. Hakeem Olaniyan of the University of Lagos, Akoka, Yaba, Lagos, said it is ironic that amid so much resource endowment Nigerians are wallowing in a poverty mentality. Prof. Olaniyan who is working on the topic, ‘Natural Resource and Our Collective Poverty: Locating the Faults and Proffering Solutions’, said: “Every Nigerian believes that the country is endowed with abundant resources. But the challenge is that the Federal Government, which owns all the resources in the country do not show enough concern about how to harness the benefits of other endowments apart from crude oil.”

    Prof. Olaniyan said virtually is mouthing the latest catchphrase of restructuring because it is assumed that the governance structure is the reason why democracy dividends are not trickling down to the masses. He said Nigeria abandoned agriculture during the oil boom era and resorted to importing food to feed her citizens and that if the country replicates what post-independent leaders did, the country would be better for it.

    Today, he said Nigerians have become so poor that they rely on palliatives and subsidies to survive. He said Nigeria will not make progress unless the citizens generally and political leaders in particular change their attitude toward the country’s natural resources.

    Similarly, a lecturer at the Department of Jurisprudenceand International Law, Faculty of Law, University of Lagos, Adeola Adedeji-Adeyemi, posits that the problem of Nigeria goes beyond the constitution and the system of government. She agrees with earlier speakers that the abandonment of agriculture is the major reason for the present economic malaise. Adedeji-Adeyemi said the regional government of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, like his contemporaries in the defunct Eastern and Northern Region, succeeded because it was anchored on agriculture. She called for cultural or attitudinal change, saying it is not the structure that is the problem. “The present political culture and mindset must change,” she added.

    The Weekend Editor of The Guardian, Dr Kabir Alabi Garba, who is working on the role of the print media in resolving the governance crisis, spoke of the importance of communication in human life and how the constitution has given the media a special role of holding government accountable, as the fourth estate. He posited that if the media plays that role well, the governance crisis is likely to disappear. But, how well is the media playing that constitutionally-assigned role? he asks rhetorically.

    Veteran broadcaster, Rakiya Dhikru Yagboyaju, who has been saddled with the responsibility of reflecting on how the broadcast media can make a difference, said in promoting good governance, the media should be above board. The veteran broadcaster warned Nigerians to be wary of any information they come across on social media because the advent of citizen journalists and social media has complicated the situation today. As a result, she said that society must fight against falsehood and lies by questioning every information that comes their way.

    Read Also: Call Ganduje’s attackers to order, APC chief tells Soludo

    Comrade Isiaka Ayinla, who is handling the topic: “Rescuing Nigeria from the Precipice: Revisiting the Socialist Alternative”, said it is necessary to have an alternative ideological option to offer Nigerians a wider choice during elections, as almost all the political parties that contested the last general election have the same capitalist orientation. He said the socialist alternative offers a solution to the problem of mass poverty because it has a better option when it comes to the challenges associated with production. He debunked claims that such an ideological approach encourages laziness.

    Prof. Dhikru Adewale Yagboyaju, who moderated the proceedings of the event, spoke on the theme: “Addressing Governance Crisis in Nigeria: Focus on Selected Elite Institutions.” The Obafemi Awolowo administration in the old Western Region, he said, relied so much on the contribution of university eggheads for ideas to run the government. Institutions like University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, Oyo State, he added, were centres of excellence, not only in Nigeria but globally. He said this was so much so that it was a referral hospital for the Saudi royal family for instance.

    He said over the years, there has been so much erosion of values and that this has lowered the standards of institutions across the country. The way forward, headed, is attitudinal change and a replication of ideas that worked well in the past.

    Many town folks, including Moslem and Christian groups, representatives of private and public schools, as well as political associates of Hon. Oshun, joined the visitors from far and near to honour him. For instance, the Head Boy of the Ijebu Anglican Diocesan College, Igan Ipabi, Ogun State, Adeleke Adebayo and the Head Girl, Ruth Eric, led by the school principal, Abimbola Adebayo and a teacher, Mrs Olabimpe Olubunmi Onajoke, delivered a goodwill message from the institution to the celebrant whose foundation, the Olawale Oshun Foundation regularly organize various talents competitions for young people to nurture their gifts.

    At the end of the day, the celebrant thanked everyone who graced the occasion, including Pa Ayo Afolabi, 76, one of the celebrant’s ARG colleagues, and the Director-General of the Development Agenda for Western Nigeria (DAWN) Commission, Oluseye Oyeleye.

  • Scholars warns Nigerians to shun materialism

    An Islamic scholar, Sheikh Alhaji Muyideen Ajani Bello, has cautioned Nigerians to shun materialism.

    He urged them to return to Allah to live a meaning life.

    He spoke in Lagos during a Ramadan lecture organised by the Babajide O. Sanwo-Olu Progressive Movement.

    “We must train ourselves to serve God in everything we do. Many people don’t love this country, they are only looking for money and this is why you see people moving from one political party to another,” he said.

    He noted that with Nigeria’s large population, if people can do the right thing, Nigeria will be a better place.

    He urged Muslims to imbibe the teachings of Ramadan.

    “Ramadan is a season of fasting and gaining wisdom, it is a season to live right, abstain from sin, backbiting and pride. It is also a season to do good, help others, say the truth, fear God, do as He wants you to and be cautious of tomorrow,” he said.

    The cleric also stressed the need to pray for the country and its leaders, noting that “we have to constantly pray to God to keep us safe because it does not take a twinkle of an eye for us to be wiped off the surface of the earth. We should beg God not to judge us.

    “We have to beg God that all those who will be working with the incoming governor of Lagos state will be good people that will do good for the people,” he said.

    The President, Babajide Sanwo-Olu Progressive Movement, Olalere Saheed said the gathering was to pray for Gods guidance for the elected leaders across the country.

    According to him, Ramadan is a holy month and prayers observed will be answered without doubt.

    “We believe that all powers belong to God. We have elected our leaders but they need God’s guidance. Some people have the mind to do good things for the masses and implement policies for the good of the people and the economy at large. If they are not directed by God, they will not do it. We believe that we should commit our leaders into God’s hands, so that He can take total control of all they do and direct them in the right part.”

    Imam Idoluwo Mosque, Lagos Island, Alhaji Abdul Lateef Uthman, said the gathering was to pray, noting that prayer is good in the month of Ramadan.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Scholars in UI for Oral Literature conference

    Over 200 scholars on Oral Literature are at the University of Ibadan (UI) for the 12th edition of the International Society For The Oral Literatures Of Africa (ISOLA) conference.

    The event, co-hosted by the Nigerian Oral Literature Association (NOLA) and the university, is the first in Nigeria in 25 years of ISOLA, a multilingual scholarly organisation, dedicated to the study and promotion of the rich oral traditions of Global Africa.

    The three-day event will end tomorrow.

    According to President of NOLA Prof G G Darah,  the conference will serve as a wake-up call for the country to pay attention to the untapped resources in its Culture and Tourism sector.

    With the theme of “Oral Literatures and African Festivals: Tradition and Globalisation”, over 150 papers will be presented by scholars and experts from Africa and across the world. Scholars from about 60 Nigerian tertiary institutions are participating. The conference keynote speakers – Nigeria’s Prof Isidore Okpewho, Africa’s foremost oral literature scholar, a two-term President in the 1990s and Tal Tamari, Senior Research Fellow at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris. (Felicia Ohwovoriole).

    “As the Convener, I am truly delighted to note special panels dedicated to special areas of scholarly and performance interest. The premier University of Ibadan has proclaimed to the world that it is truly the cradle of African literature by hosting the conference, The citadel that nurtured the Chinua Achebes, J.P. Clarks, Wole Soyinkas, Chukwuemeka Ikes., Mabel Seguns, Flora Nwapas, Molara Ogundipes, Isidore Okpewhos, Femi Osofisans, Tanure Ojaides, Niyi Osundares, Odia Ofeimuns and other wordsmiths and storytellers who have enchanted and counselled millions across the world

    “The theme is very pertinent to current trends in cultural studies with 13 sub-themes exploring various aspects of festivals and how they foster artistic creativity and innovations. There is a grand panel dedicated to Prof Okpewho’s works and career. ISOLA, headed by Nigerian scholar based in the United States, Prof Chiji Akoma, has endowed a prize in his honour for the best paper presented by a postgraduate student participant,” Prof Darah said.

  • How to teach Maths better, by scholars

    •Ajayi Poly matriculates students

    A Professor of Mathematics, Michael Alonge, has identified recruitment of unqualified teachers as a major cause of lack of interest in the subject in private and public schools.

    He also identified proper preparation by teachers, continuous assessment of students, giving of assignments, adequate lesson notes and adoption of modern teaching models to stimulate students’ interest.

    Alonge last weekend at the first public lecture to mark the maiden matriculation of new students of Ajayi Polytechnic, Ikere-Ekiti in Ekiti State.

    The lecture was entitled: “Teaching and assessment strategies in mathematics as panacea for technological and entrepreneurship developments.”

    Alonge, who stressed that teachers who studied Mathematics as a major course in the universities and colleges of education should be employed as teachers. He decried a situation where individuals who did not study the subject were employed to teach it.

    The don also suggested that Mathematics teachers should be allowed to move to the next class with their students for synergy and proper monitoring, adding that such teachers would impart knowledge better.

    According to him, proper attention to Mathematics would accelerate the nation’s quest for technological development and nation building.

    Alonge said: “The knowledge of Mathematics plays a major role in nation building. Today, many students in the country have no interest in the subject because of the wrong approach to teaching it.

    “Schools and government must ensure that only teachers who have been trained mainly in Mathematics that teach the subjects.

    “Teachers shouldn’t mark down students for not getting the final answer. Award marks for correct steps taken by students who didn’t getfinal answer in the mathematical calculations.”

    He added:”There is also the need for schools to ensure that teachers of Mathematics graduate with their students to their next class. If a teacher has taught the Class One this session, he should teach same class of students when they get to Class Two.

    “That way, he is better to impart the knowledge because he has already known the challenges of the students in understanding the subjects.”

    An educationist from the Republic of Ireland, Dr. Lucia Valente, harped on the use of technology to impart knowledge in Mathematics as done in advanced countries.

    Valente, who is the founder, Computational Class Notes in the Irish Republic, spoke on the use of cloud technology and other modern ways of teaching the subject.

    She said: “The system, cloud technology, is designed to work with educators in ensuring effective teaching of Mathematics in colleges; it is practice based.

    “The students keep practising until they get it. It increases their grades as it lays emphasis on homework. It is possible to increase student’s grade with constant practice.

    “It is based on visualisation, animation and unlimited variation, self learning, no text books, practice all the time.

    “It enhances time utilisation, decrease drop out, increase grades and encourages tangible knowledge, gives students confidence and make them to believe in themselves which are principles for educators.”

    The Founder/Rector, Ajayi Polytechnic, Dr. Busayo Ajayi, said the two scholars were chosen to speak on the subject because of the impact they had made in the field, noting that students and members of the public benefited from their knowledge.

    He explained that the vision of the polytechnic was to train and produce technical and skilled manpower that would become industrial giants and providers of solutions to the nation’s problems.

    According to him, the private polytechnic was established to empower the youths with inclusive and entrepreneurship and innovative technological education to solve the problem of graduate unemployment in the country.

    Ajayi said: “Our philosophy in the school is to ensure that we produce graduates that are not only employable, but can become entrepreneurs by starting on their own.

    “Thus is lacking in Nigerian education system and has led to mass unemployment. We also want a system that we can teach students better with the use of recent technological advancement.”

    One hundred new students matriculated at the event.

    Dignitaries at the event included the Ogoga of Ikere-Ekiti, Oba Adejimi Adu Alagbado; the Oloye of Oye-Ekiti and Chairman of the state Council of Oba, Oba Michael Oluwole Ademolaju and Commissioner for Education, Mr. Jide Egunjobi.

  • Media scholars advocate self-regulatory system against hate speech

    Media scholars advocate self-regulatory system against hate speech

    Media scholars have advocated the need to put in place a self-regulatory system and intensify activities aimed at sensitising the media community about the industry standard to avoid high-level of hate speech and partisanship in the coverage of election.

    Speaking at a Media Project Stakeholders Meeting organised by the Institute for Media and Society (IMS) as part of the support to the media component of the European Union (EU) Support to Democratic Governance in Nigeria Project, Executive Director of Media Rights Agenda Edetaen Ojo said there is a consensus that there were disturbing levels of hate speech and partisanship in the coverage of the 2015 elections by many media outlets.

    He said since then, no concerted effort has been made to address the problem, although various government officials and other stakeholders have repeatedly expressed concern about the challenge posed by hate speech to both the electoral process and public discourse.

    He said: “There is a risk that if the media community does nothing to address this problem, government could take legislative measures in response and this would most likely be in the form of criminal law.

    “In order to address this problem and other breaches of professional standards ahead of the 2019 elections, the media community should make efforts to put in place a self-regulatory system and intensify activities aimed at sensitising the media community about the industry standard.

    “I believe that there is a move to update the Nigerian Media Code of Election Coverage that was developed ahead of the 2015 elections to make it more comprehensive.  I am in complete support of such an effort.

    “A major challenge with the Nigerian Media Code of Election Coverage was that it was developed too close to the 2015 elections as a result of which not much could be done to familiarise media practitioners with the contents and standards contained in the Code. It was therefore not possible to fully apply the Code in the context of the 2015 elections and to assess its effectiveness.

    “The media community, which collaborated to develop that Code, now needs to urgently revise and update it so that the final document can be read far ahead of the 2019 elections and the necessary sensitisation carried out.”

  • Two embattled scholars

    Two embattled scholars

    The University of Ilorin stated a greater truth than it realized or intended when, in a report on its website detailing the staggering academic and professional accomplishments of the presenter of its 33rd Convocation Lecture, Professor Chris Imafidon, it described him as an “enigmatic personality.”

    More than four months after the event, the “intellectual colossus” and uber-achiever whose “rich and resounding voice tore neatly into the velvet air of the jam-packed” university of Auditorium, the “talented raconteur whose tub-thumping oratory wowed his audience for more than two hours and drove many among them to “tears of ecstasy” and who left no one in doubt about the true definition of genius,” Imafidon is in retrospect nothing if not an enigma.

    In the build-up to the Lecture, the University and other news sources had descried him as

    a multi-award winning researcher, and member of the Information Age Executive Round-table Forum – which is made up of the top 15 IT experts, decision-makers, CIOs, and executives in the UK, a consultant to governments and industry leaders, professor at Oxford University’s Keble College, and a visiting professor at leading American universities, among them including Harvard, Cornell, Columbia, Yale, and  Georgetown

    Imation’s other distinctions include serving as an internal and external post-graduate

    Examiner for Cambridge University, Imperial College, University College London, mentoring Ph.D. candidates at Queen Mary University of London, where he was Head of the Management Technology Unit.

    He raised a family of prodigies through a technique he perfected. That is no mean achievement.  He has also been listed as a leading ophthalmologist in the UK

    The foregoing should render Imafidon a polymath any times over.  But the University of Ilorin was right to call him an enigma, for an enigma he is

     

    At least one of his main bragging rights – an Oxford professorship has not checked out.  The authorities there say he does not figure in their records as student, staff, adjunct or faculty, merely that s young woman by that surname — one of Chris Imafidon’s daughters, it turned out — took a degree at their Kebel College many years ago.

    You would think that Imafidon would take high umbrage and paint the Internet and news outlets in Nigeria with pictures of himself ensconced in his book-lined, trophy-draped Oxford faculty office, or giving a tutorial, or participating at an important function of the university, all decked out in academic robes.

    Instead, he presents only his University Library Card as proof of the affiliation and challenges Oxford to demonstrate that his claim rests on shaky ground.

    Some of Imafidon’s other claims of affiliation with many other institutions, learned societies and professional bodies worldwide have turned out to be just as suspect.

    The whole thing calls to mind the case of another professor, Dr Gabriel Oyibo who burst sensationally on the intellectual scene in Nigeria some 12 years ago, when one of the more reputable Nigerian newspapers reported that he had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in physics three consecutive times.

    Albert Einstein had spent the last two decades of his life in a futile search for what has been called the “holy grail” of physics, a unified field theory that explains and the behavior of all matter, from sub-atomic particles to entire galaxies.

    In a message to a conference of the world’s leading astrophysicists in Beijing, China, in 2007, the Stephen Hawking announced that he and his colleagues were close to finding the elusive “holy grail.”

    Gabriel Oyibo was missing in Beijing.  He had no use for such gatherings. Way back in 1995, he said, he had found that “holy grail” and solved the problem Hawking and other cosmologists were still grappling with, long after Einstein.

    To this epochal breakthrough, Oyibo gave the curiously unscientific name of God Almighty’s Grand United Theorem, or GAGUT.

    GAGUT constitutes “the long awaited, the long sought, the holiest of holy grails of physics and mathematics,” he declared portentously on the website of his “research centre” OFFAPIT Institute of Technology (OITECH).

    The best evidence I could find for this rather exorbitant claim can be found a paper he presented in March 1995 at a symposium in Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, a world-class university from which he earned his doctorate.  The paper was published in the proceedings of the symposium, with Oyibo himself as editor.

    Its title, “A General Mathematical Proof of Einstein’s Theory Using a New Group Theory,” does not immediately suggest a monumental breakthrough. But a professor familiar with the paper described it as “the first to complete the task that intrigued and challenged” Einstein.

    That feat, Edith Luchins said in a letter posted on the OITECH web site, placed Oyibo in the rank of world-class scientists, adding that “he is eminently qualified for the Nobel Prize in physics.”

    Luchins’s letter is undated, and is reproduced on the site only in part. Still, it is a ringing endorsement of Oyibo’s accomplishment, even if not exactly a nomination for a Nobel

    in physics.  Pushed relentlessly by Oyibo himself, it ignited reports in the news media in Nigeria that Oyibo had been nominated for the Nobel and catapulted him into the ranks of the immortals.

    Oyibo was flown to Nigeria, all expenses paid, by the National Universities Commission on a triumphal lecture tour. The Senate, parroting Oyibo’s claim that GAGUT could lead to a cure for HIV/AIDS and lift Africa out of its underdevelopment, passed a resolution designating him the first recipient of the African International Prize for Science and Technology.  His scraggy, contemplative visage now adorns the N50 postage stamp, which describes him as a “mathematical genius.”

    It was as if he had actually won the Nobel.

    Those versed in the scholarly scientific literature will have learned of Oyibo through

    his numerous publications in the leading journals of aeronautical engineering and mathematics, enough to earn him a professorship at one of the better universities.

    Indeed, an emeritus professor of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology said

    Oyibo had published “some good, useful papers” in aero elasticity and composite material structures that should serve him well in consideration for a Presidential Medal in Science.

    The MIT professor, John Dugundji added in a letter dated June 28, 2000, that he was not competent to judge Oyibo’s more recent work in the fundamental problems of physics – the very work on which Oyibo’s claim to the stature of a Nobelist rests.

    This subtle disclaimer, I suspect, flows from the very nature of GAGUT itself. The  theory sounds suspiciously like the Biblical account of  creation dressed in scientific jargon.  Inserting God into what purports to be a scientific theory is a derogation of the canons of science.

    Nor did Oyibo help matters by the company he keeps.

    A posting on his OITECH site once featured a resolution by the New York Progressive Baptist State Convention endorsing him for a Nobel Prize and announcing the launch of a campaign to raise $2 million to call global attention to his achievements.

    The books he claims to have written on GAGUT are nowhere to be found. Most curiously for a world-class scientist and Nobel candidate, Oyibo is not affiliated with any top-notch research university.  In fact, he has no affiliation with any university at all.

    After basking in the limelight for one brief, shining moment, Oyibo seems to have sunk into oblivion with his GAGUT. Perhaps he is busy reworking it.  The “holy grail” of physics is yet to be apprehended.

    As for Professor Imafidon, it is unlikely that he will be getting any invitations soon from any Nigerian university to present a Convocation lecture or learned address.

    A motivational speech, perhaps.  That is where his genius lies.  The University of Ilorin got its money’s worth.