Tag: UNILORIN ASUU

  • UNILORIN students say institution’s charges lowest in Nigeria

    Mr Emmanuel Animashaun, the President, University of Ilorin Students’ Union Government (SUG), on Monday said the institution charges were the lowest in the country.

    Animashaun made this known at a press conference organised by the Union to mark its administration’s first 100 days in office.

    According to him, the students have realised that in spite of the hike in school fees and other charges by other universities, the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) school charges remain the lowest among Nigeria’s universities.

    The university recently increased its tuition fees by 35 per cent, which amounts to about N21, 000.

    The SUG president said that the relationship between the union and the university management was peaceful and constructive.

    He said that this had translated to the peace and the uninterrupted academic session experienced for the past 18 years.

    According to him, the union engages the UNILORIN management with constructive argument to reach conclusions as regards students’ welfare.

    “We wish to publicly reiterate that in our union, we are not rascals but radicals who will always stand our ground in protecting our members, but we do it in constructive and diplomatic ways.”

    Animashaun pledged his commitment to ensuring that the union served as the bridge between the students and the university management.

    “My administration is planning to use its resources primarily for the purpose of activities, programmes and projects that can contribute to all-round education.

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    “That can also sustain the necessary atmosphere so that eventually we will have contributed to raising giants for our nation and the world at large,’’ he said.

    The SUG president highlighted major areas of breakthrough in the institution as including the alleviation of problems with results, encouraging sports activities and catering for students’ welfare.

    He, especially, noted the renovation of school hostels had attracted zero increment to school charges.

    Animashaun said that as part of his administration’s blueprint, the new Students’ Union Executive Council had embarked on an empowerment programme.

    He said that the programme tagged: “Earn as you Learn’’ was aimed at collaborating with some organisations, which offered to employ some of the students who wished to earn money while still in school.

    The SUG president revealed the efforts he had made to ease the problem of transportation, which had long been an issue on the campus.

    The Dean of Student Affairs, Prof. Lateef Ajibade, commended the union for representing the students very well and for cooperating during the meeting on school charges’ increment.

    The dean, who was represented by the Sub-Dean of Student Affairs, Dr Alex Akanmu, charged the students leaders to ensure that the students maintained the university facilities.

    Ajibade urged the students not to relent on their peaceful conduct but to continue to represent the university in good light.

  • UNILORIN ASUU accuses authorities of planning to kill members

    UNILORIN ASUU accuses authorities of planning to kill members

    A faction of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) of the University of Ilorin (Unilorin) loyal to the National ASUU yesterday accused the institution’s management of planning to kill its members.

    The union urged the public to immediately rise up in its defence.

    Its Chairman, Dr. Kayode Afolayan, said in a statement: “The University of Ilorin, which is funded by the public in a democratic system, has now become notorious as a bastion of anti-democratic practices.

    “On Wednesday, November 9, academic staff of the University of Ilorin, who were attending a congress, were assaulted by gun-wielding men of the Department of State Services (DSS), in company of campus security and officers of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).

    “As usual, the university management was notified of this meeting. Usually, the authorities would deploy security personnel to prevent members from attending and to intimidate those who went on to attend, and the union had always protested this illegal and barbaric habit in writing.

    “However, a new dimension was added yesterday when men of the DSS and Civil Defence, accompanied campus security to assault members at the meeting.

    “The documents being used by Dr. Afolayan were forcibly taken away; Mr. Felix Akinsipe’s i-pad was taken and Dr. Femi Dunmade’s shirt was torn. The situation nearly went out of hand before the head of campus security led them away.

    “The University of Ilorin management has been repeatedly lawless; it has serially disobeyed court orders with impunity. Over the years, it has engaged in serial victimisation of anyone – students, academic and non-academic staff – who is perceived as critical of its illegal and fraudulent activities.

    “The authorities have repeatedly made it clear that they are unwilling to uphold the tenets of democracy by allowing the freedom of association and expression.

    “However, they have now gone to the extent of plotting the physical elimination of leaders of the union. Let us be clear, when a union notifies the university administration of a meeting, and the administration sends gun-wielding officers to assault them, the administration’s objective cannot be anything less than the murder of union leaders, possibly in the name of “accidental discharge”.

    “The state Director of DSS has denied sending his men on campus, and even promised to deal with the culprits. He has also handed over the seized items to their owners.”

    But the university authority, in a response through its Head of Corporate Affairs, Kunle Akogun, denied the allegations.

    According to him, “the allegation by Dr. Kayode Afolayan is news to us as the university authority is not aware of any meeting by any group outside the one held by the Kwara State Police Commissioner with members of all campus unions (staff and students) in the auditorium on Wednesday”.

    His words: “This meeting, which was also attended by members of the Private Hostel Association and Tanke community leaders, was conveyed to foster the security of lives and property of members of the University community and its adjoining communities.

    “Members of the executive council of Unilorin ASUU, led by Dr. Usman Raheem, were fully represented at the meeting and they made useful contributions to its proceedings.

    “Whatever happened between the Kayode Afolayan group and the DSS, as alleged, is not known to the management.

    “We should, therefore, not be drawn into any fray by people whose well-known stock-in-trade is to foment trouble just for attention seeking.”

  • A tale of two UNILORIN-ASUU factions

    A tale of two UNILORIN-ASUU factions

    There are two factions laying claim to the leadership of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) at the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN). The management is backing a faction; ASUU National is with the other. How will it all end? ADEKUNLE JIMOH (Ilorin) reports.

    The past still haunts the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), which is perceived as the most preferred university in Nigeria.  The sacking of 49 teachers by then Vice Chancellor (VC) Prof Shuaib Oba Abdulraheem in 2001 for participating in a strike called by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) still reverbrates in the institution – 15 years after.

    The union was then led by Dr Taiwo Oloruntoba-Oju.

    Though a lengthy court battle led to the teachers’ reinstatement eight years later, the institution’s branch of ASUU has not quite been the same because of its isolation from the national body.

    The UNILORIN boasts of not shutting down except for holidays.   There have been allegations that UNILORIN-ASUU has been operating as a stooge of management.

    Since the reinstatement of the UNILORIN 49 in 2009, management has been romancing with successive executives of a faction led by its lackeys.

    But, the emergence of a new faction polarising the union along pro-establishment and national ASUU lines may be threatening the institution’s uninterrupted academic calendar of 15 years.

    An election held about two months ago produced Dr Usman Raheem as ASUU Chairman.  But last April 20, a drama played out.  The national ASUU leadership attempted storming the institution in a convoy of over 18 buses but was prevented from entering the campus by a combined team of the school’s security personnel  and the police.

    Dr Deji Agboola from the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) Ile-Ife ASUU chapter described the university’s action as belated, claiming that members of the union had sneaked into the campus much earlier, “and conducted the inauguration of our own ASUU, before the university could wake up from its slumber. We did it at Block 10. We merely asked our drivers to come in a convoy.”

    He said those that sneaked in inaugurated Dr Kayode Afolayan as ASUU’s authentic representative at UNILORIN.

    Others inaugurated were Dr Bode Olumorin (Vice Chairman), Abdulganiyu Olatunji (Treasurer) and Dr Solomon Oyelekan (Secretary).

    Dr Raheem leads the ASUU chapter endorsed by the university.

    Raheem faulted ASUU’s national leadership over how it went about the issue.

    He said before the UNILORIN-ASUU can be re-integrated into the national body, ASUU must discuss with members of the union.

    Raheem said: “ASUU has been suspended at UNILORIN since 2001 and the suspension has not been lifted. There is nobody that can claim to be legal ASUU member at the UNILORIN. If the national ASUU is willing to back and reintegrate us, we are willing to discuss. After 15 years you cannot say that the next thing is election; that you have suspended a branch for 15 years and you now come back to say the next thing is election that is unreasonable. Where is that done? You dragged us to court on different occasions and we say you withdraw those cases. You said no. Majority of our professors are on suspension from ASUU. Can we discuss ASUU UNILORIN without those people?

    “UNILORIN is sanctioned. No external examiners, no invigilation. ASUU should lift all of these so that we can be on the same page. Then we can now hold elections. If we hold election today I’m confident I am not going to lose. No. This is because the other so-called faction has only 12 members. In the congress they called they were just 11 in the whole of this university and they are telling us they are the ones recognised by the national body. We don’t even recognise the national body because the national body is biased.

    “If you have two children, is it by abandoning one that you will solve the problem? If somebody has been out of the university in the last 15 years when he was the chairman and still comes back to say he wants to retain the seat. Is it even possible in the animal kingdom that that person will return after fifteen years and calls himself the chairman of that association?

    “Whatever national ASUU wants to give Dr Kayode Afolayan, he cannot take UNILORIN ASUU. If the national ASUU wants UNILORIN back, it should write officially to me. Anything short of that my faction will remain the recognised ASUU at the UNILORIN; nothing more nothing less.”

    To Dr Afolayan, the Raheem-led “ASUU is illegal, lawless and unconstitutional. Their claim of being more in number is irrelevant. Number is relative. ASUU follows rule of law and constitution. The matter is constitutional.”

    Afolayan accused management of taking sides with Raheeem on the matter.

    “Indeed, they are a set of lawless people and it is a shame that UNILORIN is supporting them. They cannot say that ASUU led by me is not recognised. There is an evil collaboration between UNILORIN and whatever group it claims it is recognising.

    “They are only helping the authorities to destroy the institution. They are not ASUU members. There is palpable fear everywhere on the campus as the vice chancellor does what he likes. That type of one-man dictatorship is what ASUU led by me is out to prevent,” he said.

    Asked for his comment, the VC, Prof Abdulganiyu Ambali, described the development as an internal issue that would be amicably resolved.

    Ambali confirmed that there were rumours of plans by some external ASUU members to conduct election for the local chapter.

    He said management was not informed by anybody or group about plans to elect new leaders for ASUU in the university.

    Ambali said he would do all in his power to sustain the peace and stable academic calendar the institution has enjoyed for long.

    “For 16 years UNILORIN has enjoyed peace. It is a routine exercise that when we notice anything that could breach the peace, we beef-up security.  For about 10 years our local ASUU has been suspended by the national body of the union, but since then, we have had about three ASUU executives. An election was held about two months ago to elect new leaders for ASUU.

    “ASUU and management’s relationship has been very cordial. We are on the same page on maintaining stable academic calendar and moving the university forward,” he said.

    The VC, who said his door was open for dialogue and mediation, warned that “any move to challenge the peace which UNILORIN has been enjoying will be resisted by Nigerians.”

    He continued: “We’ve improved in terms of infrastructure, staff and students welfare. We should all come together to make the university better by far.

    “UNILORIN is the most subscribed university in Nigeria in the last three years. Things cannot be done the way they used to be in the past 20 years. There is only one ASUU on ground.

    “The new group which is trying to spring up has about 13 members while the substantive ASUU has over 700 members.”

    A teacher, who did not want to be named, urged the factions and  management to resolve their differences in the interest of the students, lecturers and parents.

    “The ASUU imbroglio needs to be resolved soonest; the interested parties must be ready to move forward by sheathing their swords,” the source said.

    The source added: “Unionism is not about being the mouthpiece of the administration all the time. Intellectuals are known for their integrity, credibility and scholarship not for politicking. Staff welfare should be looked into the administration should avoid non-payment or delay in implementation of agreed earned allowances to sustain the relative industrial peace being enjoyed at the moment. Office and classroom infrastructure should be improved upon to boost the morale of staff and students.”

    Oloruntoba-Oju, who led the UNILORIN 49 struggle, said the Raheem group could not be regarded as legal because its election was not ratified by the ASUU national leadership.

    He said: “ASUU is not a local union. It is a national union with branches in all state-funded universities. By the union’s constitution therefore, you cannot become chairman of a branch without an election approved, organised, supervised and certified by the central union.

    “It is as simple as that. So when a group gathers itself together out of the operations of ASUU as a national body, then this is not a case of factionalisation at all.

    “What we have is a group of individuals (currently led by Dr U.A. Raheem) who never conducted any election known to ASUU as a body, yet they are claiming to be ‘ASUU executive.’ On the other hand you have a union approved and supervised election which was well advertised and which produced the current Chairman of the union (Dr Kayode Afolayan).”

    “What makes the matters worse is that the National Industrial Court has declared the group to be illegal as far back as February 2013.

    Oloruntoba-Oju also blamed the university management for interfering in union matters.

    “Perhaps the saddest part of this so called factionalisation is that the university is supporting this lawlessness. The university should know better. The University certainly has no business interfering in union affairs. If anything its business is to align with those following the law.”

  • UNILORIN ASUU faction holds  procession for Iyayi

    UNILORIN ASUU faction holds procession for Iyayi

    A faction of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) held yesterday a rally in honour of the late ex-president of the union, Prof Festus Iyayi.

    The faction, led by Prof Wahab Egbewole, is recognised by the university authorities but not the national body.

    When the national body got wind of the procession, it reportedly issued a statement banning any procession in honour of its ex-president.

    It added that it would not accept any attempt by the illegal group to desecrate Iyayi’s memory.

    But Egbewole argued that nobody could stop such a move to honour the memory of the departed.

    The lecturers marched from the union’s secretariat in the school premises to the university roundabout and back. Egbewole and other leaders addressed members and reporters.

    “Prof Festus Iyayi was president of ASUU in the thick of the military regime. He discharged his responsibilities selflessly; he did not take opportunity of that office as we have with some leaders today.

    “He was not a representative of the caricature of leaders we have today.

    “Iyayi was a man, who cherished the rule of law; he was not someone to stay somewhere with a clique to say you have suspended or expelled someone. He also faced the persecutions of leadership.

    “At UNILORIN, we believe we are not against the leadership of ASUU, but it’s the one who does not want us. Articulate and progressive unionism is what we stand for and we shall continue to do this.

    “We are out in the sun today for Iyayi and we will do that for any other leader found worthy of such honour. Let them say whatever they like; they said we have been banned from organising this procession but we have just done it and that shows they don’t have our numbers.”

    Prof Albert Olayemi, ex-chairman of the union in the university, said: “We are today united in grief for the loss of our leader. Iyayi did not insist on continuing as president but here we have people who after 15 years want to continue.

    “This is the attitude we have here and which is against the position of the national leadership. It’s unfortunate that the national body is condoning such wrong attitude.

    “Unfortunately, what we have are mere cliques who have hijacked the union; no longer do we have the kind of selfless attitude that Iyayi had.

    “I do not think anybody has the right to deny us the right to do what we have done today. The directive that we should not hold the procession is senseless and illogical; you said you have expelled somebody and you are still sending directives to him.”