Tag: UNILORIN
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Abdulkareem emerges new VC of Unilorin
Governing Council of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) has announced a a professor of chemical engineering, Sulyman Age Abdulkareem as the new Vice Chancellor of the university.The tenure of the current Vice Chancellor Prof Abdulganiyu Ambali ends October 15th, 2017.Addressing reporters in Ilorin, the Kwara state capital, Chairman, Governing Council of the university, Dr Abdullahi J. Oyekan said the “appointment is to take effect from October 16, 2017.”Said Dr Oyekan: “At its meeting on Monday August 28, 2017, council, in accordance with the university Act and the provisions of the universities (miscellaneous Provisions) (amendment) Act 2003,considered the recommendation of the selection board and I am happy to announce that the council approved the appointment of Professor Sulyman Age Abdulkareem as the 10th VC of the university of Ilorin.“The council noted that the tenure of the VC, Prof Abdulganiyu Ambali, OON, will come to an end on October 15,2017, council commenced the process for appointments of a new VC by announcing the vacancy in two national Newspaper on Friday, April 14,2017. The advertisement was also placed on the university website and the University weekly bulletin.“Interested applicants were given six weeks to submit their applications with a closing date of May 26,2017. Immediately thereafter, council met and constituted the joint council /Senate selection board as well as the search team for the appointment of VC.“The search team visited universities in various geographical zones of the country and contacted senior academic staff in these institutions who might not have applied for the position. Subsequently, theselection board considered based all the applications received and shortlisted candidates based on the various parameters indicated in the advertisement.“The selection board later interacted with the shortlisted candidates over a period of three days from Wednesday August 23 to August 25,2017. At the end of the exercise, the selection board forwardedits recommendation to council for further consideration.”Prof Abdulkareem, who hails from Oro, Irepodun local government area of Kwara state was the immediate past Vice Chancellor of Al-Hikmah University, Ilorin.Born in 1954, Prof Abdulkareem attended the Government Secondary School, Ilorin for both his secondary education and higher school certificate (HSC) from 1968 to 1974 which he undertook with the Kwara state government scholarship.He later got the the Federal Government Scholarship for his university education at the University of Detriot, Detroit, Michigan, USA between 1975 and 1780.At the end of the course he was awarded the Mche, Bche (Chemical Engineering) specialising in heterogeneous Catalysis/reaction engineering.From 1985 to 1988, he was awarded the United States of America National Science Foundation Fellowship for his doctoral programme in chemical engineering at the University of Louisville, USA.He obtained the engineering-in-training certificate of the state of Minnesota, USA in 1991 and became a registered engineer of the Nigerian Society of Engiineers in 2002 as well as COREN regusteredengineer in 2004.Prof Abdulkareem was engaged as a lecturer by by the Detroit Board of Education, Detroit, Michigan, USA from August 1984 to August 1985; and a graduate teaching assistant at the University of Louisville,Kentucky from September 1985 to August 1988.He joined the services of the University of Ilorin as a senior lecturer in 1996 and rose to become a professor in September 2005. -

UNILORIN, KWASU shun action
As the strike called by the national body of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) enters its second day today, lectures were on yesterday at the University of Ilorin (Unilorin).
In fact, most students of the university are putting finishing touches to their second semester examinations, it was gathered yesterday.
Yesterday, UNILORIN hosted an international conference organized by the Social Studies Association of Nigeria (SOSAN).
At the event, Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academic) Prof Sidikat Ijaya, said she was at the conference because the university was not on strike.
Ijaya added “this non participation of UNILORIN in all strikes called by ASUU has been responsible for the unbroken academic calendar and peace we have on campus in the last 16 years.”
The factional Chairman, ASUU, Unilorin, Dr. Usman Raheem, whose faction is recognised by the Unilorin management, said the branch did not join the strike as it had not been part of the national ASUU since 2001. He alleged that ASUU national did not also inform the branch of the strike.
He, however, said the branch was in support of the reason for the strike and urged the Federal Government to honour the agreement it reached with ASUU since 2009.
Raheem said: “Unilorin is not observing the strike called by the national union of ASUU because of the reasons that are so obvious.
Since 2001, Unilorin has not been part of ASUU national and ASUU national has also been carrying its activities without us. The reasons for the strike and need for it were not communicated to us at Unllorin. So the referendum for whether it will hold or not in this university was not conducted because it was not communicated to us. So, Unilorin academic staff are fully at work and we want to remain at work.
At KWASU, It was observed that not all the students were in the campus as the school resumed academic activities on Monday and some of the students were yet to start attending lectures.
Both factional Chairmen of ASUU in KWASU, Dr. Adesola Dauda and Dr. Issa Abdulraheem said the branch did not join the strike.
Dauda, whose faction is recognised by the national body of ASUU, said it was observing the situation.
He said “ASUU national is on strike but KWASU is not on strike because we are on observer status. We have just joined ASUU and by their constitution we have to observe. We are on observe status. We have the capability to join, but I am still having problem with my university management. The university management does not want union to exist in KWASU.”
Abdulraheeem, who is recognised by the KWASU management, said the strike was not being observed.
The faction will have a congress today to inform the members why the faction will not embark on the strike.
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ASUU raises alarm on ‘plan’ to sack members in UNILORIN
The Ibadan Zone of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has raised alarm on an alleged move by the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) Governing Council to terminate the appointments of its top members. The union said its members, who blew the whistle to expose alleged unwholesome practices in the school, were being subjected to official victimisation by the school management, noting that UNILORIN has become a lawless body that shows no regard for rule of law.
ASUU fingered the outgoing UNILORIN Vice-Chancellor (VC), Prof Abdulganiyu Ambali, as the mastermind of the plot, pointing out that the lecturers’ body would not be suppressed in exposing the Ambali’s “shady dealings” despite victimisation against its members.
In a statement titled: Planned sack of ASUU whistle blowers in UNILORIN by Governing Council, signed by the Zonal Coordinator, Dr Ade Adejumo, ASUU urged the UNILORIN Governing Council chairman, Dr. Jubril Oyekan, to resist being dragged into the crisis, adding that effort should be made to rescue the school from sliding further into infamy.
It named the officials as the ASUU chairman in UNILORIN, Dr. Kolawole Afolayan, and Secretary, Dr. Solomon Oyelekan, who were suspended.
ASUU urged the Governing Council members not to bow to the pressure to terminate the appointments of the affected staff. The lecturers’ body called on the Federal Government and supervising agencies to prevail on the school to stop the “continuous harassment of critical voices of dissent” in the university.
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UNILORIN VC race: 20 profs petition council over age restriction
No fewer than 20 professors have written a petition to the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) Governing Council, protesting the decision to limiting the age of would-be vice chancellor to 60 years in the vacancy advertisement.
Tenure of the current vice chancellor, Prof. Abdulganiyu Ambali, expires in October.
Spokesperson of the group, Prof Yinka Adesiyun, said the proviso was already causing disquiet on campus.
The petitioners averred that the clause in the vacancy advertisement that “candidates who would have attained the age of 60 years at the point of assumption of duty need not apply,” would put eligible applicants at a disadvantage.
The petition reads: “This sentence is already causing some disquiet in the university as it will sideline some of the best candidates who are older than 60years but less than 65 years by October 16, 2017.
“The new retirement age of professors in universities owned by the Federal government of Nigeria is 70 years. The consequential bill was passed by the Senate in January, 2012 and signed by the President in June 2012.
“Since the law backing the change in retirement age of professors in federal universities from 65 years to 70 years was signed in June, 2012, the eligibility of professors for the position of vice chancellor was increased by different governing councils of federal universities from 60 to 65 years.
“We are aware that there was no formal council meeting at which the issue of vacancy announcement for the post of vice chancellor was discussed. Who then authorised the advertisement?!
“Our appeal therefore is for the new council under your leadership to revisit the controversial advertisement and amend it to accommodate experienced professors who will not be older than 65 years by October 16, 2017, who can contribute immensely to the development of University of Ilorin.
“We remain confident that your positive action in this regard will instill confidence in all eligible professors in the university and those from other universities who desire to contest fairly for the highly esteemed position of our great university.”
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Unilorin rejects ASUU’s call for VC’s resignation
AUTHORITIESof the University of Ilorin have rejected call by Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), demanding for the resignation of the Vice Chancellor Prof Abdulganiyu Ambali. Unilorin described the demand as “unwarranted” and “mischievous”. In a statement, the university,s spokesman Mr. Kunle Akogun, said it was preposterous to ask Mr. Ambali, whom he described as “an excellent captain”, to quit, adding, “No excellent captain quits midstream”.
The Ibadan Zone of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), had called on Prof. Ambali to honorably resign his appointment to allow for an independent investigation of fraud allegations against him. But Mr. Akogun, in his reaction, said the union was only bent on destroying the peace and progress of Unilorin simply because all attempts to hijack the progressive ASUU at Unilorin had been rebuffed by the University lecturers.
“Dispassionate watchers of events at the University of Ilorin, especially since the University began to gain national prominence and acclaim as a socially responsible, generally peaceful, academically excellent and qualitatively most sought-after citadel of learning in the country, are familiar with the antics of a few dissidents who are bent on taking us back to Egypt,” he said.
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Unilorin and ASUU’s ‘sanctions’
An another desperate attempt to truncate the steady academic progress being recorded at the University of Ilorin, the National Secretariat of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has unilaterally imposed what could simply be described as ill-advised, mischievous and vexatious sanctions on this flagship of the nation’s education sector.
Following a meeting of its National Executive Council (NEC) at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, mid-January, the Union sought to ostracise the University of Ilorin from the nation’s academic community, citing flimsy and baseless “acts of lawlessness, arbitrariness, violation of human and trade union rights, and persecution of loyal members.”
The Union alleged that “contrary to the law and despite the ruling of the National Industrial Court, the University has continued to prevent the Union from functioning on its campus.” It stated further that Unilorin “has also continued to forcefully collect check-off money from academics of the university in the name of the Union without remitting it to the Union.”
Having charged the University with these offences and convicted it on all counts, the Union went ahead to impose the sanctions on the University administration. According to it, “For the duration of the sanctions, academic staff of the University of Ilorin will no longer enjoy the cooperation, collaboration or participation of academics of other Nigerian public universities, in (sundry) areas of academic and related activities.” These include teaching, research and supervision of students; setting, moderating or assessment of examinations; external assessment for professional cadre appointments or promotions; sabbatical, visiting, part-time and adjunct appointments; accreditation of institutions, colleges, programmes and courses; collaborative research; attendance of learned conferences, society workshops, seminars and other related activities; peer review of journal articles and patronage of journals; and so forth.
From the tone and intent of its unilateral ‘sanctions’, it is clear that the National ASUU is deliberately pursuing a belligerent agenda, having failed serially in its bid to hijack the Unilorin Branch of the Union for its anointed gangs, who constitute less than one percent of the academic staff of the University.
Since the ASUU-orchestrated crisis erupted in 2001, the Union has consistently put up a belligerent posture, spurning all forms of reconciliatory moves. Its intention, since then, has been to destabilise the University of Ilorin.
The Union unwittingly exposed its main motive with its complaint that the University has “continued to forcefully collect check-off money from academics of the university … without remitting it to the Union.” It is becoming obvious that members’ check-off dues are the main grouse. For, in one breath, you claim you have suspended the Unilorin Branch of the Union and in another you still expect check-off due remittance from the same suspended Branch? In any case, it is on record that at the outset of the crisis, more than 95 per cent of the academic staff of the University resolved to discontinue the payment of check-off dues to ASUU National and decided, instead, to pay a percentage of their salaries as administrative charge to the local branch. This decision was duly communicated to the University management for the purpose of deducting this from source. And from this administrative charge, the ASUU leadership in the University has been able to build a befitting secretariat for the Union, a feat which was never on the agenda of the previous executive committees headed by the lackeys of these anarchists.
Again, the allegation of lawlessness levelled against the University administration is spurious. How can Unilorin be lawless when it obeyed all court judgments and dutifully carried out the judicial order to reabsorb all the disengaged lecturers. Their accumulated salaries were paid in full despite the fact that most of them were already in regular employment in some other places.
The call on academic staff of other public universities to boycott all Unilorin-based journals as well as the embargo on the acceptance of articles from Unilorin academics by journals of other universities for peer review and publication clearly shows the Union as simply anti-intellectual. When has trade union membership become a pre-requisite for featuring in an academic journal? Or are we now to believe that any academic, who is not an ASUU member, cannot publish in an academic journal?
In the same vein, ASUU’s call on academics from other universities not to come to the University of Ilorin for sabbatical, visiting, part-time and adjunct appointments as well as the embargo on Unilorin academics who may want undertake similar exercises in other universities runs counter to the principle of reciprocity on which universities all over the world thrive. Not only is the University of Ilorin a hot cake, for sabbatical, visiting, part-time and adjunct applicants, the management, as a matter of sustained policy, actively encourages its academic staff to go for these appointments even outside the country and they are widely accepted. Would these self-conceited unionists then agree to recall some of their members who are currently on sabbatical at the University of Ilorin?
It should be pointed out that this is not the first time these people would be exhibiting their anti-intellectual stance, as they have, several times in the past, disrupted semester examinations; petitioned the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria, in 2002, over allegations that the University violated academic regulations and minimum standards in the training of its medical students; unilaterally banned external examiners from moderating the final year examinations and projects of Unilorin students in 2001; and serially embarrassed members of our academic staff who went for one engagement or another in a couple of universities. All these antics were aimed at arm-twisting the University and truncating its rising profile.
It is on record that the University administration has continued to broker peace between the local branch and the National ASUU with a view to promoting a peaceful campus and fostering harmonious management-labour relations. Times without number, successive Vice-Chancellors of the institution, and the incumbent Prof. AbdulGaniyu Ambali in particular, have facilitated reconciliatory meetings but as soon as the issue of popular election is mentioned and the need for both parties to go to the Congress and test their respective popularity in a popular democratic contest, the National-backed faction often balks.
The University Management is hereby calling on the Federal Government and all lovers of education in the country to call these fellows to order because they are transgressing the limit allowed by trade unionism. They should be told in clear and unambiguous language that they do not possess the power to sanction a federal University that is being run with the tax payers’ money, a University that has contributed, in no small measure, to the upliftment of the higher education system in the country.
- Akogun is the Head of Corporate Affairs Unit, University of Ilorin
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I was not unduly favoured by UNILORIN, says Oloyede’s son
Mr. Abdulkarim Oloyede, son of the Registrar of the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) and former Vice-Chancellor (VC) of University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, has denied his father played any role to influence his employment and privileges in the school.
Oloyede was reacting to a three-part investigative report by The Nation titled: “Exposed: How corruption, favouritism thrive in UNILORIN”, which revealed that the younger Oloyode benefited from his father’s alleged nepotism.
Oloyede, who is a lecturer in the Department of Telecommunication Science, described the report as “mischievous and an attempt to tarnish his reputation”.
In a three-page letter to the editor, the younger Oloyede said: “Let me put it on record that, at no time did I request for, enjoy or benefit from any form of scholarship from the University of Ilorin before, during or after my father’s tenure.
“It is noteworthy that the acceleration policy of the University of Ilorin on instant release for postgraduate studies had been in place long before I joined the university.
“The Staff Development Award has been a long-standing policy that an academic staff member who wants to pursue a postgraduate programme will be given the opportunity for salary supplementation after signing of a bond, irrespective of the length of time he or she has been in the system.”
Dr. Oloyede denied receiving any money beyond his salary, saying his appointment was based on merit and in accordance with the school’s procedure for employment.
He wondered why he should be prevented from seeking employment at UNILORIN for being the son of the former VC, adding that he qualified for the job based on his academic credential and Nigerian citizenship.
He said: “My appointment at the University of Ilorin followed a response to an advertisement by the university, which was made open to all Nigerians and published on May 1, 2012 in many newspapers… I was shortlisted, interviewed and found appointable in accordance with the laid down procedure. My father was not present nor did he participate in the process of my assessment.
“It is not unlikely that it was because I was an applicant that he delegated the evaluated process to the leadership of the faculty to which I applied. I later got to know that I was adjudged to be either the best or second best of those eventually appointed. I wonder if being the son of Prof. Ishaq Oloyede should deny me my right as a Nigerian to seek employment in the university where I am qualified for same.”
Dr. Oloyede said the allegations contained in the report did not represent him and the principle he stands for.
He said the writer was out to malign his character.
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UNILORIN partners enterpreneurs on inventions– VC
Prof. AbdulGaniyu Ambali, Vice-Chancellor, University of Ilorin, says the university is partnering with some entrepreneurs to begin mass production of the speed limiting device at affordable prices.
Ambali made this known while featuring at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) forum in Abuja.
He said the effort was in line with a call by the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) and the university’s mandate to contribute to the development of the country through research.
‘’University of Ilorin through our group of research scientists from various relevant disciplines have come together and they have came up with a device.
“And that device was tested in-house, within the university campus and it worked.
“So right now, we are at the stage of making mass production. We have been able to get one or two entrepreneurs in Lagos who are ready to put up some money to be able to help us do mass production of the device.’’
Ambali said that the cost of the device would be affordable, adding that the aim was to reduce the burden on the people.
He explained that the university had also signed agreement to ensure that the sugar research institute of the institution produced sugarcane seedlings to meet the needs of farmers.
The vice-chancellor promised that the university would continue to lay emphasis on those things that would benefit the immediate community as well as the general populace.
He said that the university had come up with an oil spillage-cleaning device that would help in the clean up of the Niger Delta region.
“You are aware that the university has been able to come up with oil spillage cleaning device which is currently been tried by the government.
“We have tried it and it works.
“So of recent the Federal Government has given us the go ahead to talk with those that are cleaning the Niger Delta, so that we can contribute towards that,’’ he said.
The vice-chancellor said that other achievements of the institution in the area of agriculture included the Palm tree, the Jetropha and teak (a tropical hardwood tree species) plantations.
He said that the institution was collaborating with some industries toward the harvest and processing of these plantations once they are ready.
Ambali added that the university authorities had always put up minimum of 18 infrastructural facilities in the school on yearly basis in the last four to five years.
“Every year, we have been able to put up between 18 and 20 infrastructures ranging from classroom, office building, electricity, water supply, befitting security offices, hostel accommodation, roads to strengthening of security in the school,” he said.
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UNILORIN don shines at U.S. Materials conference
The organisers of the 146th Minerals, Metals and Materials Society (TMS) Conference and Exhibitions held in San Diego, California, United States (U.S.) have praised the Deputy Director of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) Central Research Laboratories, Associate Prof Baba Alafara, for his contribution to professional sessions and discussions held at the event.
The event with the theme: The world comes here, was organised by Pan American Materials Congress between February 26 and March 3. The conference hosted over 4,000 participants, including academics and industry professionals, from more than 80 countries.
Assoc. Prof Alafara presented a paper titled: Preparation of High Grade Industrial Copper Compound from a Nigerian Malachite Mineral by Hydrometallurgical process, at the conference.
Based on his contribution, the UNILORIN don was part of World Professional Materials Science experts selected for mentoring doctoral candidates and post-graduate students, with the aim to provide professional guidance to the mentees.
Prof Cindy Belt of the U.S.-based Metals Energy Management announced the appointment of Alafara as coordinator of the firm’s metallurgical research in Nigeria. The don was also elected as a member of the award committee on Energy Materials for the coming TMS conference.
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Exposed: How corruption, favouritism thrive in UNILORIN (III)
In this third and concluding part of his series on the University of Ilorin, Kwara State, Assistant Editor ADEKUNLE YUSUF reveals more dirty details of the rot in the 42-year-old university
Shortly after Prof. Ishaq Oloyede left office, his administration was accused of speedily granting an award of N22 million to two members of staff who are alleged to be his relations before he left office in 2012. One of them is his son, Ayopo Oloyede Abdulkarim, an Assistant Lecturer in the Department of Telecommunication Science. The second beneficiary is Mrs. Fatihah Adeyinka Odumosu (nee Oloyede) of the Department of Physiology. Records showed NI7 million went into the pocket of Ayopo Oloyede and N5million to Mrs. Odumosu. At the time, a group known as the University of Ilorin Stakeholders Forum (UISF), which called for the probe of the awards, insisted that the awards were illegally granted, alleging that it was nepotism since Ayopo is the biological child of the former VC while the second beneficiary was alleged to be his distant cousin.
It was also alleged that by the time Ayopo requested for the favour, via a letter dated February 22, 2012, he was yet to be a staff of the university. The young Oloyede was only given his letter of appointment on June 28, 2012 vide a letter reference number UIL/S SE/ PF/5023. It was signed by Oyeyemi, then registrar. Barely two months later, precisely on August 24, 2012, the university granted the request, vide a letter signed by Adegoke. His father was to justify the speedy approval and disbursement to the awardees, saying nothing was done outside rubric of due process.
“The Governing Council of the University, in May 2007 before I became Vice-Chancellor, decided to suspend the requirement that a newly recruited academic staff should spend a minimum of two years before he could go on study leave. Consequently, lecturers of the university were released on Staff Development Awards (SDA) scheme, which only consisted of paying their salaries, to pursue their PhDs anywhere in the world,” he said.Lopsided promotions
Ordinarily, it is supposed to have fizzled out of memory. However, despite the passage of time, the hurried appointment of Mrs. Bamitale Janet Balogun is still being widely reviled, if not regularly spurned among academics that lay claim to integrity credentials in UNILORIN. At the time of her appointment in August 2013, she was the wife of the secretary of the local faction of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) that is robustly loyal to the administration. Touted as part of the gale of appointments without the due process in UNILORIN, Mrs. Balogun, now in her mid-fifties, was employed as Assistant Lecturer on temporary appointment into the Department of English Language, even without any interview whatsoever and without being recommended by the Head of Department or Dean of the Faculty – against all extant rules governing academic appointments.
Despite all subtle protestations by the Head of Department of English Language that there were more suitably qualified persons, who had been interviewed, found employable and were merely waiting for appointment letters, the powers that be foisted Mrs. Balogun on the system. It was a case of fait accompli of sort, an appointment many lecturers see as a favour to her husband who, until he died, was one of the chieftains of ASUU who enjoyed the ears of the university authorities. Going by the written objection of the HoD, Mrs. Balogun’s area of specialty was not also very much needed at the time, but UNILORIN ignored all this.
One of the casualties of this decision whose fate suffered a body blow at the time was one Mrs. O. Adeoti, who was the department’s best graduating student in 2003 and a doctoral student in the same department then. Her case was tabled before the university authorities by her department, but nothing was done. Against what has become the norm in the university, it was because her candidature was not backed by any big name in the system, sources said. Like others who waited in vain after being recommended for employment, Mrs. Adeoti had been interviewed, found employable and recommended for employment long before the issue of Mrs. Balogun, with a Master of Arts in English Language, surfaced through the VC’s office.
“The Department’s 2003 best graduating student, who is also a present PhD student in the Department, Mrs. O. Adeoti, had been interviewed and found appointable to the post of Assistant Lecturer in English Language, which Mrs. Balogun has now applied to. We were actually awaiting a response in respect of Mrs. Adeoti sir. There is also the dire need of the department in respect to Literature-in-English lecturers. There were, in the 2012/13 session, only five Literature-in-English lecturers on the ground as against eleven language lecturers. It is evident that Literature-in-English lecturers were overburdened with courses,” the HoD commented on Mrs. Balogun’s application letter, which did nothing to sway the university leadership who forwarded an already approved application and asked him to “please comment on the approved applicant”.
That is not the only absurdity trailing her recruitment, critics said. At the time of her appointment, records show that Mrs. Balogun was already 49 years old. Many lecturers therefore argue that she was too old for such an entry-level academic job, which may limit her contributions to the system. Thus, they see her appointment as a clear subversion of public service rules on the age of people that can be employed into trainee cadres – since Graduate Assistantship and Assistant Lecturership are trainee cadres.
But if the fuss that greeted Mrs. Balogun’s appointment calls for a thorough probe, it may pale into insignificance when compared to the “extreme lopsidedness” that is at the heart of multiple promotions enjoyed by another “administrative errand boy” in the Department of Computer Science. Reviled as a reference point in the “scandalous wave of unbridled favouritism thriving in UNILORIN,” not a few pooh-poohed the frenetic rise of Dr. Rasheed Jimoh. As at January 2011, he was still an Assistant Lecturer in the university. At the time, he was in a Malaysian university battling with writing his PhD dissertation and how to defend same. On his return, Dr. Jimoh was promoted to Lecturer II in February of 2011, having earned same with a fresh-minted PhD certificate.
And by October of 2011, the young lecturer was elevated again to Lecturer I – in a style that is said to be both strange and unknown to all rules and regulations governing promotions in academic circles, but which the tenure of Prof. Oloyede was said to have promoted to no end. As if that was not enough, he was propped up again to Senior Lecturer rank on October 12, 2012 and, later Associate Professor – a generosity that has helped him bypass lecturers, who taught him during his undergraduate days. Within this short period of less than four years, Dr. Jimoh has oddly enjoyed nothing less than four promotions. Besides this, he has also served as HoD, bossing his colleagues as well as former instructors around. And without exuding any spectacular erudition or parading academic feat in terms of a breakthrough in research that sets him apart from peers, he has now been tipped to man one of the most important units in the university – thanks to his ‘loyalty’ to the authorities.
Although some people in the system insisted that no rule was broken, another case that some lecturers say reeks of nepotism is that of Mr. Ibrahim Abdulganiyu Ambali, VC’s son in the bursary section. The young Ambali’s wife (Mrs. Rabiat Gambari-Ambali) was granted external study leave in 2014 and the young man was allowed to join her in the United Kingdom on no known grounds, such as study leave, leave of absence, etc. Yet the university continues to pay the salary of a man that can best be described as an AWOL. However, those close to the family said the husband and wife are both being expected back this year.
Like most appointments in the last ten tears, Adam Abdulrahman Idoko was appointed on temporary basis in the Microbiology Department. Later, at the ‘regularisation interview’ where he was the only candidate, having been appointed and having assumed duty anyway, he was said to have performed so poorly that even his godfathers admitted out of rare candour that his appointment could not be rationally sustained. However, instead of dismissing him outright for being unfit, he was asked to continue on ‘probation.’ But to the chagrin of other workers, in the interim, he was processed for overseas study and whisked abroad, which some lecturers in the department said the university usually denies otherwise qualified candidates. He is now back in the system – a situation which academics in his department say underscores the sham and danger of temporary appointments because Mr. Idoko would not have been employed if there had been advertisement and competitive interview.
“It shows how qualified persons are deprived of positions and how the nation is being destroyed by filling positions with incompetent persons, thereby perpetuating a cycle of incompetence. It also shows how sycophancy and subservience has come to dominate the academia. Authorities prefer the temporary appointment mode because it enables them to fill positions with relations, friends and cronies or as favours, thereby ensuring the subservience of all without regard to merit or competence,” a senior academic in the department said.
An alleged impropriety involved in the appointment and promotion of Mrs. Taiwo Toyin Ambali, one of the wives of the UNILORIN VC, has triggered a seething controversy. The kernel of the dispute is the fact that she was employed as Lecturer I on a temporary appointment in 2015, and then promoted to Senior Lecturer a year later, which sparked protests among her colleagues who insisted that her appointment and promotion were in clear breach of regulations guiding academic appointments and promotions.
Born on July 10, 1958, Mrs. Ambali joined the services of UNILORIN in 2015. The VC’s wife obtained a Bachelor of Education degree in Adult Education from the University of Maiduguri in 1996, a Masters and a PhD also in Adult Education from the same university between 2003 and 2014. She was a lecturer in the Department of Continuing Education and Extension Services at UNIMAID before UNILORIN, where her husband is the VC, offered her appointment as Lecturer I and promoted her a year later. Her letter of appointment was dated July 30, 2015, with reference number UIL/SSE/PF/6237, putting her on step 7 of the CONUASS 04 in the Department of Adult and Primary Education. The letter conveying the good news of her promotion was dated September 30, 2016, with reference number UIL/SSE/PF/6237.
Unlike her appointment letter which was signed by the Registrar, Emmanuel Obafemi, Mrs. Ambali’s letter of promotion was signed by M.S. Adegoke, on behalf the Registrar.
“I am directed to convey approval of your promotion to the post of Senior Lecturer on CONUASS 05. Your new salary will be N3,101,505.00 per annum i.e. step 1 of CONUASS 05 with effect from October 1, 2016. I wish to congratulate you, on behalf of the University Council, and to urge you not to relent in giving your best in the service of the university,” the letter read. However, rather than congratulatory messages from colleagues, her promotion sparked an outrage among vocal academics, who cried blue murder that her appointment and promotion were anomalies that should not find expression in an academic environment.
Among other things, critics are miffed that her appointment was done without prior advertisement – contrary to rules governing academic appointments of that status. Besides, appointing a recent PhD holder as Lecturer I was also said to be overindulgence, an action that some lecturers said breached academic rules and procedure. According to regulations in UNILORIN, advertisement indicating a vacancy for the position should have been done before she was allowed to join the system. It is also clear in the rules that no academic staff can be promoted from one cadre to another until after three years of meritorious service. Even for academics that have stayed on the job for years and later obtained PhD, they are only awarded Lecturer II on attainment of the highest academic degree, prompting critics to query the rationale for promoting Mrs. Ambali, who has less than ten years’ experience as a lecturer. As if this was not enough, Mrs. Ambali was rewarded with promotion to Senior Lecturer – all within a year as Lecturer I in UNILORIN – when regulations governing academic promotions are explicit that promotion from one rank to another cannot be countenanced until after three years. And this can only come after due confirmation of appointment.
Interestingly, the local faction of ASUU has kept mum on the matter. It perhaps sees nothing wrong in the appointment and promotion of Mrs. Ambali. But the faction recognised by the parent body of ASUU would not allow such alleged infractions to go unchallenged. Although it controls the minority followership, the critical faction has been a pain in the neck of the university authorities, having lately written petitions to anti-graft agencies alleging colossal fraud in pension deductions, extortion of students, lack of transparency in contract awards, among other weighty allegations.
Led by Dr. Kayode Afolayan and Dr. Solomon Oyelekan, chairperson and secretary, respectively, ASUU railed against the “heinous acts of nepotism and favouritism”.
According to ASUU officials, what it means, in essence, is that Mrs. Ambali has been placed ahead of her superiors by nothing less than six years, thus further “bastardising the concept of merit and academic integrity.”
Because she now enjoys salaries that she would not have earned until about six years’ time, they claim the promotion has awarded the VC’s wife unmerited monetary benefits – at taxpayers’ expense – thereby adding to the economic adversity of the nation. In a letter addressed to the VC on February 6, ASUU spelt out the “illegality of Dr. Taiwo’s appointment and promotion.” Acknowledging that while the appointments and promotions committee (AP&C) headed by the VC is responsible for appointments and promotions, ASUU insisted that the committee must be seen to be doing so within the ambit of the law and regulations.
The union, therefore, demanded “immediate reversal of the illegal and nepotistic awards to Mrs. Ambali by the current administration headed by her husband,” maintaining that her appointment and subsequent promotion within a year cannot be morally, legally or administratively justified. Accusing the university authorities of bias and nepotism, ASUU maintained that Mrs. Ambali’s initial appointment should have been to the position of Lecturer II instead of Lecturer I, and that she was not in any way due for promotion until after three years of her previous appointment or promotion.
“It is also worthy of note that, while constantly violating and manipulating regulations to enhance the careers, economic status and social standing of its relations, friends and cronies, the same administration keeps violating and manipulating the same regulations by constantly shifting the goal posts to keep down other staff, thereby treating them as slaves. This is morally reprehensible,” ASUU said.
UNILORIN descended on ASUU officials. It slammed the duo of Dr. Afolayan and Dr. Oyelekan with queries on February 6, accusing them of “serious acts of misconduct” and “malicious allegations and publications”.
The query, with reference number UIL/SSE/PF/471, gave the union leaders 48 hours to explain why disciplinary action should not be meted out to them. Asserting that it has received a report, which has “disclosed a prima facie evidence of acts of misconduct” against the two lecturers, UNILORIN alleged that the duo circulated or caused to be circulated a leaflet “containing words and allegations that are considered to be bluntly disrespectful and insurbordinating to the office of the Vice Chancellor, which in effect has challenged the integrity and fairness of the university administration”.
The university went further to claim that, in the leaflet, the two union leaders “made some malicious statements and claims capable of inciting staff and students to protests, agitation and violence targeted at disrupting normal academic activities on the campus”. The leaflet was also said to have been “calculated to undermine the authority of the university, its peace and order”.
Although UNILORIN requested that the lecturers should respond to the query within 48 hours, a day after issuing the query, precisely on February 7, it suspended the duo. The bad news was conveyed in a letter with reference number UIL/SSE/PF/4471. It was signed by the Registrar.
The suspension letter reads: “The Vice Chancellor has directed, in exercise of the powers conferred on him by section 8.4.2 (d) (i) of the Conditions of Service for Senior Staff of the University of Ilorin, that you be suspended from duty from the date of this letter, pending the outcome of the investigation into your alleged acts of serious misconduct bordering on insubordination to the office of the Vice Chancellor, circulation of malicious statements and claims capable of inciting staff and students to protest, agitation and violence targeted at disrupting normal academic activities on the campus as earlier communicated in a letter of query issued to you dated 6th February, 2017.”
The letter concluded that “you are hereby suspended from duty. You are to hand over all the university property in your possession to your Head of Department forthwith. By a copy of this letter, the Bursar is being requested to place you on half pay pending the determination of your case. Please leave your residential address, email and phone number with your Head of Department for purpose of reaching you without hindrance should the need arise.”
Dubbing it a victimisation of its officials, Ibadan zone of ASUU (comprising universities in Oyo, Osun and Kwara states) flayed the action of the university “as an act of illegality and cowardice.” It added that the VC acted as a judge in his own case by querying and suspending the duo for merely raising allegations against him and his wife.
“This latest act of illegality and cowardice by the Vice Chancellor of University of Ilorin is a classic case of corruption fighting back when you fight corruption. The Vice Chancellor also showed extreme lack of decency or decorum by acting unilaterally as a judge in his own case (as the allegations are against him and the latest also involve his wife) without at least waiting for the intervention of the University Council. How do you suspend union officials for making allegations against you without first being absolved of the allegations which are before the relevant government agencies?
“After enjoying fifteen years of uninterrupted corrupt practices due to suppression of authentic union representation and critical voices, the university is now fighting tooth and nail to banish the new ASUU executive from its campus in order to continue its corrupt practices without challenge. By appointing his wife on ‘temporary appointment basis’ (while many PhD staff who had put in years of service in the university are still on Lecturer II even after PhD), and by promoting her after only one year (when all other staff have to wait for three years), Professor Ambali certainly breaks new grounds in corruption and indecency,” Dr. Ade Adejumo, zonal coordinator of ASUU, said in a statement.
The union warned that the “actions by the University of Ilorin pose a great danger to democracy, to decency, and to the anti-corruption efforts of the present government. How can the government proudly claim that it is encouraging citizens to ‘blow the whistle’ against corrupt officials while allowing its agencies to openly victimise whistleblowers? If university officials can be so openly corrupt under the glare of anti-corruption agencies, then what is the future of the fight against corruption? And how can democracy and justice thrive when a University, an institution that is supposed to nurture leaders and democrats, openly practise dictatorship and illegality while suppressing debate or dissent?”
The VC has, however, faulted ASUU’s stance, saying the promotion of his wife followed due process. At an interactive session with reporters, the VC provided clarifications on his wife’s promotion, saying it was not illegal. He explained that the promotion of any academic staff is the sole responsibility of the Appointments and Promotions Committee, stressing that Mrs. Ambali was duly promoted following legal procedures. “My wife commenced her career at the University of Maiduguri as a Lecturer II officer in 2006 and was promoted to Lecturer I in 2009. She later transferred her service to the University of llorin and was recently promoted to the rank of Senior Lecturer by the AP&C. This act was sequel to the approval of both the department and faculty management team.”
Prof. Ambali restated that the university is run on committee basis, which he said makes it impossible for anybody to “singlehandedly do anything without due process and approval of the committee concerned and such decision will also be carefully scrutinised before final approval is given”.
“The VC comes at end of the equation. When it comes to committee’s deliberation and it concerns those who are close to the VC, the VC usually steps aside during the deliberation so that people within the committee can feel free to deliberate on it. That is exactly what happened. She has almost 10 years of university teaching experience,” the VC said.
But Dr. Afolayan also fired back, picking holes in the explanations by the VC.
“If you look at the promotion letter, when she got to University of Ilorin, she was promoted to lecturer 1 on temporary basis. Even then, she ought to spend three years in the University of Ilorin before she can be promoted to Senior Lecturer. She was also promoted to Lecturer 1 on Level 7, which would mean that she had spent seven years as Lecturer 1, which is another wrong information. When the AP&C was to meet, her own (Mrs. Ambali’s) case was treated specially. The Vice-Chancellor had said he did not know about the promotion, how come he is now saying it is legal? He formed a special panel for his wife and promoted her to Senior Lecturer. The promotion ought to have come in 2018.
“Even if she were to be promoted on accelerated basis, there should have been a newspaper advert stating that there is vacancy in the position of Senior Lecturer in her department. But none was done. They promoted her on special recognition without following due process, which is totally wrong. The Vice- Chancellor cannot feign ignorance in the case and cannot defend it. You don’t transfer years of service from Maiduguri to Ilorin,” Dr. Afolayan said.Fears of UNILORIN dons
A past ASUU leader in the school, Dr. Taiwo Oloruntoba-Oju, believes there is a deep-seated displeasure about what is going on in the university. He added that most people who look as if they are cowed are merely afraid of reprisals.
“The system is filled with cronies of the current and past VCs, often incompetent persons through an abuse of the temporary appointment mode of appointment. The cronies running into hundreds consider themselves indebted to the current and past VCs and would always do their bidding whether legal or illegal. They constitute a severe limitation to the university, which is supposed to be built on a system of merit and excellence. The country cannot develop with this mode of populating the academia with incompetent hands. Apart from enthroning a cycle of incompetence, it also serves as a disincentive to otherwise competent and hardworking persons. This amounts to double jeopardy, but the country is the overall loser,” he cautioned.
Significantly, all the issues bordering on improprieties in the university – ranging from allegations of corruption, nepotism, favouritism and disregard for due process – were staunchly debunked by the VC. While fielding questions in an extensive interview with The Nation last September, Professor Ambali dismissed all the issues as mere figments of imagination of his traducers who do not see anything good in a school that has become a model in university management. When confronted with allegation on bonanza professorships, the VC lambasted those who flay the procedure, saying no process can be more transparent, competitive and merit-oriented than what obtains in UNILORIN.One university, two ASUU
It is a long-drawn-out war of attrition, but none of the warring parties seems ready to eat the humble pie. Like two parallel lines that can hardly meet, UNILORIN leadership and the ASUU have been locked in a bloody faceoff for about two decades without any sign of respite in sight. The feud, which started during the tenure of Prof. Shuaib Oba Abdulraheem as VC, began then as a minor rift between ASUU and the university authorities over the need for the lecturers to shun the strike declared by the union of academic staff, has now snowballed into an intractable crisis that is fast consuming all the combatants. As at the time of turning in this report, nothing less than five court cases are pending before the National Industrial Court (NIC) as well as conventional courts, midwifing two opposing camps into existence.
But to keen observers of happenings in the nation’s academia, the rift between ASUU and UNILORIN dated back to over 15 years. The seed of what has become a pig-headed disagreement was to be planted in 2001, when Prof. Abdulraheem’s administration sacked 49 lecturers in one fell swoop for defying the university management, which forbade them from participating in a strike called by the national body of ASUU. Prof. Oloyede, a student and long-term ally of some members of ‘UNILORIN 49,’ chaired the panel that recommended the firing of the recalcitrant lecturers.
Before the UNILORIN chapter of ASUU became splintered into miserable factions, Dr. Oloruntoba-Oju, a die-in-the-wool iconoclast, led the union then. Generally soft-spoken but imbued with a mind like a steel trap, he is the last man standing, almost twenty years after. Prof. Amali, an even-tempered academic who succeeded Abdularaheem, enjoyed a relatively peaceful tenure; his coincided with the period the sacked intellectuals were jumping from one courtroom to another trying to wriggle out of the conundrum. By the time Prof. Oloyede succeeded Amali in 2007, hope of a quick resolution of the brewing crisis came alive, as stakeholders, including the national body of ASUU, expected him to right the wrongs of the past, being one of the dramatis personae.
He declined to accede to their demands, culminating in the eventual suspension of the local chapter of the union. It was alleged then that Oloyede’s administration deliberately instigated the suspension of the local chapter of the union for a purpose, which signaled the beginning of more serious court battles between the feuding combatants. All political solutions proffered to resolve the logjam failed woefully. However, after intense legal fireworks that literally sapped all the parties almost beyond redemption, ASUU floored UNILORIN in court in 2009. After nine-year legal battles that had disrupted the national academic calendar to no end, the Supreme Court declared the sack of the famous “UNILORIN 49” as illegal and ordered their immediate reinstatement.
Before then, the Court of Appeal had ruled against the striking dons on July 12, 2006. About a year earlier, a Federal High Court in Ilorin had also sided with the sacked lecturers, ordering their immediate reinstatement. The industrial row was sparked, when all lecturers who refused to sign an attendance register created by UNILORIN as a way of foiling the 2001 nationwide ASUU strike, were summarily relieved of their jobs. The union claimed that the lecturers’ sack was a gross violation of the 2001 agreement ASUU reached with the government, which stipulated among other things, that no member of the union would be victimised on account of the strike. At the time, UNILORIN insisted that the appointments of the affected staff were terminated for different reasons.
But, as it finally turned out, the Supreme Court ruling was a pyrrhic victory. After almost ten harrowing years of staying out of job, some of the promising lecturers had died. Some who could not bear the pain sought greener pastures beyond the shores of UNILORIN. Careers were also stagnated or brutally ruined. There was an urgent need for reconciliation and healing of wounds, but both parties chose to embark on ego trips. However, despite the ruling by the highest court in the land, it is still being alleged that some are yet to receive their full entitlements. As fate would have, Oloyede, who recommended the sack of the lecturers, was also the man in the saddle by the time the court resolved the dispute. But the union did not trust him, accusing his administration of not complying fully with the judgment. The union declared war on his administration.
That was how two factions of the same union emerged in UNILORIN: one faction, which is clearly in the majority, consists of more pliant minds; while the other comprises remnants of the confrontational wing which waged war with their employers. For obvious reasons, the former group, which is derisively tagged as “administration ASUU,” has enjoyed a chummy relationship with successive VCs, but it is deemed illegal because its parent body does not recognise it. It has also suffered heavy setbacks in the courts, which affirmed its illegality, though appeals are pending. With a clever use of carrot and stick, UNILORIN has helped the loyal ASUU to amass huge followership over the years, having had the likes of Professor Ayo Omotosho (2001-2003), Dr. Kola Joseph (2003-2006), Dr. Sa’ad Omoiya (2006-2009), Professor Wahab Egbewole (2009-2012), Dr. AbdulRasheed Adeoye (2013-2016) and Dr. Usman AbdulRaheem (2016-?) as chairmen.
It is however a different kettle of fish for the radical faction, now led by Dr. Afolayan. Its members, like lepers banished from the community in order not to infect other households, are not only being treated as outcasts on campus; they are also roundly shunned by successive administrations. As the crisis continues to develop twists and turns, visits to the campus in the last four years have shown that students of UNILORIN are the happier for it. Stable and rancor-free academic sessions have furnished parents and their wards with the much-needed tranquility of mind to plan – a cherished rarity in a country where public universities are recurrently enmeshed in unpredictability and strikes.
Arguments are also fiercely divided as to whether or not the institution is paying any price for having its house divided against itself, but there is a dearth of external supervisors, as required under academic stipulations, to moderate examinations and assessments in UNILORIN. Because of its refusal to recognise the local chapter of the union known to the national body, the university is sanctioned by the National Executive Council of ASUU, making it difficult for academics in many federal universities to serve as external examiners in the institution. But the faction loyal to the administration has often debunked this as the “greatest fallacy of the century,” maintaining that it is a mere “rumour” and a “lie put up to destroy” and discredit the university.
As The Nation found out, one man that is yet to be forgiven for his roles in the crisis is the immediate past VC. As far as ASUU is concerned, Prof. Oloyede remains blacklisted, being an “anti-union administrator with draconian propensities.” That was why his appointment as JAMB Registrar was greeted with wild protests last August. Among other things, ASUU was miffed that Oloyede, whom it considered as the most unsuitable man to head such a sensitive national body, was given such a plum job. When the appointment was made public, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, ASUU National President, urged the government to reverse the decision immediately and investigate “Oloyede’s tyrannical and nepotism tendencies” during his reign at UNILORIN. The union also vowed never to interact with a man who “took nepotism to unprecedented heights as vice chancellor of UNILORIN” or allow him into any public universities where it has members.
“Given our inside knowledge of his anti-democratic and anti-union antecedents, Professor Oloyede is the last person that we expected to be so honoured with a national appointment of that status in the education sector. His anti-workers stance stood out in the case of the sacked UNILORIN 49. He led the administration’s team to as far as Lagos to testify falsely against the workers before the Industrial Arbitration Panel,” Professor Ogunyemi added.
Expectedly, the local ASUU body loyal to the national union threw its weight behind its parent body’s decision over Oloyede’s appointment. Its Chairman, Dr Afolayan, said ASUU UNILORIN aligned itself wholly with the call that Oloyede’s appointment was a huge mistake by President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.
He said: “The branch is in agreement with the union’s publicised opposition to Oloyede’s appointment as JAMB Registrar and for the reasons stated. This is not the first time that allegations of fraud, nepotism and having anti-workers tendencies have been raised against Professor Oloyede from within the University of Ilorin itself. The allegations were raised even while he was VC, but they were always suppressed by the powers that be within the university.”
Not surprisingly, the “administration ASUU” hailed Oloyede’s appointment, saying he is the most worthy person to lead JAMB. It also descended on its parent body, calling it names. It said: “What ASUU National Executive Committee (NEC) is lamenting is its serial failure to foist unpopular leadership on the branch. Majority of our members had insisted and still insist that ASUU NEC will continue to fail woefully and sulk until it embraces the elementary democratic principles in the election of leadership. It is yet another evidence of the meddlesomeness of a union (leadership) that has lost track of the laid down objectives of its cherished founding fathers. Otherwise, what kind of reasoning will produce such an outburst over a well and widely acknowledged appointment?”
UNILORIN also defended Oloyede’s appointment, accusing the national ASUU of “bad belle” and purveyors of lies.
Kunle Akogun, Deputy Director, Corporate Affairs, said the university management was shocked that ASUU could be raising such allegations against the former VC.
“It is baffling that despite the national applause elicited by the recent appointment of Professor Ishaq Oloyede as JAMB Registrar, any group can still come out to oppose such highly commendable decision of President Muhammadu Buhari. Of all the appointments made so far by the Buhari administration, that of Professor Oloyede has been singled out as a veritable round peg in a round hole. It is in this regard that the management of the University of Ilorin views the allegations leveled by ASUU against the person of our former VC as not only spurious but also irritating, as it smacks of ‘bad belle.‘“
One thing is, however, clear: it will be far easier for the proverbial camel to pass through the eye of the needle than for the opposing parties to reach a truce. For example, Dr. Afolyan’s group firmly holds on to the belief that since the NIC had declared as “illegal the group of persons declaring themselves as ASUU,” there should be no need for controversies. It insisted that UNILORIN should just tread the path of legality and withdraw its support for the rival faction, since the “crisis persists because the management prefers a lame duck union comprising mostly stooges of the sitting Vice Chancellor to foist a feudal system on the university”.
But its rival faction enjoying the ears of the university management considers the other group as ingrates. It has also staunchly opposed the request for “payment of accumulated salaries” and the thorny issue of backdated promotions for the years members of dissident group were in the trenches. It also sees nothing wrong in the monthly check-off dues of all ASUU members deducted at source, but which are allegedly not remitted to the coffers of the national secretariat of the union. Flaunting its numerical advantage, it also boasts that members of the other faction are not on the ground in the university, adding that unionism connotes a group and not one-person affair.
Now with the choreographed birth of two chapters of ASUU firmly in place, analysts say it seems UNILORIN has murdered sleep, as the two factions and successive university administrations have continually been at daggers drawn – to the continued detriment of the university’s image. With feuding combatants perpetually trading accusations and counter-accusations, it is as palpable as cotton that all the actors have revved the engine on the road to mutual assured destruction. Who will resolve this seemingly intractable rift between “family members of the same destiny and profession,” as Akogun, the university’s ever-ready spokesman, often sarcastically dubs it?