Tag: UNN

  • UNN alumni to build N6b college

    THE Alumni Association of the College of Medicine, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, is to build a N6 billion medical school at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), Ituku Ozalla.

    Association’s National President and ex-National Chairman of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Dr. Okwesilieze Nwodo said this when he spoke to reporters yesterday in Enugu.

    Nwodo said the college would commence kidney transplant before the end of this year, adding that by the time the facilities are in place, the college would handle about 1,000 cases of Open Heart Surgery yearly.

    He regretted that the college, which uses the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital at Ituku Ozalla as temporary site, lacked laboratories, lecture theatres and buses for students.

    Nwodo, a former governor of old Enugu State, decried the situation where students travel from Enugu to Ituku Ozalla by public transport.

    He said the college would be completed in five years, adding that each alumnus would pay N100,000 yearly for the next five years.

    Nwodo added that the association would reach out to governors of the Southeast and donor agencies.

    He described the UNN College of Medicine as a brand name that had produced renowned professors and doctors doing well in different parts of the world.

  • Two valedictorians shine at UNN convocation

    Two valedictorians shine at UNN convocation

    •VC counsels varsities to be futuristic

    Ossai Chikwetalu Emmanuel and Ume Chukwuma Otum shared the stage as joint valedictorians at the 43rd convocation of the University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN) held at the university’s Margaret Ekpo convocation ground last Friday.

    The duo from the Departments of Religion and Agricultural Economics finished their courses with Cumulative Grade Point Averages of 4.79 each.

    Ossai, who had to settle for Religion instead of Law, said he made up his mind to be the best despite the challenges he faced.

    He said: “Initially I had two challenges. Upon my admission in 2009, my first challenge was how to develop interest in Religion because I had always dreamed of being a lawyer and applied for it in UNN. But I later rearranged my thoughts and decided to transfer the energy I planned to channel towards Law to Religion.

    “Second was financial problem. My Mum is into small business while my Dad works in the security unit of UNN. Getting money to buy books and other materials was not easy for me. But as the Class Governor from my 100-Level, I had access to the university as well as departmental libraries where I photocopied most of the materials I needed.”

    For Otum, God did the magic.

    “I am a born again Christian and have been associated with Christian associations from my 100-Level. Their support and encouragement to trust and believe in God are some of the things that actually saw me through. It made me realise that God does not fail. So I’m calling on my friends and everyone here to give their lives to Christ and he is the key to every problem man faces,” he said.

    The Vice-Chancellor of UNN, Prof Bartho Okolo said a total of 7,989 graduands were conferred with first degrees, masters, PhD and post-graduate diplomas during the two-day event.

    With his tenure ending in June, Okolo delivered his last convocation address in which he expressed optimism about the future of universities in Nigeria, anchoring his belief on President Goodluck Jonathan’s promise to improve funding for universities.

    He described the recent disbursement of funds by Federal Government to public universities nationwide as commendable. He nonetheless contended that continuous dependence on government for funding by universities may not last, calling on university administrators to be more creative and aggressive in attracting funds from external sources.

    He said: “I foresee a future in which the current dependence of universities on government funding would diminish. I also foresee a future in which the competition for bright students, competent faculties, as well as funding from donor agencies will become more aggressive among universities. We must therefore strategise and make adequate preparations to guarantee the future survival of our university.

    “In the same vein, the global ranking of universities will continue, and our universities should no longer be seeking to meet only the standards set by the local regulatory agencies. Instead, we should stay conscious of our position or ranking in the global listing of universities, or at least in the African continent. This consciousness should inform our thinking, planning and action in the day and years ahead.”

    He identified his administration’s achievements as including, forging collaborations with over 80 reputable institutions across the world, development of infrastructure, making investments to boost the university’s revenue, and development of 72-hour online transcript delivery system, among others.

    Okolo expressed appreciation to the Federal Government and good-spirited Nigerians who had collaborated with the Institution, under his administration, to ensure a better infrastructure for the University.

    In his speech President Jonathan, who was represented by the Supervising Minister of Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, expressed happiness that peace had returned to the university following the crisis ignited by the removal of the former Pro-Chancellor, Dr. Emeka Enejere, a UNN alumnus and former lecturer, who hails from Nsukka.

    Besides, Wike said the Federal Government had kept its promise of providing additional funding for facility development in universities through TETFund and other high impact interventions.

    He urged the university to address poor work ethic and prolonged industrial actions, which affect the university as badly as inadequate funding.

    Further he said that his administration was committed to strengthening all tiers of the education sector by expanding access to education and upgrading the quality of teaching and personnel across all levels of education.

    The UNN Pro-Chancellor Emmanuel Ukala (SAN) assured that the university would continue with her due process, adding that there would not be sacred cows.

     

  • Ojukwu gets posthumous doctorate

    Ojukwu gets posthumous doctorate

    The late Biafran leader, Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, is to receive an honorary doctorate in law (Hon. LLD) from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN).

    Africa’s richest woman, Mrs. Folorunsho Alakija, is also to receive a doctorate in Business Administration.

    Also on the list are Chief Executive of Peace Mass Transport, Samuel Maduka Onyishi and Chief Executive of Innoson Group of Companies Innocent Chukwuma.

    Speaking yesterday at a pre-convocation news conference, Vice Chancellor Prof. Bartho Okolo said the award would take place at the 43rd convocation on Saturday.

    He said the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah, would deliver the Convocation Lecture: “After the Insurgency: Some Thoughts on National Cohesion,’’ on Thursday.”

     

  • Ojukwu to receive posthumous doctoral degree

    Ojukwu to receive posthumous doctoral degree

    The late Biafran leader, Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, is to receive a posthumous honorary doctoral degree from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN).

    He will receive Doctor of Law (Hon. LLD).

    Also to be honoured are Africa’s richest woman, Mrs. Folorunsho Alakija (Doctor of Business Administration); the Chief Executive of Peace Mass Transport, Samuel Maduka Onyishi (Doctor of Business Administration); and the Chief Executive of Innoson Group of Companies, Innocent Chukwuma (Doctor of Business Administration).

    Speaking yesterday at a pre-convocation news conference, the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Bartho Okolo, said the award would take place during the 43rd convocation on Saturday.He said the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah, would on Thursday deliver the 43rd Convocation Lecture on the topic: “After the Insurgency: Some Thoughts on National Cohesion”.

     

  • My scorecard, by UNN VC

    My scorecard, by UNN VC

    • ‘Allegations against me frivolous’
    Uneasy, they say, lies the head that wears the crown The outgoing Vice-Chancellor, University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN), Prof Bartho Okolo, in this interview, bares his mind to ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA on the various battles he fought in his determination to sanitise the system. He says his
    five-year tenure gives him the belief that it is about time the government allowed private participation in public universities if significant progress must be witnessed in the nation’s ivory towers.

    ON June 9, the Vice-Chancellor University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) Prof Bartho Okolo will sign off, after completing his five-year tenure in the university.

    However, the professor of Bioprocesss Physiology has had a rather bumpy ride ever since he mounted the saddle with one allegation or another against his administration.

    For his critics, some who have taken the war to the media, Prof Okolo would not respond. He told this reporter at his office in UNN last week that he does not engage his critics in a war on the pages of newspaper. His strength, he said, lies in the rule of law. Besides, he believes what keeps a man going is not the amount of criticisms against him, but his ability to follow his conscience. According to him, any discerning mind knows he has given his best to the 52-year-old institution, leaving the rest for posterity.

    “For any doubting Thomas, what I tell them is to compare the situation of this university before we came in five years ago and what it is now before passing judgment. I have received lots of criticism. People alleged that I stole this and asking the government to sack me. But while the rumour went on, we were focused on what we set out to do; and this is why we don’t go to the media; rather, we were busy working, believing that our work can speak for us.”

    Okolo said that his war to obliterate the status quo on accession of office, ran him on a collision course with certain interest in the university.

    “I have been in this university for over 30 years, so, I am no stranger to the system. When we came on board, we realised that there was so much corruption in the system, and that some people were responsible for swallowing this money; even the ones wearing collar calling themselves reverends, they were all armed robbers. We commenced with the auditing of faculties, department and even the School of Postgraduate Studies, blocking loopholes. Then, we began to catch them one after the other. Those that we caught we just shoved them aside. Unfortunately, because we did not prosecute them some of them still talk. That was how we were able to stop the leakages; and then, we began to engage in a comprehensive rehabilitation of this university.

    “They made series of threats that we will slump or even die, but we thank God that we haven’t died till today,” he said.

    He said when his distracters could no longer have their way, they began peddling rumours that he (Okolo) was helping himself with the government’s allocations to the university.

    “Our monthly allocation as overhead cost is about N18 million every month. But what we spend on public power supply alone is about N30 million monthly. This is not to talk of the countless infrastructure that keep springing up at every corner of the university. At a point, they (distractors) even began to look for money that does not exist,” he added.

    As an accomplished academic, Okolo said he believes university standard is one worldwide regardless of whether the said university is Oxford or UNN, noting that any university that dreams to be world-class, and also does not wish to be left out in the ongoing globalisation, must not compromise such benchmarks.

    Okolo said he soon found out that some lecturers indulged in certain ‘un-academic acts,’ such as sale of handouts, sexual abuse, convertion of a section of their office for business use, and late release of results, among others.

    “Before we assumed office, there were cases that students after five or seven years that they had finished, were still looking for one missing result or the other at the examination office. When I assumed office, I told my staff that this is a university and we run semester here, so at the end of the semester, every result must be available. Any lecturer that defaults after three weeks of a semester will have his or her salary withheld.

    “They (lecturers) sell handouts too. They force girls to sleep with them. I have some of the documents here. I believe there are proper way of approaching a girl. You cannot force a young girl to go to bed with you; that, to me, is also ignorance. Eleven Senior lecturers are on suspension for various allegations and one of them is sacked already.”

    Okolo described as frivolous most of the allegations raised against him. He said despite this, his goodwill and reputation got him attracted to lots of donors locally and internationally.

    ‘’Despite that we are in need of more facilities, yet, we tried as much as we can to have our specification. One key point we held on to is that we did not allow anybody to come and build ramshackle structures for us. We already have our own standard which we present to our intending donors. That is why many of the projects you see around are of quality, which will leave imprints in the sand of time.

    “Besides, we did not compromise standard or cut corners on any of the projects we carried out through our IGR. We used the best construction outfits we could afford in Nigeria, all because we wanted quality and something we can leave for posterity. We do not go through middlemen and we don’t collect 10 per cent. Some even thought we were collecting kickbacks. I’m saying this authoritatively and you can go and find out from our contractors,” Okolo said.

    An apostle of privatisation, Okolo believes the government’s handing of the running of universities to individuals will put workers on their feet and make the university more productive. His experience as the chief executive of UNN, he explained, has further exposed him to lots of the abnormalities in the nation’s universities.

    “Anybody who is earning salary in the public university system is not working for his salary but seeing it as a government’s grant. Unfortunately, this problem is general in our universities. I have seen some who claim to be professors in this university, yet they cannot take their professorship beyond the gate of UNN. University standard is one anywhere. If you have a professorial chair and you have not won a grant, you don’t have any business staying there. The implication (of a professorial chair) is on research and communication of knowledge.”

    But rather than sack the redundant, Okolo said the university began the recruitment of young but knowledgeable graduates of UNN with either first class or those who emerged as best graduating students.

    “We do not discriminate in absorbing them (first class). The process is strictly by merit! At present, we have about 300 of them doing their masters or PhDs in institutions abroad. We were able to achieve this via effective international collaborations and exchange programmes.”

    Last year, we won $8 million grant from the World Bank. With this, we were able to buy more infrastructure into our university. we were also able to facilitate scholarships for our young graduates studying abroad via our various international collaborations. I’m happy to tell you that we have just won another $4.6 million which will also go for the same purpose.

    The Head of Department of Microbiology Prof Moneke Anene, told our reporter that some of achievements of Okolo are part of his (Okolo) roadmap which he presented to a team of interviewers before he eventually emerged.

    Anene said why none of the administration’s projects terminated halfway is simply because money earmarked for a particular project is already kept in an account, and released in tranches to contractors as such project progressed.

    Anene, who also supervises some of the projects, said Okolo’s administration since inception fixed roads that were in total disrepair before he came in, adding more substations which resulted into interrupted power supply in the institution have been addressed. Also, water challenges, rehabilitation of all the hostels, increase in students’ lecture theatre, fixed interactive white boards in all classrooms/lecture theaters were some of his legacies.

    “We are building a new School of Post Graduate which is over 60 per cent completed. It will complement the one we already have. That is why the new structure is close to the old one.

    “The number of our staff sent abroad for conferences have increased; this has not been witnessed in the university’s history. It might also interest you to know that since Prof Okolo came, came, he has cleared all certificates backlog as far back as 1981. There was even a point he broke down while signing certificates. Aside, there is no classroom or laboratory where you will not find an interactive white board.

    He believes the university is not for lecturers alone, but that both staff and students must be made comfortable to give their best.”

    The Dean of Vetenary Medicine Prof Soyinka Olumuyiwa Sodehinde had this to say of Okolo: “There is no way the history of the UNN can be written without Prof Okolo. It’s a pity that some who were peddling rumours were not here five year ago to see the sorry state of this university which was to me, like a war museum. Forty years after the (civil) war, this university was still using prefabricated building made of planks as classrooms and laboratories, it was Okolo that changed all that.

    “When (former) president Obasanjo visited this university for our convocation two years ago, he said the entire institution looked like a construction site. He then lauded Okolo for not only developing physical infrastructure but also human materials.

    “Before he came on board, there was no bookshop in the university’s history. But now, we have a very big one. It might also interest you to know that our books are a lot cheaper because we signed Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with publishers so the issue of middlemen was completely ruled out. We also have the university press now. Before, we were spending millions of naira on contracting university materials out; with our press, we now do it internally, thus saving usmillions. The press also generates more money for the university because it prints for outsiders.”

     

  • ‘We are committed to quality education’

    Management of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) has expressed its commitment to reposition the institution for academic excellence. At the ninth edition of its lectures series held at the Faculty of Medical Sciences Hall last week, Provost of the College of Medicine, Prof Basden Onwubere said the university had initiated series of projects to upgrade the college.

    He said the college has concluded arrangements to launch a N6 billion education fund raising programme scheduled to hold from today till Sunday.

    Prof Onwubere said despite the impressive performance of their graduates globally and rapid infrastructural development in the college, management was in dire need of more funds.

    He said: “Within the past four years, we have moved from less than 20 professors to nearly 60 in the College of Medicine, with many at the final stages of assessment. However, we are not yet where we should be, and there is still room for improvement in our academic work and research activities.”

    He decried the challenges faced by the college, which include medical library, students’ hostels, transportation and modern facilities necessary for conducive learning. Prof Onwubere commended the Vice Chancellor, Prof Barth Okolo for starting the construction of the ultra-modern college building complex, adding that Associate Professor at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, USA, Ben Nwosu formed African Research League with nine other UNN alumni to provide funds for students to conduct research under the strict supervision of members of staff.

    Chief Medical Director of the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital, ‘UNTH’, Dr Chris Amah said in two years, the hospital had witnessed massive transformation in infrastructure, establishment of new patients’ wards and improved services, adding that the open heart surgery, which was suspended for more than 10 years has been restored with record of five successful surgeries.

    He said the oxygen plant that had ceased to function for several years is operational, noting that building complexes for the schools would soon be completed.

    A former Chief Medical Director of UNTH, Prof John Oli stressed the need for the inclusion of local languages in the medical curriculum, saying this is necessary to enable medical doctors communicate effectively with illiterate patients.

    The chairman of the Professor Chukwuedu Nwokolo Annual Lecture Series and Award of Prizes for Academic Excellence, Prof Chuba Ijoma, said every year, there are cash prizes of N50,000 and N25,000 for best academic staff and students.

    In a lecture entitled: “Future trends of medical education in Nigeria,” Prof Okey Mbonu, said the future of medical education in Nigeria depended on the willingness of stakeholders to modify the curricula with a view to producing medical graduates with the additional competencies required for modern medical practice, adding that doctors were now required to acquire rare abilities that would meet the current needs of the society.

    “We need medical graduates with excellent clinical, research, computer and entrepreneurial skills, who would possess a problem-solving and a life-long learning attitude required in community centers,” he said.

    Prof Mbonu called for the establishment of departments of education in medical colleges in the country to drive progress in medical education, adding that community based training should be enhanced to complement traditional hospital practice.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that in 2006, the college administration under the leadership of Prof Banjamin Chukwuma Ozumba, instituted the Prof Chukwuedu Nwokolo Annual Lecture Series and Award of Prizes for Academic Excellence to stimulate research and scholarship.

     

  • UNN celebrates first Ph.D. in PR

    University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), has produced its first set of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Public Relations (PR).

    Dean, Faculty of Business Administration, Prof. Geraldine Ugwuonah, said the two academics- Josiah Akalazu Nkwocha and Benedict Ejikeme Odigbo, emerged after successfully defending their Ph.D theses.

    He congratulated the duo for going through the rigours of the programme under the able supervision of Prof. Justie Nnabuko.

    According to Ugwuma, the university is celebrating the feat because it is the first in Nigeria and West Africa. Ugwuona, who announced this on behalf of the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Batho Okolo, said the Masters and Doctorate degrees in PR are domiciled in the Department of Marketing.

    She praised Prof. Julius Onah, the late Prof. Ikechukwu Nwosu and Dr. D. A. Nnolim for getting the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) to endow a chair in PR in the university in 1992/93 academic session. The Ph.D programme only started in 2005/2006 academic session, she explained.

    “We are celebrating this milestone because it is the first since the programme started, and the first in any Nigerian university,” she said.

    Also, the Head of Department, Marketing, Dr. Andrew Ehikwe and the external examiner/Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka don, Prof. Anayo Nkandebe, have advocated a project to immortalise Nwosu who pioneered the PR programme in the UNN.

    Nwosu died in May 2011.

    “Let the university and NIPR organise an annual lecture in honour of Professor Ikechukwu Nwosu who contributed immensely to the growth of the Public Relations profession in Nigeria,” they said.

    Prof. Nwosu was Nigeria’s first professor of Marketing Communications and gave Public Relations education tremendous boost during his lifetime. “His students are everywhere in Nigeria and in diaspora,” Dr. Ehikwe said.

     

  • The nonsense at UNN

    Every well meaning citizen must be flabbergasted at the determination of some shadowy forces to turn the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, (UNN) into a rustic village primary school, a far cry from the lofty vision of the founding fathers to make it an exemplary higher institution on behalf of the Blackman everywhere in the world. The battle cry in some quarters now is that an indigene of the Nsukka senatorial zone must be the vice chancellor of this institution, Nigeria’s first full-fledged indigenous university created in 1960, the year of independence. This battle cry was first heard three years ago when the race was on for the post of vice chancellor. Someone from outside the Nsukka zone was eventually appointed based on merit, provoking the shadowy forces to swear  to make the place ungovernable for him. These parochial forces could not be consoled by the fact that Professor Bato Okolo is from Enugu State, the host state of the university.

    Therefore, it could not have come as a surprise to perceptive observers that things became difficult for the vice chancellor the moment Enejere was appointed pro chancellor. Okolo, a former professor at Obafemi Awolowo University, could not understand why this foremost federal institution should be turned into an exclusive preserve of people from just one senatorial zone in the country. He could not understand why staff appointments should be indefensibly lopsided or how a university which is perennially cash strapped could provide amenities like electricity free to communities around it at a time of astronomically increasing electricity bills. Which public university has done so? Meanwhile, the vice chancellor has been facing one probe or another on the prompting of the pro chancellor.

    To save the university from further self-inflicted misery, the Federal Government decided to separate Enejere from the UNN. Hell has consequently been let loose. Every person of Nsukka extraction holding any significant position, whether in the non academic staff union or the Ohaneze youth wing, has been told to see the the action as genocide against the people of this senatorial district. The propaganda is akin to the type we saw in Biafra, marked by xenophobia, paranoia and an outright rejection of the notion of peaceful co-existence. In a well-circulated written statement in the media which should never have been associated with someone who has ever seen the four walls of a university, one Nwodo, said to be the Ohaneze youth leader,  says “the UNN is Dr Enejere and Dr Enejere the UNN”. The statement is reminiscent of the infamous declaration of King Louis X1 who said: “I am France, and after me comes a deluge!” This hubristic statement was one of the  immediate critical factors which led to the famous 1789 French Revolution in which the bourgeois got guillotined. Still, in Nigeria of the 21st Century a so-called academic would get his minions to declare that he is, indeed, the University of Nigeria and the UNN him. Have our values and sense of proportion collapsed so calamitously that there is now no difference between an academic, on the one hand, and an uneducated village politician cum rabble rouser, on the other?

    The Igboland must be in a profound social crisis. Can you imagine a group of scholars in, say, the Akoka community, shouting from the rooftops that they will make the University of Lagos ungovernable unless the vice chancellor is from their senatorial zone? Can such a thing happen  at the University of Ibadan or Obafemi Awolowo University at Ife or at Ahmadu Bello University at Zaria? The answer is hell no! The supreme irony is that while some elements of Nsukka extraction want to create the impression that they are discriminated against by not having one of their number as the UNN vice chancellor, they have carefully turned a blind eye to the fact that an Nsukka person, Professor Hilary Edoga, is the vice chancellor of Michael Okpara University at Umudike, Abia State, and that another one, Professor Cyprian Onyeji,  is the vice chancellor at the Enugu State University. How would  latter-day Nsukka ultra nationalists feel if people from the senatorial zones where these universities are sited should rise up in arms against the smooth administration of the institutions because these vice chancellors are non-indigenes?

    The UNN must be saved from backward-looking elements. Who would have imagined that the UNN Law Faulty, which once paraded such great minds as Professors Ben Nwabueze, Edwin Nwogwugwu, Cyprian Okonkwo, etc, could ever fail to meet the National University Commission’s accreditation test? The immediate past UNN vice chancellor, Professor Chinedu Nebo, the current Minister of Power, used to bemoan the fact that its medical school was publishing the least number of academic articles among first generation universities when he assumed office. And yet this is the university which up to 2001 was rated by the NUC to have the most rigorous academic programmes in Nigeria.

    As the ongoing simulated crisis at the University of Nigeria indicates, if there is any group of people marginalizing the Igbo, it must be a handful of our own folk who are parochial, backward, opportunistic and greedy. The Great Zik of Africa who established the UNN as a first class liberal university “to restore the dignity of man” must be turning in his grave in utter disappointment at the attitude and antics of some of its stakeholders.

    Enough of all this nonsense.

     

    • Ubadike is an engineering consultant in Abuja.

  • Workers block UNN’s resumption

    Workers block UNN’s resumption

    Last November, the host-community of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) protested its alleged neglect by the institution. Now, the workers have risen up against the university over the removal of the Pro-chancellor and Governing Council Chairman, Dr Emeka Enejere. The action has stalled the resumption of the university, which, like others, was shut for over five months during the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike. KINGSLEY AMATANWEZE (500-Level Metallurgical and Material Engineering) and FESTUS IYORAH (200-Level Mass Communication) report.

    ALL was set for the resumption of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) in Enugu State last Monday.

    Students had arrived on campus at the weekend and the freshers, among them, were looking forward to their registration and clearance that Monday.

    Then it happened. Workers stormed the campus to protest what they called the “unjust removal” of the Pro-chancellor and Governing Council Chairman, Dr Emeka Enejere, by the supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike.

    It was the second protest in two months. The first in December, last year, was by members of the institution’s host community, who complained of “neglect”.

    The protesters also condemned “arbitrariness” of the Vice-Chancellor (VC), Prof Bartho Okolo, in running the university.

    Trouble started when Wike’s Special Assistant on Media, Mr Simeon Nwakaudu, announced Enejere’s suspension on his principal’s order on December 17.

    Although, no reason was given for the action, some workers believe the VC influenced it.

    Enejere was appointed eight months ago.

    Condemning Enejere’s suspension, the workers protested the following day, threatening to prevent the school’s resumption if Enejere was not reinstated.

    When the institution resumed on January 3, the workers held a procession to remind the management about their demand.

    Last Monday, the protesters were joined by members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU), and National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT).

    They gathered at the Freedom Square on the main campus under the banner of Joint Action Committee (JAC). The demonstration began at 8am with prayers. Teaching was affected as lecturers trooped to the protest ground.

    A worker, who simply gave his name as Tony, accused ASUU members for taking side with the management. It was learnt that an ASUU official sent a message to members not to join the action.

    Addressing the protesters, ASUU chairman Dr Ifeanyichukwu Abada, who dismissed the text message, said the union had no reason not to join the protest. He urged the workers to continue the protest until their demand was met, adding: “Since what we are demanding is justice, our protest must also be peaceful.”

    Describing Enejere as a hero, Agada said: “The man who came in to restore the dignity of man was unjustly removed. We are asking that an inquiry be constituted immediately by the Federal Government to unravel the crises rocking this university. There is a lot of corruption, injustice and irregularities going on in this school. And we (workers) are saying enough is enough.

    “The Governing Council has not even worked for one year and the chairman is suspended. How can you suspend somebody without stating what the person has done wrong? How can you suspend somebody without telling him what he has done and then telling him to write apology letter? Is it done anywhere? How can you cut workers’ salaries? Is it not criminality? These were what the Governing Council was working against. Dr Enejere did a nice job and workers are happy. The workers are protesting that the right thing should be done and the man should be returned.”

    His SSANU counterpart, Mr Paul Obododike, said: “We are pressing our demands; those arbitrariness and irregularities should stop in the administration of UNN.”

    Obododike explained why the union boycotted a meeting convened by the VC last Sunday. He said: “A meeting was convened yesterday by 9pm. When one man is running out for his life, some of us will also run out for our lives. The university has Nsukka as its main base. I don’t know why a meeting should be convened in Enugu, so that they could round us up and put us in prison. So we said we will not accept; let the VC convene the meeting here in Nsukka. If he said this place is hostile to him, then Enugu is hostile to us. This is the reason why we did not attend the meeting.”

    The non-academic staff also showed solidarity with the struggle. NASU, through its chairman, Mr Godfrey Ugwu, said the protest must continue until their demands are met. “This protest is for a purpose and the purpose is to return Dr Enejere to his position; a panel must be set up to probe how the school is run by the present administration,” Ugwu said.

    On the fate of students as the workers shut down the campus, Abada said: “It is not within our power to ask the students not to come to school; it is the prerogative of the university to do that. We are only protesting arbitrariness in the university; we are not on strike.”

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited the VC’s office, our correspondents were turned back by the security personnel, who said he was not in the office.

    The students are lamenting the effect of the protest on their academic programmes. Freshers’ registration and clearance have been suspended.

    Stephen Onyeka, 100-Level Electrical Engineering student, said he was unhappy with the development. He said: “It appears getting a degree is becoming difficult in Nigeria; even after we have been at home for five months because of ASUU strike.”

    Florence Udeh, a 100-Level English and Literary Studies student, pleaded with the protesters to consider the students’ future. She said: “Because of the protest, we could not continue with our registration. There was nobody to attend to us. They should resolve the issue peacefully because we are already tired.”

     

  • UNN vows to maintain high dental standard

    The second yearly health week of the University of Nigeria Dental Students Association (UNDESA), with the theme: Ethics of dental and medical practice in a developing country: The place of students associations in nation building, has been held at the institution Enugu Campus.

    Addressing the students, the Dean of the Faculty of Dentistry, Dr Linda Oge Okoye, said the university was committed to providing an enabling environment for students to achieve their academic ambitions.

    Dr Okoye said the high standard of its programme which earned it the accreditation of Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN), would not be compromised, adding that management had provided facilities and adequate manpower to enhance quality teaching and research.

    The event was attended by principal officers of the university, including the Deputy Vice Chancellor, Prof Ifeoma Enemo and Provost of the College of Medicine, Prof Basden Onwubere.

    Dr Okoye noted that due to the massive educational and research activities of staff and students of the faculty in the past two years, Enugu and its neighbouring environments, have witnessed a high level of dental health awareness.

    “Since our last health week, we have been accredited and went ahead to graduate two sets of dental surgeons,” she stated.

    She said in an effort to give the students the best dental training, the university had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to run an exchange programme with the University of British Columbia, in Canada, adding that only hardworking students would benefit from the scheme which begins early next year.

    Dr Okoye appealed to the Enugu State Governor, Mr Sullivan Chime, to assist the faculty, noting that the Federal Government alone could not solve their numerous problems.

    She stated that despite the impressive performance of students, the faculty, which was the only one training dental surgeons in the South-east, required more equipment, additional hostel and administrative blocks, staff vehicles and buses to convey students from Enugu to the permanent site of the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH) at Ituku in Ozalla, Enugu.

    President of the association, Endurance Lawrence, said this year’s health week would raise awareness on oral healthcare in rural communities.

    He noted that oral care was a critical aspect of health that most people neglect, adding that after their health campaign, more information would be made available to the members of the communities.

    “Apart from lectures, which be delivered by two eminent scholars such as Prof Uche Nwagha and Dr Felix Chukwuneke, we will be presenting to the public Mascella, the official journal of our association and a website for the association,” he said.