Showing posts with label Educational News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Educational News. Show all posts

Friday, 24 July 2015

Maryam Abacha university degrees not recognised – NUC


Executive Secretary, National Universities Commission, Prof. Julius Okojie
The National Universities Commission has handed down a hard knock on degrees obtained online from any institution outside the country, saying henceforth such certificates would not be recognised as a means of seeking employment or doing other legitimate business in Nigeria.
The commission also slammed Maryam Abacha American University, in Niger Republic, saying it has been inundated with enquiries from some Nigerian students who had been offered admission into the university.
“We wish to restate that as the only quality assurance agency for universities in Nigeria, the NUC is maintaining its stand that degrees from Maryam Abacha University will not be accepted in Nigeria”, the commission stated.
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The NUC which also discredited all part- time cross boarder education in Nigeria, therefore warned citizens against patronising online universities which offer academic programmes without physical contact with their students.
The commission’s Director of Information and Public Relations, Mr. Ibrahim Usman Yakasai, made the announcement during a press briefing on Thursday evening in Abuja, against the backdrop of some foreign universities which place advertisements and admit students from Nigeria.
According to him, the Nigerian constitution has no backing or recognition for such degrees obtained online, insisting that students look for cheap means of acquiring qualifications to avoid competition at home.
He said, “Nigeria will not recognise online degrees. Online degrees are not accepted in Nigeria at the moment; the Nigerian constitution does not even give recognition to such degrees. Those who ran out of Nigeria for study outside this country are those looking for cheaper degrees. It is either they cannot pass the examinations or they do not possess the minimum entry qualifications.”

Thursday, 17 October 2013

Police stop varsity lecturers’ protest

Police stop varsity lecturers’ protest

No fewer than 200 policemen stormed the campus of the Ebonyi State University (EBSU) yesterday to prevent lecturers from staging a protest to draw attention to their ongoing strike.
The EBSU chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Nigerian Universities (ASUU) planned a peaceful protest on the streets of Abakaliki, the state capital, but policemen prevented them from going out of the campus.
The police team that stopped the lecturers claimed to be acting on directives from Commissioner of Police Maigari Dikko.
Lecturers have been on strike for almost four months, claiming government has failed to honour agreements it reached with ASUU on proper funding of education in the country.
The policemen, who were armed with AK 47 rifles, tear gas and other anti -riot accessories, closed the gate leading to the College of Agricultural Science, (CAS) campus of the university from where the procession was to take off.
They also denied other members of the public and students who had other reasons for coming to the school entrance into the campus.
Policemen were also drafted to the other three campuses of the institution: the permanent site campus at Ezzamgbo and those at Ishieke and Presco. They claimed to have stopped the procession from going out of the campus to prevent hoodlums from hijacking the protest.
The police were supported by other security agencies including State Security Service, (SSS) operatives.
The EBSU-ASUU members however staged the protest within the campus. They carried placards with the inscriptions: “FG: Save University Education”, “FG: Do not kill University education”, “FG: Agreement is Agreement”, “Poor University education makes every sector fake”, “Nigeria: “Fight poor education”, “FG-ASUU Agreement! FG has reneged, Say no to Beggarcracy,”among others. They sang solidarity songs.
The policemen did a stop-and-search at the gate of the campus and retrieved all the materials and flyers from both the academic and non-academics staff .
Addressing the union members, the Divisional Police Officer in-charge of Ekumenyi Police Station, W.A Mustapha, as ASP, said the directive to stop the rally was given by the Commissioner of Police adding that the application made by the union for the rally was not approved by the commissioner.
He said: “I was directed by the police commissioner to come here and ensure that you restrict your rally within the school premises. There are other citizens of this country going about their normal businesses and we won’t want a situation where their movement will be restricted.”

Saturday, 12 October 2013

Educating girls could prevent two-thirds of child marriages

Educating girls could prevent two-thirds of child marriages




If all girls went to primary school, one-sixth of child marriages could be prevented among girls aged under -15 years in sub-Saharan Africa and South and West Asia.


This was one of the findings of the UNESCO’s Education for All Global Monitoring Report released on the International Day of the Girl Child on October 11.

The report also indicated that if all girls got the chance to go to secondary school, child marriages could be reduced by two-thirds in these regions, saving almost two million girls from becoming child brides.
 Mariam Khalique, Malala’s teacher from the Swat Valley in Pakistan, and spokesperson for the EFA Global Monitoring Report said: “Every hour counts– we must educate girls to help bring about changes quickly in our society. Education gives girls dignity. How can you change your life if you don’t know how? If girls and women are empowered they can take control of their own lives and their bodies. That is why education is priceless and important for girls and women not only in Pakistan but all around the world.”

The new EFA GMR analysis, ‘Education Transforms’, shows that one in eight girls is married by the age of 15 years in sub-Saharan Africa and South and West Asia.

It also shows how education can empower girls to find greater confidence and freedom to make decisions that affect their own lives. In Ethiopia, for example, 32% of girls with less than primary education were married before the age of 15 years, compared with less than 9% of those with a secondary education.
“Educating girls is one of the best investments we can make”, said Pauline Rose, director of the EFA Global Monitoring Report, “and yet 31 million girls of primary school age out of school, and 17 million are expected never to enter school at all. This situation desperately needs addressing.”

In addition to preventing child marriages, the EFA GMR’s new analysis shows that educating girls can also prevent them from becoming mothers themselves when just children, risking their own, and their babies’ health in early childbirth.

‘Education transforms’ shows that one in seven girls has given birth by the age of 17 years in sub-Saharan Africa and South and West Asia. Yet 10% fewer girls would become pregnant at an age when they should be in school if they had a primary education. There would be 59% fewer pregnancies among girls under 17 years if all girls had a secondary education.

A+ A A- Early school, later crisis... What parents must know before enrolling their kids
















Enrolling children in school at the tender age of one or two years has become a common practice in Nigeria and some other countries. SADE OGUNTOLA and KEHINDE OYETIMI report experts’ concerns, the attraction for this practice, its effects and the ideal age parents should make their children to begin formal education.

WHEN Cynthia was born, she looked plump and playful. As a baby, she was gifted with such superabundant energy that she would stab the air relentlessly with her tiny hands. Her chubby cheeks and her comely dimples were the enchantment of her parents’ guests. She had a sunny smile and an alluring appeal. Many would carry her at the slightest opportunity. She never lacked friends who delighted in playing with her.

Her parents watched as she developed a strong cognitive mind, taking in what she saw with quick, reflective understanding. As a toddler, she appeared much too attentive for a child her age. She was as considerate as she was considerable. She was no younger than a year when she fancied picking up objects with sharp ends and would begin to scribble on hard surfaces. With a suppressed grin, Cynthia’s mother, would watch her baby’s face cake into that of a serious academic as she incomprehensibly made impressions on surfaces. Her mother provided her with large sheets of paper and a marker. Her mother was further amazed when she would gently guide Cynthia’s little fingers with a pencil in writing without Cynthia putting up any resistance. She told her husband of the incredible discovery that she made.

Cynthia became the toast of many relatives and her parents never hesitated in showing off their baby’s early obsession with scribbling. “Sweetheart, Cynthia will soon be a year and two months. She is showing such uncommon skill at learning. I believe the earlier we got her in school, the better,” her mother said. “I strongly agree,” her father replied with a resolution strongly spread across her face. But Cynthia’s uncle, who sat at lunch with the family, disagreed, insisting that such step would stunt Cynthia’s emotional development. Her parents jointly maintained silence but there was a conniving agreement to carry on with their decision.

Cynthia started school quite early. She barely was eight when she was through with her primary education. Her academic feats were stunning. She enjoyed double promotions. By the time she was 14, she had finished her secondary education, with excellent grades in her West African Senior Secondary Certificate Examination (WASSCE). Her university matriculation examination was a work over. She gained admission to two prestigious universities where she could either study engineering or medicine. She opted for engineering, being a field with a dwarfed female presence. Cynthia graduated with a first class degree by the time she was 20, finished her mandatory one-year national youth service, and was employed by one of the leading construction companies. She was married at 21.

As impressively phenomenal as her educational records were, Cynthia had begun to have emotional crises at a later stage of her life—finding it difficult to cope with marital obligations. Her parents had waved it, believing that she would outgrow it. At her place of work, she was quite cerebral but she couldn’t have a firm grip on her emotional outbursts. She flew into fits; she got angry without provocation. She had once complained to a colleague that she had no childhood...having been snatched from her by early education. She complained that her early cognitive development was her undoing, since she had to maintain her academic prowess which was the only source of keeping her parents’ affection.

Early education as a big issue
The issue of when a child should begin formal education has generated much discourse globally. Early education for children is one of the ripple effects that came with the dawn of modernity’s age. In all countries, education curriculums are designed in such ways so as to incorporate the young, toddler minds of children. In the United Kingdom, early education for children has created so much concern that an influential body of about 130 experts which comprised academics, teachers, authors and charity leaders recently made a call for fundamental reassessments of the policies on early child education in Britain. The experts had warned, according to a report by the Telegraph that formal schooling should be delayed till the age of six or seven or the effects would be disastrous.

The attraction
In Nigeria, the culture of early child formal learning has found its way into nurseries. Parents argue that the earlier a child starts schooling, the better for his/her overall development. Children, who can barely walk, are whisked to schools and made to recite letters of the alphabets and get familiarised with the numeric system. They are made to stare long hours at television programmes aimed at facilitating their formal learning. Parents quickly hand over their parts to teachers in the collaborative coaching venture of their children. Crèches and day-care centres have been transformed into serious learning facilities for very young children.

For Mrs Ronke Adeoti, “We had no choice but to quickly enrol these children. Their learning abilities and their powers of retention are unlike our own. So the best thing to do is too put them in school early. How can I wait to put my child in school when he is six or seven? That will be too late.”

Mr Frank Edet shared same opinion with Adeoti when he told Sunday Tribune that “our generation when we were growing is different from that of these children. You will be surprised at the kind of these things that they know. We are forced to put them into school by the realities on ground. People will assume that you are poor when they notice that your child is still at home at age two.”

Mrs Grace Nwachukwu had a different thought. “As good as it seems to put these children in school at an early age, there are many issues at stake. For instance, some of these children begin life too early. A child has graduated from the university at the age of 19. That child gets a master’s degree at 21 and gets married at 22. Many of them are getting married earlier than that. There is a high rate of divorce because many of these children are malformed,” she said.

A lecturer at the University of Lagos, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, argued that it had gradually become difficult to teach these children character wise. “Many of the candidates that are admitted to our universities today are children. Some of them are as young as 14. For God’s sake, they are just too young. The government-owned universities are placing age-restrictions but the private universities are not doing so.

“In fact in many cases, we have problems shaping these children morally. They are academically sound but morally bankrupt. It is sad. We do understand that they are pushed to start early by their parents.”

Funso Ajibade, a graduate, told Sunday Tribune why she decided to refuse her parents’ pressure to go for postgraduate studies. “At age seven, I was writing common entrance into a secondary school. After that, a model school complained that I was too young to start secondary education. I had about two double promotions in primary school.

“My parents made sure I finished my secondary education by 14. At 15, I had gained admission to the university. At 19, I was through. At 20, I had finished my NYSC. My parents wanted me to proceed to postgraduate studies but I refused. Is it a crime to be intelligent?” she queried.

Formal education should begin at age 5—Expert
Indeed, psychologists are beginning to raise the alarm about the danger of early child education, noting that it is becoming a link to mental and psychological imbalance in adulthood.

Dr Alex Oyinlade, a consultant paediatric neurologist, University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, said the ideal time for commencement depends on the child in question.

“It is better to take every child individually. Children develop at different rates. Also cognitive development differs from one child to another,” he said.

Dr Oyinlade, who stated that rapid development and westernisation accounts for why many parents enrol their children too early in school, said it was better to allow a child to achieve some cognitive development before such starts a formal school.

“Where a child passes though a lot of stressors in this developmental stage of life, over time the effect can precipitate mental problems. Mental problems arise from a complex interaction between genetic and environmental factors.  Over time, in those with genetic predisposition, this could affect such children mentally,” he said.

Dr David Fakeye, senior lecturer, Department of Teacher Education, University of Ibadan, stated that children should not be allowed to start school earlier than age five.

According to him, “a major principle of learning is maturation. A child must be matured mentally and emotionally so as to be able to cope with academic work in school.

“What we are saying is that if they can delay the starting point of primary education such that children will spend more time at home, learn more of informal education and get used to cultural upbringing, they will be able to cope and will continue to do well. It is not how early they start school but how well they are able to master what they are exposed to in school.”

Thursday, 10 October 2013

ASUU warns UNILORIN on ‘plan’ to share N30b fund

ASUU warns UNILORIN on ‘plan’ to share N30b fund
ASUU
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has warned the authorities of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) not to share the N986.7 million earned allowance disbursed to it by the Federal Government until the end of the ASUU strike.
The Zonal Coordinator of ASUU (Ilorin Zone), Dr Ayan Adeleke, spoke yesterday in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.
He said the authentic ASUU Chairman at UNILORIN, Dr. Taiwo Oloruntoba-Oju, had conveyed the position of the union to the Vice-Chancellor, Prof AbdulGaniyu Ambali, that the struggle for funding was still going on.
The lecturer warned that universities should not betray the struggle by disbursing the earned allowances until the end of the agitation for the union’s demands.
It was learnt that UNILORIN workers were discussing with the university’s management the modalities to share the university’s share of the N30 billion earned allowances from the Federal Government.
Dr Adeleke, who denounced the Prof Wahab Egbewole-led faction, said: “The group had been declared illegal by the National Industrial Court. Whatever they are doing is illegal.”

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Christians protest merger of schools by Aregbesola


• The protesters in Iwo, Osun State ...on Monday.
Christians in Osun State, especially members of the Osun Baptists Conference, on Monday protested against the attempted merger of Muslim students wearing hijab with the Baptists High School, Iwo, under the new education policy introduced by Governor Rauf Aregbesola.

Aregbesola last week inaugurated a new education policy in Osun, which the governor said had necessitated re-classification and merger of public schools in the state to reflect the new education system.

The governor, who expressed worry about the protest, however, urged the people to cooperate with the school restructuring, saying the policy was introduced as part of transformation of the education sector by his government.

Aggrieved Christians armed with Holy Bible and Hymn books trooped to the Baptists High School as early as 7:30am and dislodged the students and prevented teachers from entering the school premises.

They said that the merger of the schools, if allowed to succeed, would obliterate the Baptist heritage and that they would not allow hijab-wearing students in a school founded by Christian missionaries.

The Christian protesters defied the presence of armed security operatives and insisted that they would not allow the merger to work.

Presiding minister for the 35 Baptist churches in Iwo land, Rev. Bayo Ademuyiwa, said the church had nothing against the government’s attempt to equip schools in the state but he said that the church would not allow any attempt to erase its identity and heritage.

He said, “Our forefathers and missionaries sacrificed their lives, resources and everything to establish schools, reputable schools with morals and values and that is why the Baptists in Iwo land are here to protect our schools.

“Without any doubt, the Baptists in the state are known for excellence, decorum and dignity. These virtues are highly cherished by the Nigerian Baptist Convention and this is the reason why the Baptists are making these two submissions which are, “Baptists in Iwo land say no to merger of schools and Baptists in Iwo land say no to the use of hijab in Baptists schools.

“While we welcome genuine efforts to provide modern infrastructures and equipments in schools in Osun State, the Baptists see merger of schools as a step in the wrong direction as it will rob us of our identity and bring more pains to parents and students.”

Chairman, Osun State Christian Association of Nigeria, Rev. Elisha Ogundiya, also said that CAN would not allow any programme to erase the legacy of the Church.

Ogundiya said, “We have maintained this stand from inception and we will continue to defend lawfully what belong to us as Christians in the state.”

“As a major stakeholder in the state, the leadership of CAN expects the state government to invite us to discuss this issue without delay. We wish to explain it clearly that at no time did the new leadership of CAN in Osun held any meeting with the state government on the issue of merger of schools.”

But the governor, in a statement by his media aide, Semiu Okanlawon, allayed the fears , promising that the interest of all groups, organisations, religious and social bodies would be protected  in the ongoing re-classification and reform.

He urged the people of the state to discountenance and dismiss “any untrue and baseless insinuation” critics of the government might be spreading across the state.

I saw policemen kill my dad – Six-year-old girl

   


Mariam and slain father Adeniyi
A six-year-old girl, Mariam Adeniji, is currently in shock after witnessing the killing of her father, Rafiu Adeniji, who was allegedly shot dead by policemen on Sunday.
The little girl, who spoke to PUNCH Metro while trying to fight back tears, said her father was killed after challenging policemen over an accident along the Mangoro end of Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway.
She said, “My daddy was driving home when someone hit his car. He went to see the policemen; they just brought out their guns and shot him. They then ran away.”
Another occupant of the vehicle, Lateef Okesola, who expressed shock at the incident, said it occurred in broad daylight.
He said, “Adeniji, Mariam and I, were all in his Honda car; Adeniji was driving. We were headed towards Agege when we saw a white police patrol vehicle with the inscription, OPS Attack, chasing a commercial bus. So, Rafiu swerved to the side and allowed the vehicle to pass.
“We continued on our journey but after a while, we found ourselves behind the same bus. Suddenly, the driver of the bus applied his brake.”
Unfortunately for Adeniji, he couldn’t stop his car fast enough as his vehicle was said to have hit the bus from behind, causing Okesola to sustain a bruise on his head. An argument was said to have ensued between the bus driver and Adeniji after the motorist demanded payment for the repair of the bus.
The deceased allegedly told the bus driver to blame the policemen for causing the accident.
“The policemen were parked on the side of the road and when Rafiu approached them to discuss what had happened, one of them alighted and shot him in the chest before fleeing.
“It was the sympathisers who gathered, that flagged down another commercial bus to take us all to the Isokoko Police Division,” Okesola added.
After obtaining a police report, Adeniji was taken to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, where he was confirmed dead.
Not long after his corpse was taken to his family home at Oshodi, Adeniji was said to have been rushed to a private hospital after a sympathiser claimed he saw the corpse move.
However, Adeniji was confirmed dead again at Jericho hospital.
When our correspondent visited Adeniji’s mother’s home located on Samura Street, sympathisers were seen coming in droves to condole with his aged mother said to be in her 70s.
PUNCH Metro gathered that Adeniji was an employee of NAHCO. His colleagues, who came to sympathise with the family, described him as a hardworking man.
Elder sister of the deceased, Titilayo Akintunde, described the incident as a nightmare, saying there was a need for the government to curb the excesses of policemen.
She said, “One wonders why it is those that are paid to protect lives and property that “continue to add sorrows to our lives in this country.
“My brother was not a thug. He was gainfully employed at NAHCO. He had a wife and two children. Unfortunately, his life was cut short in his prime.
“The case is even more pathetic because he was killed in the presence of his six-year-old daughter and she has refused to eat since the incident. It is a sight that she will never “forget. We want justice for him. Imagine what our mother is going through right now?”
When contacted on the telephone, the Deputy Police Public Relations Officer, Damasus Ozoani, said,  “There was a shooting in Agege area which led to loss of life. The patrol team within that area has been arrested and their arms have been taken for ballistic examination.”
- See more at: http://www.punchng.com/news/i-saw-policemen-kill-my-dad-six-year-old-girl/#sthash.Vetg0YBg.dpuf

I saw policemen kill my dad – Six-year-old girl

   


Mariam and slain father Adeniyi
A six-year-old girl, Mariam Adeniji, is currently in shock after witnessing the killing of her father, Rafiu Adeniji, who was allegedly shot dead by policemen on Sunday.
The little girl, who spoke to PUNCH Metro while trying to fight back tears, said her father was killed after challenging policemen over an accident along the Mangoro end of Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway.
She said, “My daddy was driving home when someone hit his car. He went to see the policemen; they just brought out their guns and shot him. They then ran away.”
Another occupant of the vehicle, Lateef Okesola, who expressed shock at the incident, said it occurred in broad daylight.
He said, “Adeniji, Mariam and I, were all in his Honda car; Adeniji was driving. We were headed towards Agege when we saw a white police patrol vehicle with the inscription, OPS Attack, chasing a commercial bus. So, Rafiu swerved to the side and allowed the vehicle to pass.
“We continued on our journey but after a while, we found ourselves behind the same bus. Suddenly, the driver of the bus applied his brake.”
Unfortunately for Adeniji, he couldn’t stop his car fast enough as his vehicle was said to have hit the bus from behind, causing Okesola to sustain a bruise on his head. An argument was said to have ensued between the bus driver and Adeniji after the motorist demanded payment for the repair of the bus.
The deceased allegedly told the bus driver to blame the policemen for causing the accident.
“The policemen were parked on the side of the road and when Rafiu approached them to discuss what had happened, one of them alighted and shot him in the chest before fleeing.
“It was the sympathisers who gathered, that flagged down another commercial bus to take us all to the Isokoko Police Division,” Okesola added.
After obtaining a police report, Adeniji was taken to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, where he was confirmed dead.
Not long after his corpse was taken to his family home at Oshodi, Adeniji was said to have been rushed to a private hospital after a sympathiser claimed he saw the corpse move.
However, Adeniji was confirmed dead again at Jericho hospital.
When our correspondent visited Adeniji’s mother’s home located on Samura Street, sympathisers were seen coming in droves to condole with his aged mother said to be in her 70s.
PUNCH Metro gathered that Adeniji was an employee of NAHCO. His colleagues, who came to sympathise with the family, described him as a hardworking man.
Elder sister of the deceased, Titilayo Akintunde, described the incident as a nightmare, saying there was a need for the government to curb the excesses of policemen.
She said, “One wonders why it is those that are paid to protect lives and property that “continue to add sorrows to our lives in this country.
“My brother was not a thug. He was gainfully employed at NAHCO. He had a wife and two children. Unfortunately, his life was cut short in his prime.
“The case is even more pathetic because he was killed in the presence of his six-year-old daughter and she has refused to eat since the incident. It is a sight that she will never “forget. We want justice for him. Imagine what our mother is going through right now?”
When contacted on the telephone, the Deputy Police Public Relations Officer, Damasus Ozoani, said,  “There was a shooting in Agege area which led to loss of life. The patrol team within that area has been arrested and their arms have been taken for ballistic examination.”
- See more at: http://www.punchng.com/news/i-saw-policemen-kill-my-dad-six-year-old-girl/#sthash.Vetg0YBg.dpuf

I saw policemen kill my dad – Six-year-old girl

   


Mariam and slain father Adeniyi
A six-year-old girl, Mariam Adeniji, is currently in shock after witnessing the killing of her father, Rafiu Adeniji, who was allegedly shot dead by policemen on Sunday.
The little girl, who spoke to PUNCH Metro while trying to fight back tears, said her father was killed after challenging policemen over an accident along the Mangoro end of Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway.
She said, “My daddy was driving home when someone hit his car. He went to see the policemen; they just brought out their guns and shot him. They then ran away.”
Another occupant of the vehicle, Lateef Okesola, who expressed shock at the incident, said it occurred in broad daylight.
He said, “Adeniji, Mariam and I, were all in his Honda car; Adeniji was driving. We were headed towards Agege when we saw a white police patrol vehicle with the inscription, OPS Attack, chasing a commercial bus. So, Rafiu swerved to the side and allowed the vehicle to pass.
“We continued on our journey but after a while, we found ourselves behind the same bus. Suddenly, the driver of the bus applied his brake.”
Unfortunately for Adeniji, he couldn’t stop his car fast enough as his vehicle was said to have hit the bus from behind, causing Okesola to sustain a bruise on his head. An argument was said to have ensued between the bus driver and Adeniji after the motorist demanded payment for the repair of the bus.
The deceased allegedly told the bus driver to blame the policemen for causing the accident.
“The policemen were parked on the side of the road and when Rafiu approached them to discuss what had happened, one of them alighted and shot him in the chest before fleeing.
“It was the sympathisers who gathered, that flagged down another commercial bus to take us all to the Isokoko Police Division,” Okesola added.
After obtaining a police report, Adeniji was taken to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, where he was confirmed dead.
Not long after his corpse was taken to his family home at Oshodi, Adeniji was said to have been rushed to a private hospital after a sympathiser claimed he saw the corpse move.
However, Adeniji was confirmed dead again at Jericho hospital.
When our correspondent visited Adeniji’s mother’s home located on Samura Street, sympathisers were seen coming in droves to condole with his aged mother said to be in her 70s.
PUNCH Metro gathered that Adeniji was an employee of NAHCO. His colleagues, who came to sympathise with the family, described him as a hardworking man.
Elder sister of the deceased, Titilayo Akintunde, described the incident as a nightmare, saying there was a need for the government to curb the excesses of policemen.
She said, “One wonders why it is those that are paid to protect lives and property that “continue to add sorrows to our lives in this country.
“My brother was not a thug. He was gainfully employed at NAHCO. He had a wife and two children. Unfortunately, his life was cut short in his prime.
“The case is even more pathetic because he was killed in the presence of his six-year-old daughter and she has refused to eat since the incident. It is a sight that she will never “forget. We want justice for him. Imagine what our mother is going through right now?”
When contacted on the telephone, the Deputy Police Public Relations Officer, Damasus Ozoani, said,  “There was a shooting in Agege area which led to loss of life. The patrol team within that area has been arrested and their arms have been taken for ballistic examination.”
- See more at: http://www.punchng.com/news/i-saw-policemen-kill-my-dad-six-year-old-girl/#sthash.Vetg0YBg.dpuf

Christians protest merger of schools by Aregbesola

   

• The protesters in Iwo, Osun State ...on Monday.
Christians in Osun State, especially members of the Osun Baptists Conference, on Monday protested against the attempted merger of Muslim students wearing hijab with the Baptists High School, Iwo, under the new education policy introduced by Governor Rauf Aregbesola.
Aregbesola last week inaugurated a new education policy in Osun, which the governor said had necessitated re-classification and merger of public schools in the state to reflect the new education system.
The governor, who expressed worry about the protest, however, urged the people to cooperate with the school restructuring, saying the policy was introduced as part of transformation of the education sector by his government.
Aggrieved Christians armed with Holy Bible and Hymn books trooped to the Baptists High School as early as 7:30am and dislodged the students and prevented teachers from entering the school premises.
They said that the merger of the schools, if allowed to succeed, would obliterate the Baptist heritage and that they would not allow hijab-wearing students in a school founded by Christian missionaries.
The Christian protesters defied the presence of armed security operatives and insisted that they would not allow the merger to work.
Presiding minister for the 35 Baptist churches in Iwo land, Rev. Bayo Ademuyiwa, said the church had nothing against the government’s attempt to equip schools in the state but he said that the church would not allow any attempt to erase its identity and heritage.
He said, “Our forefathers and missionaries sacrificed their lives, resources and everything to establish schools, reputable schools with morals and values and that is why the Baptists in Iwo land are here to protect our schools.
“Without any doubt, the Baptists in the state are known for excellence, decorum and dignity. These virtues are highly cherished by the Nigerian Baptist Convention and this is the reason why the Baptists are making these two submissions which are, “Baptists in Iwo land say no to merger of schools and Baptists in Iwo land say no to the use of hijab in Baptists schools.
“While we welcome genuine efforts to provide modern infrastructures and equipments in schools in Osun State, the Baptists see merger of schools as a step in the wrong direction as it will rob us of our identity and bring more pains to parents and students.”
Chairman, Osun State Christian Association of Nigeria, Rev. Elisha Ogundiya, also said that CAN would not allow any programme to erase the legacy of the Church.
Ogundiya said, “We have maintained this stand from inception and we will continue to defend lawfully what belong to us as Christians in the state.”
“As a major stakeholder in the state, the leadership of CAN expects the state government to invite us to discuss this issue without delay. We wish to explain it clearly that at no time did the new leadership of CAN in Osun held any meeting with the state government on the issue of merger of schools.”
But the governor, in a statement by his media aide, Semiu Okanlawon, allayed the fears , promising that the interest of all groups, organisations, religious and social bodies would be protected  in the ongoing re-classification and reform.
He urged the people of the state to discountenance and dismiss “any untrue and baseless insinuation” critics of the government might be spreading across the state.

I saw policemen kill my dad – Six-year-old girl

   


Mariam and slain father Adeniyi
A six-year-old girl, Mariam Adeniji, is currently in shock after witnessing the killing of her father, Rafiu Adeniji, who was allegedly shot dead by policemen on Sunday.
The little girl, who spoke to PUNCH Metro while trying to fight back tears, said her father was killed after challenging policemen over an accident along the Mangoro end of Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway.
She said, “My daddy was driving home when someone hit his car. He went to see the policemen; they just brought out their guns and shot him. They then ran away.”
Another occupant of the vehicle, Lateef Okesola, who expressed shock at the incident, said it occurred in broad daylight.
He said, “Adeniji, Mariam and I, were all in his Honda car; Adeniji was driving. We were headed towards Agege when we saw a white police patrol vehicle with the inscription, OPS Attack, chasing a commercial bus. So, Rafiu swerved to the side and allowed the vehicle to pass.
“We continued on our journey but after a while, we found ourselves behind the same bus. Suddenly, the driver of the bus applied his brake.”
Unfortunately for Adeniji, he couldn’t stop his car fast enough as his vehicle was said to have hit the bus from behind, causing Okesola to sustain a bruise on his head. An argument was said to have ensued between the bus driver and Adeniji after the motorist demanded payment for the repair of the bus.
The deceased allegedly told the bus driver to blame the policemen for causing the accident.
“The policemen were parked on the side of the road and when Rafiu approached them to discuss what had happened, one of them alighted and shot him in the chest before fleeing.
“It was the sympathisers who gathered, that flagged down another commercial bus to take us all to the Isokoko Police Division,” Okesola added.
After obtaining a police report, Adeniji was taken to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, where he was confirmed dead.
Not long after his corpse was taken to his family home at Oshodi, Adeniji was said to have been rushed to a private hospital after a sympathiser claimed he saw the corpse move.
However, Adeniji was confirmed dead again at Jericho hospital.
When our correspondent visited Adeniji’s mother’s home located on Samura Street, sympathisers were seen coming in droves to condole with his aged mother said to be in her 70s.
PUNCH Metro gathered that Adeniji was an employee of NAHCO. His colleagues, who came to sympathise with the family, described him as a hardworking man.
Elder sister of the deceased, Titilayo Akintunde, described the incident as a nightmare, saying there was a need for the government to curb the excesses of policemen.
She said, “One wonders why it is those that are paid to protect lives and property that “continue to add sorrows to our lives in this country.
“My brother was not a thug. He was gainfully employed at NAHCO. He had a wife and two children. Unfortunately, his life was cut short in his prime.
“The case is even more pathetic because he was killed in the presence of his six-year-old daughter and she has refused to eat since the incident. It is a sight that she will never “forget. We want justice for him. Imagine what our mother is going through right now?”
When contacted on the telephone, the Deputy Police Public Relations Officer, Damasus Ozoani, said,  “There was a shooting in Agege area which led to loss of life. The patrol team within that area has been arrested and their arms have been taken for ballistic examination.”
- See more at: http://www.punchng.com/news/i-saw-policemen-kill-my-dad-six-year-old-girl/#sthash.Vetg0YBg.dpuf

Wednesday, 2 October 2013

Yobe attack: Expert seeks more security in schools




Security expert, Dr. Ona Ekhomu, has urged the government to tighten security in schools in Yobe, Borno and Adamawa states.

Ekhomu stated this while reacting to the killing of 40 students of the College of Education Gujba, Yobe State, on September 29, a statement said on Tuesday.

He said it was not mere coincidence that the massacre of 40 students in Federal Polytechnic Mubi in Adamawa State occurred on October 1st 2012, while the massacre of 40 students in College of Agriculture Gujba occurred on September 29, 2013.

He described it as “a horrific independence anniversary present from Boko Haram to the nation.”
Ekhomu, who is also the Chairman of the School of Management and Security, said fortifying schools in the affected states was necessary to prevent future terrorist attacks on schools.

He also advised that schools in border states such as Kano, Jigawa, Bauchi, Gombe and Taraba should receive enhanced physical security as displaced Boko Haram terrorists might select them and carry out attacks.

While describing the latest attack as an unacceptable and unfortunate incident carried out by a “bunch of cowards,” Ekhomu urged the government to stop lamenting over the intentional attacks on schools which are “soft targets” by Boko Haram.

He said rather, schools should be strengthened against surprise terrorist attacks by improved physical security measures.

He said, “The government must adopt reliable preventative physical security measures in order to safeguard schools and students.

Such measures are school lockdown protocols, metal doors in dormitories and classrooms, skill drills for students, faculty and staff in reacting to active-shooter/terrorist incident, use of security dogs to patrol and detect imminent terrorist attacks.

“Installation of air raid sirens in schools which may be activated when a school is under attack – to alert the students about the emergency and attract military patrols to the school in distress is also advised.”

Ekhomu, who is also the President of the Association of Industrial Security and Safety Operators of Nigeria, explained that the physical security measures were cost effective and would save precious lives.

He said that when churches were consistently targeted by Boko Haram, the policy response was to strengthen security around churches with concrete bollards, remote parking, use of metal detectors and increased security surveillance.

He said that those measures drastically curtailed the incessant attacks on churches.

He said, “It is my professional opinion that providing layered security measures for schools would deter, delay and deny future BH attacks on schools.”

Honour agreement with ASUU, group tells FG


National President, ASUU, Nasir Issa-Fagge
Some former students’ leaders have called on the Federal Government to honour the agree
ment it entered with the Academic Staff Union of Universities to save the educational sector from collapse.
The ex-students’ leaders, who spoke on Tuesday under the auspices of the Past Rivers State Students’ Leaders’ Forum, explained that though the Federal Government had continued to appeal for the understanding of the striking lecturers, it was necessary for the government to show more commitment toward resolving the problem.

Chairman of PARSLEAF, Mr. Amakiri Amakuro, told newsmen in Port Harcourt that the disagreement between ASUU and the Federal Government would have been resolved if government had acted swiftly on the warning notice from the union.
Amakuro also charged ASUU, other unions in the nation’s tertiary institutions and stakeholders in the educational sector to embrace peace and return to the negotiating table with government in the interest of the country.

“We appreciate the Federal Government’s appeals for understanding and commitment to meeting ASUU’s demand. We, however, call on the Federal Government to make further commitment to honouring the agreement entered into with ASUU in order to save the educational system from total collapse.

“We also call on the leadership of ASUU to explore other means of engaging with government in drawing their attention as the option of strike is no longer fashionable and acceptable.

“If strike must be used, it should not last for more than a few hours as is the practice in developed countries. We passionately appeal to the Federal Government, ASUU and other stakeholders in the educational sector to sheathe their swords,” he said.

Friday, 20 September 2013

Sambo Takes over Negotiation with ASUU

0905F02.Namadi-Sambo.jpg - 0905F02.Namadi-Sambo.jpg

Vice-President, Alhaji Namadi Sambo
The Vice-President, Alhaji Namadi Sambo,  Thursday took over the negotiation with the striking Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), in a move to end the lingering strike by the union.
The new development  was the outcome of the deliberations between Sambo and ASUU's delegation held behind closed doors in the State House for about two hours last night.
At the end of the meeting between the vice-president and representatives of ASUU, the contending parties  refused to reveal details of the discussions, hence leaving journalists to guess if the meeting was fruitful or not.
Speaking to journalists after the meeting, ASUU president, Nasir Isa Fagge, noted that the union needed to discuss their meeting with their members and get back to the government.
Asked to assure Nigerians on early resolution of the crisis, Fagge insisted that as a good messenger, he would only report back to the larger ASUU body.
He also refused to divulge the details of government's fresh offer.
Also speaking, supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike, assured Nigerians that students would soon return to school as government was ready to make sure all the contending issues are resolved as soon as possible.
Others in the meeting include former ASUU presidents, Dr. Dipo Fasina and Dr. Abdullahi Sule-Kano.
Also in attendance were the Vice-Chancellors of Bayero University Kano (BUK), University of Ibadan (UI) and Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University (ATBU) Bauchi, Profs. Abdulrasheed Abubakar, Isaac Adewole and Muhammed Hamisu Muhammed.
The Excutive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof. Julius Okojie was also at the meeting.
Benue State Governor, Gabriel Suswam's committee had been in charge of the negotiations since the beginning of the strike about three months ago with ASUU.
Meanwhile, the  Committee of Pro-Chancellors of Nigerian Federal Universities (CPC) has appealed to ASUU to end the strike and return to the classrooms.
The committee, composed by Chairman of Governing Councils,  said the government had shown commitment to the causes pursued by the union by sourcing funds for the disbursement of N130 billion for infrastructure and payment of earned allowances of the lecturers.
In a communique issued at the end of its meeting in Abuja to deliberate on the lingering strike, the CPC said it had received the assurances of President Goodluck Jonathan to provide the balance of the shortfall of the earned allowances if any, only after due verification by councils on those entitled to the allowances.
The communique issued yesterday and signed by the Chairman of the CPC, Prof. Kimse Okoko, added that the government had promised to consistently make budgetary and non-budgetary funds for the revitalisation of the universities from 2014.
"However, and as we all know, appropriation of funds fall within the purview of the National Assembly and that is where we all, including ASUU will have to appeal to, to ensure that adequate funds are appropriated," it read.
It listed the issues in the 2009 FG/ASUU Agreement, which have already been addressed.
These include consolidated salary structure for all teaching and non-teaching staff since 2009, amendment to pensionable retirement age of academics and registration of Nigerian Universities Pension Management Company (NUPEMCO) with N250 million contribution by the FG.
Other addressed issued are assistance for state universities through federal intervention agencies and  national health insurance scheme among others.

Thursday, 19 September 2013

As the ASUU strike lingers…

As the ASUU strike lingers…
ASUU strike
Most students in public universities across the country would not forget July 1, 2013 in a hurry. It was the date the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) commenced the ongoing industrial action. What was thought to be a “mere police action” that would be addressed in days has now lingered for close to three months. It has taken the backstage as the concern of the polity is the crisis rocking the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) which is far in our “national interest” than the ramblings of a couple of bearded professors and lecturers who know next to nothing about ‘the delicate art of governance’.
Since the commencement of the industrial action, there have been many calls on the lectures to return to the classroom. Among such calls, one seems to always stand out because it has become a refrain each time there is a strike. That is, ‘ASUU should devise other means, apart from strike, to compel the government to honour the 2009 agreement’. Unfortunately, the proponents of ‘other means’ have not come out with suggestions or ideas about how to engage the government to honour the agreement. There are even calls for ASUU to be proscribed.
A dangerous dimension to the strike, which I feel will not be in the nation’s interest, is its politicisation. I read some reports in the papers where some politicians were insinuating that ASUU has been infiltrated by the opposition! Can you beat that! We have a dubious penchant in this country for trivialising very serious issues. It is quite sad that avoidable industrial action is always allowed to spell further doom for our epileptic education system. More worrisome to me is the stance of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS); a body that has allowed the quest for money and power to rob it of its constitutional duties to Nigerian youths whose future is being mortgaged on a daily basis.
It is disheartening that NANS could even wait on ASUU to always declare a strike to compel the government to fund the universities. NANS, as far as I’m concerned, cares less about the products of the Nigerian universities who have been described as “half baked” “unemployable” etc by both local and foreign employers.
The association took to the streets recently in Ado Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, threatening to shut activities in the nation’s private universities if the strike by ASUU is not called off and public universities re-opened. They poured invectives on the Federal Government for failing to honour the agreement it entered into with ASUU since 2009.
Asafon Sunday, Director of Action and Mobilisation, NANS, Southwest, who spoke on behalf of his colleagues, was quoted as saying that between 2000 and 2011, the Nigerian government earned about N48.48 trillion from the sale of oil alone, against N3.10 trillion earned between 1979 and 1999. This, he said, is apart from the N5.12 trillion raked in from taxes by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) in the 2012 financial year alone. The association, therefore, submitted that the excuse that the country does not have the wherewithal to fund public varsities does not hold water. Good analysis and submission. But should such submission be presented on the streets of Ado Ekiti? Don’t they know the way to the National Assembly?
They didn’t stop there. Accusing the government of being insensitivity to the plight of students in public universities, the student body concluded that swooping on private universities, where it believes the children of the elite and government officials are would drive home their point. They vowed to “mobilise and disrupt academic activities in the private universities because it is the sons and daughters of the rich that are in these schools.”
Anyone familiar with this column knows where I stand on this issue. Millions of Nigerians – me included – sympathise with NANS, the affected undergraduates, their parents and their guardians. Who, in his or her right mind, will be oblivious to their frustrations? Without mincing words, the lingering ASUU strike is a national embarrassment and a shameful burden on a nation that has carefully removed the word ‘shame’ from its lexicon.
Endless strikes in the nation’s educational system are an unfortunate development that Nigeria has started paying dearly for. However, the threat to shut down private universities, if I’m to lend my voice is ill advised from an association that has been fragmented for years and lacks the intellectual depth and comportment to champion the cause of students in Nigeria. Will shutting down these institutions solve the problems in our education sector?
Are they not aware that private universities are private business concerns? It will be illegal and indefensible to disrupt their activities. The private universities have also not broken any laws by continuing to run their academic sessions while public institutions remain under lock and key. Apparently bent on educating these student, Prof. James Makinde, President and Vice Chancellor of Babcock University, pointed out recently that the rules guiding public and private universities are different, although they both serve the same purpose. The VC put the matter in a clearer perspective when he explained that it would be ridiculous for anyone to call for the closure of private telecommunications operators such as MTN, Globacom and Airtel because the government-owned NITEL is shut.
I am aware that emotions are running wild and the anger of students in public university is based on the premise that the children of government officials attend these private schools. If, indeed, this were so, what would the student leaders do about foreign institutions to which Nigeria’s elites also send their wards? Will NANS go to the United States of America and shut down Harvard University or to Ghana to shut down University of Ghana for ‘harbouring’ elite Nigerian students?
My advice to NANS (which faction of NANS are we even talking about here) is to avoid any action that could lead to a breakdown of law and order which is bound to happen if they activate their threat. It will gladden my heart if the association first puts its house in order and look at the crisis holistically. If the body was united, there is nothing stopping them from preparing a well written position paper backed with all the facts necessary and lay siege on the national assembly to force them to deliberate on the issue. They can remain there until their demands are met. This can be done peacefully without recourse to violence because it is their constitutional right to express themselves as the constitution grants freedom of speech and lawful assembly to Nigerians.
As things stand at the moment, most Nigerians do not even know what the issues are anymore. They only would have expected that the quality education President Jonathan and some of his ministers were exposed to should help them to deal with the numerous problems that the 2009 FG/ASUU agreement seeks to address. The government seems to have lost direction over the matter. Attitude and utterances about ASUU strike suggest they have no answer to the rot that has eaten deep into our universities.
And the rot may continue as thoughts are strictly focused on 2015. Let’s not fool ourselves, honouring the 2009 FG/ASUU agreement is gradually becoming a non-issue. What is N1.3trillion in comparison to the jets at the presidential fleet? The amount politicians are now spending on political jamboree would have up graded facilities in some universities and bought hundreds of thousands of computers.
Have those in government thought about the effect of the rot on our campuses and its implication for nation building? We have a system that believes and promotes dysfunctional learning. Apart from older generation of teachers, many of the millennium lecturers in both public and private universities are products of a defective system. How and what they deliver in classes is what the system gave them. The trend is continuing and we shall soon have these millennium lecturers as professors and university administrators. One wonders what quality these ones will bring into the system. As it stands, our university education system has placed a lot of importance on academic excellence to the detriment of proper tutelage.
Don’t get me wrong; academic excellence is top priority but achieving such grades by students and not minding if the facility is in place for proper tutelage is the question here. Excellence in exam is what the government and parents use to gauge the learner and ultimately determine the failure or success of an individual. Neither the government nor the parents care to know how defective the system is. The culture of first class degree certificate at all costs is a sad reality which has resulted in the prevalence of social and political evils such as corruption, moral decadence and leadership failure. How sad.