“In all these, I don’t think theory can solve the problem.”
Professor Onyindo
Yes, he is right. In politics, the “textbooks” are not always applicable. Theories are based on accumulated ideas over time. They are not prophesies. Young people can now abuse you, something that would never happen in the 1950s and 60s when I was growing up. But the context changed, and someone can now slap you at the age of 80!
In life, you want wisdom, but the problem is that by the time you acquired enough, there is no more time to use them!
My good friend, Paul Zeleza, faced a protest to go as VC because he wanted to change two rules—one on payment, and the other on entrance to the campus. The insults were unimaginable. I endured the agonies and pains with him. Theories don’t teach you that, as Professor Bolaji Aluko also experienced at Otueke. Wait for Aluko’s memoir! And wait for Tade Aina’s memoir, and you will realize that you and I know very little.
TF
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Moses:
A small point of correction…People actually condemned the Oyo/Ibadan candidacy politics. The PRO of UI is on this list but a civil servant, since the colonial period, must never talk.
I am a chief of the city, “the historian of the empire”, they called me. I refused to attend any of the meetings. And I wrote to them, criticizing the move.
When three people posted comments, two were abusive of those running, and one was insinuating. I declined the post but contacted them privately to remove names and insults. I love arguments and disagreements but once any abuse is inserted, I get angry as we cannot do Oluomo and Kanu politics. Had they used a different language, I would have posted them, at least that of Toyin Adepoju.
Over the issue you raised, a member of this list was recommended for sanction by the Senate—I don’t have the details. He is on this list. Two members on this list wrote extensive petitions along the line you have mentioned.
As I write, the crisis continues…. There are ongoing serious conflicts to be VC in nine places, and all of them are on the Minister’s table. Indeed some of the set with Aluko and new universities wrote a joint letter to the Attorney General that they should be considered for reelection, making the argument that the initial appointment was not authorized by Council. I was drafted to counter them, and the Minister refused to grant the request.
Alas! there is always a distinction between a public space and a private space, and a wise person knows that all what he knows must be kept private.
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I expressed my opinion on this matter when the search for the VC began. I suggested then that “there was no vacancy,” and that the advertisement of the position was a mere formality. This was so, since the power brokers in the state had already chosen a VC. My opinion on the VC selection at UI followed what happened at the University of Benin (my nephew’s alma mater).
Several years ago, the VC of the Federal University of Benin was from Asaba, the capital of Delta State. I was astonished while reading the papers that some of my Edo brothers and sisters challenged his VC-ship. They demanded vociferously that the university’s VC should be an Edo. Ironically, many citizens from this region (Midwest, Bendel, Delta and Edo) of Nigeria share a common root.
I find this thread very interesting since I am examining it—i.e. education—within the context of human rights infraction in Nigeria.
Ike Udogu
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