EKSU: Oyebanji Promises Intervention through Collaboration with Stakeholders

Governor Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji

Governor Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji

 Gbenga Sodeinde in Ado Ekiti

Ekiti State Governor, Mr. Biodun Oyebanji has said his administration would reposition Ekiti State University, Ado- Ekiti, as a centre of academic excellence with strategic collaboration with the university’s Council, management, unions, students body, parents and other stakeholders.
The governor stated this at the weekend, while receiving a delegation of the National Association of Nigeria Students (NANS) led by its Vice President, Mr. Akinteye Babatunde in his office.


He said he had to constitute the university council after rigorous but careful consultation and came up with people he believed could add value to the institution and help solve the myriad of problems bedeviling it.


He assured that his government would do what was administratively possible to return EKSU to its pride of place and save it from total collapse as he would not want to be seen as usurping the power and responsibility of the university council and that of management.
On their part, the NANS leadership sought the intervention of the governor in the tuition fee issue in the university.
Oyebanji, who is also the Visitor to the University identified what he called, “politicisation of school fees” by some political leaders as one of the sources of crises in the university.


He said a situation where school fees were reduced for political reasons without recourse to or consultation with council and management in order to arrive at a realistic fees chargeable would always lead to crisis.
He stressed the need for all the stakeholders of the institution to have a meeting where the development and repositioning of the institution would be discussed so as to bring an end to all challenges once and for all.


Oyebanji, who noted that the institution was without electricity supply for more than 10 years, promised to restore electricity supply to the institution through the state owned Independent Power Project (IPP) as well as the timely completion of the 12kilometer road from Ado-Ekiti through the university gate to Iworoko, Ekiti, to make the campus more conducive for academic work.


He commended the maturity displayed by all unions in the institution thanking them for their perseverance, sacrifice and for having interest of the state and the students at heart.
“I’m obligated to EKSU, EKSU produced me and I’m proud of it. So, I plead with you to show patience and see what we are going to do, because I have confidence in the ability of the newly appointed council members to bring to bear their wealth of experience in ensuring that we have a university that works, university that gives you pride and which guarantee a stable educational system.


“As a government, we are working so hard to ensure that we get electricity to that place, we are constructing the road to Iworoko. Part of the reason why we are doing that is to ensure that you have thoroughfare to campus and we’ve spent billions of Naira on that road just to make life easy for you.
“EKSU is sick, extremely sick and it’s in ICU and we have a choice to either live it to die and close it down or we attempt a revival of that institution.
“One thing I can assure you is that we can’t be emotional about the problem in EKSU, students complain that they don’t graduate on time, workers are not being paid regularly. You spoke about subvention.


“We have a choice either to push for a 21st century institution or a glorified secondary school, I went to the same university and I knew how it was then compared to now with respect to quality of education not minding the physical structures.


“I don’t know if you are aware, Mr. Vice President, that for the past 10 years, EKSU has no electricity despite having students studying Engineering and Computer Science, last week I demanded for what it will cost government to extend that state’s IPP to the university and they said it will cost N500 million, I will rather do that than ask the university to bear the cost.
 “The reason I am saying this is for you to know that we have a stake in the university because most of the cabinet members including myself were alumni of EKSU.

“I have an endowment of N250,000 in the institution for the best student. So, all of us are critical stakeholders in that university,” the governor stated.

Related Articles