Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, (UNIZIK), will be appointing a substantive Vice Chancellor few months from now when the non-renewable six-month tenure of the acting VC will come to an end. It is expected that activities marking the process will be made public with notice of vacancy for the position published in at least three reputable national newspapers. Nothing will be more gratifying to know that the University is working hard to ensure it recommends its bests from among whom a primus inter pares will be appointed to steer the ship of the school to a safe shore.
It does not seem anything will upend the course of getting the best for the University, especially when the antecedents of those in contest are in the public space for interrogation. But more than that, the federal government’s decision to sternly apply what it calls eligibility criteria in appointing Vice Chancellors, Rectors and Provosts, will guarantee that a good job is done. These criteria will not only ensure promotion of equity, integrity and transparency, but will strengthen institutional governance in the Universities, Polytechnics and Colleges of Education. One of the criteria is that no acting Vice Chancellor or its equivalent should be allowed to contest a substantive office without first resigning the office. This is to make sure that the pattern of undue advantage brought to bear on such contests which often influences appointment outcomes is totally eliminated. Council is to also certify that only candidates with ten-year experience as Professors are allowed to contest out of which the top three contestants are shortlisted in order of merit. It is from the three that University Council will appoint the best – the primus inter pares for the substantive position.
It is expected that no Council of any University however well-intentioned will circumvent the rules in selecting and appointing a candidate to an office as hallowed as a Vice Chancellor of a Federal University. As much as Universities have their peculiarities which do not preclude recommendations for appointment to the office, it is believed that UNIZIK would play by the rule in order to maintain and possibly surpass its rating among Universities in Nigeria. The University has over a long period of time copped a reputation for academic excellence which needs to be protected by strongly recommending and appointing its best in order to safeguards its achievements. Even an implacable enemy of the school knows that UNIZIK is minded to always take the high ground when deciding its leadership future. It has never succumbed to mediocrity in such matters.
What then are the qualities expected to be possessed of the would-be Vice Chancellor of UNIZIK? Put differently who qualifies to be that Vice Chancellor who will turn things around for the school and change the fortunes of the school in such a manner as to make it a place where alumni and alumnae would be proud to identify with? Where in the corner of the University is the one who would unleash the genius of the University lurking? The answer to this question may not be difficult to provide unless UNIZIK has not decided to offer its best for the job. Though being qualified to aspire to lead is one and the ability to effectively deliver on the job is another. Vice Chancellorship position of any University is laden with a lot of responsibilities only very few can discharge creditably. It is not an office to be experimented on because of the responsibilities it carries. Professors may claim knowledge well above the ordinary run of men, but when confronted with leadership responsibilities which are way off the range of academics many very easily crumble under the weight. Ability to combine academic excellence with leadership capacity is not common among the tribe of Professors. Majority are persuaded to profess “knowledge” alone which John Cardinal Newman, the 19th century academic, writer, historian, philosopher and Catholic theologian believed is the sole idea of a University. But this may signal unmitigated failure heaving on a shoulder designed for propagation of knowledge alone the burden and exhaustive work of managing a University. It does not fail to cave under the weight particularly if not borne with purpose and courage.
What Nnamdi Azikiwe University needs now is a leader who professes knowledge in much the same way he manifests leadership skills. In recommending the three out of which one will emerge, UNIZIK should be intentional about leadership experience. A hands-on manager who has been tested and who is not coming to experiment on the job. He should be someone whose capacity for managing an organization as big as a University is well established. Managing a University requires tact and strength of character to deal with the humungous challenges not very common at the level of deanship, director or provost. It tasks patience, courage and cosmopolitanism while spurning insular and sectarian bent. It is way beyond grandstanding and unnecessary showmanship of the stamp of a unionist.
It is most unlikely that UNIZIK will want to reinvent the wheel recommending those who have no business aspiring to lead it at this critical time in its history. The fact that every candidate who has already indicated interest in the job is known to the University community will help lighten the burden of selection and appointment. Fortunately, the capacity of all the candidates to perform is not obscured by lack of responsibilities–almost all have led either as departments heads, deans of faculties, provosts of colleges, directors of centres/institutes. Their strengths are as evident to the Council as their weaknesses are public knowledge. It will be a great disservice to the University if merit is sacrificed on the altar of group interest, provincialism and greed. If the beautiful foundation upon which Nnamdi Azikiwe University was built and sustained by its past Vice Chancellors, especially the disciplined Professor Festus Nwako and the transformative Professor Ilochi Okafor (SAN) is not to be lost, care should be taken not to allow irrelevant considerations to trump merit in the making of the new VC.
By Orakwue Chikelue, a Public Affairs Analyst writes from Enugu
Peter Obi has expressed strong concern over the political situation in Guinea-Bissau, citing comments made by former President Goodluck Jonathan, who served as an election observer in the country.
“I listened closely to Dr. Goodluck Jonathan’s briefing. As a former President who was on ground as an election monitor, he noted that the so-called coup appeared suspicious,” Obi said. He added that Jonathan had described the incident as unusual, pointing out that “it was the president himself who announced the coup and relayed the details to the international community.”
‘ECOWAS was quick on Guinea-Bissau, silent elsewhere’
Obi noted that reports from Guinea-Bissau indicated the election process was peaceful, with only the formal announcement of results pending before events took a strange turn.
“ECOWAS was swift to sanction Guinea-Bissau, but what does ECOWAS do when democracy is subverted — not by soldiers, but by technology?” he asked.
‘Do we condemn only coups with guns?’
The former Anambra governor questioned whether the regional bloc would apply the same standards to countries where election outcomes are disrupted by conveniently timed ‘glitches.’
“Do we only condemn coups that are visible with guns and ignore those executed through deliberate technological failure?” he queried.
Obi warned that both technological manipulation and political interference pose serious threats to electoral integrity. “Whether technical or political, these issues can undermine democracy, stall progress, and deny African citizens their right to freely choose their leaders,” he said.
A call for transparency across West Africa
Obi stressed that democracy can only thrive when transparency, accountability, and the will of the people are upheld.
“By confronting these challenges honestly, we can move towards a New Nigeria and a more stable, democratic West Africa. Our goal must be to ensure that the people’s will prevails and our elections reflect the true desires of our citizens.”
He added that the Guinea-Bissau incident mirrors a broader regional crisis.
“The episodes in Guinea-Bissau highlight two faces of the same problem: one where ballots are overturned by force, and another where ballots are obstructed by convenient technical excuses,” he said.
“In both situations, the citizens lose, democracy is weakened, and the region sinks deeper into instability. The result is the same — the people are denied their mandate.”
IN the Holy Scriptures, the Bible captured an account of a man who was born blind. It is in the book of John, Chapter 9, that the account of this man born blind was recorded in his encounter with our Lord Jesus Christ.
After our Lord Jesus had cleared with his disciples that neither the blind man nor his parents had sinned, “he spat on the ground and made clay of the spittle, and he anointed the eyes of the blind man with clay. And he said unto him, Go, wash in the pool of Siloam. He went his way therefore, and washed, and came seeing.”
“The neighbours therefore, and they which before had seen him that he was blind, said, Is not this he that sat and begged?” Some said, “This is he.” Others said, “He is like him.” But he said, “I am he.” Therefore said they unto him, “How were thine eyes opened?”
He narrated his encounter with our Lord Jesus Christ.
Then, “they brought to the Pharisees him that aforetime was blind. And it was the Sabbath day when Jesus made the clay and opened his eyes.” And again, the Pharisees asked him how his eyes were opened, and he repeated his encounter with our Lord Jesus Christ to them.
Some of the Pharisees accused Jesus of not keeping the Sabbath and said he was not of God, and the Jews never believed that the man was born blind.
Thank God the parents of he who was born blind were still alive, and when they were called and asked, “Is this your son, who ye say was born blind? How then doth he now see?”
His parents answered them and said, “We know that this is our son, and that he was born blind. But by what means he now seeth, we know not; or who hath opened his eyes we know not: he is of age; ask him: he shall speak for himself.” Therefore said his parents, “He is of age; ask him.”
Then called they the man that was blind, and said unto him, “Give God the praise: we know that this man is a sinner.”
The man that was born blind answered and said, “Whether he be a sinner or no, I know not: one thing I know, that, whereas I was blind, now I see.”
This scripture of the Bible aptly captures the state of Abia since its creation in 1991 and the current administration under Dr. Alex Chioma Otti. Since Governor Otti mounted the saddle, there is no doubt that there is an all-round transformation of the entire sectors of the state.
Only fools doubt proofs, and you can’t contest what you see. Like my people will always say, you can only tell a blind man that there is no oil in the soup, not that of salt. But the case in Abia defeats all, as even the blind in Abia—though they cannot see—but walking along the streets of Abia will definitely know of a truth that there is undoubtedly a transformation in Abia State under Dr. Alex Otti.
It is so surprising that people now ask of the account of Smart Schools and others under Dr. Alex Chioma Otti within two years of his administration, while we obviously know the glaring truth of the comatose state of both our primary, secondary, and tertiary institutions in the state in the past twenty-four years, with unpaid salaries of workers.
Yes, opposition is one of the ingredients of democracy, but the case in Abia is that of emptiness, as the collapse of the PDP into APC in the state has been drowned with the excellent performance of Dr. Otti’s-led administration.
Governor Alex Otti sincerely understands the yearnings of the people, and it is very unfortunate that people in the name of opposition have been so naive and daft to acknowledge the obvious developmental strides of the present administration.
From Aba to Umuahia, down to Ohafia and other parts of the state, the positive developmental impacts speak volumes.
What will you tell residents of Aba, the commercial nerve city of Abia State, against the Otti-led administration? A city that was completely decayed and abandoned for years—so dirty that it was branded the dirtiest city in Nigeria. Commercial activities were almost grounded while investors were fleeing the city in droves.
What will you say about the ever-abandoned Port Harcourt, Ohanku, Obohia, and other numerous roads already done and commissioned by the present administration and many ongoing ones? Aba has today, under Dr. Alex Chioma Otti, turned out to be the cleanest city in the country, with new roads and street lights restoring nightlife and a beehive of business activities. What a transformation!
Enyimba International Hotel, Abia State, inherited from the old Imo State under the government of the late Sam Mbakwe, which had been politicised by previous administrations, is now undergoing speedy reconstruction.
A former commissioner in Abia State under the previous administration, who hails from Ugwunagbo LGA of the state and has decamped to the APC, couldn’t hide his observations last week at Alaoji Flyover after plying through the Port Harcourt road on his way to his village. He stopped and said, “Of a truth, Otti has done well. Just in three minutes we are here—a movement that used to take over an hour due to the bad road.”
Although a few months ago he was in the media questioning the present administration, he couldn’t but acknowledge that Governor Otti has changed the state.
In fact, for Abia people during the last visit of the president, who was represented by the Minister of Works, Sen. Dave Umahi, to commission projects in the state, they were not bothered about who came and who didn’t come; neither did they consider the envious comments from desperate opposition. The people are satisfied and happy with the Governor’s achievements.
Governor Otti’s name represents a phenomenon and an identity of a new Abia. The love the people show wherever he goes clearly demonstrates the positive impact his administration is making on the lives of the people. Residents of Abia State are seeing infrastructural development never witnessed in the state since its creation in 1991.
How can you explain the joy of the people of Abia North Senatorial Zone, with massive road construction from Umuahia in Abia Central to Ohafia and Arochukwu, defying the old saying that “Onwegi uzo di nso e gi aga Arochukwu,” meaning, “There is no shortcut to Arochukwu.” Today, Governor Otti has dismissed that message, as you can now access the city of Arochukwu with ease as a result of good road construction.
What a story! That the “mami water” River Goddess of Omenuko Bridge saw Governor Alex Otti and disappeared. Today, Omenuko Bridge, which has defied all the previous administrations in the state, has been constructed by Governor Alex Otti. The list of road construction and other developmental works in all sectors of the state is inexhaustible.
Just last week, the Governor flagged off the construction of the 25km Umuahia–Ikot Ekpene and the 13.5km Ariam–Usaka roads, both in Abia Central Senatorial Zone of the state. The road construction momentum is at its peak in all the senatorial zones of the state. Like one will say in all these projects—just come to Abia and see. The people of the state have never seen it so before.
For Barr. Evelyn Nnenna Ekeke, an Abia indigene born in Aba, where her parents live till date, she left Aba in 2016 for further studies in the UK and only returned last week. Their house is located on Ohanku Road in Aba. She was dumbfounded on entering Ohanku Road by 8 p.m. last Sunday. She couldn’t believe her eyes. She said, “This can’t be Ohanku Road. No, certainly not Aba. Can someone help tell me where we are?”
You can’t blame her. The transformation on that road is massive. Businesses and lives have been restored, and by the time the Governor completes that road to Ohanku village in Ukwa East LGA, three local governments—Aba South, Ugwunagbo, and Ukwa East—would have been connected.
You may not like the person of Dr. Alex Otti. His administration’s style may also not favour you. He may not be “sharing money,” as has been complained in some quarters. He may be governing the state from his bedroom, sitting room, or kitchen. No matter the imperfections, defects, and lapses pinned by the opposition against his administration, one indispensable fact remains: you cannot deny the momentous impact of his developmental strides.
So for Abia indigenes who have suffered many years of neglect, infrastructural decay, and underdevelopment, whatever you say against the present administration of Dr. Alex Otti is immaterial. Whatever allocations the Governor is getting from Abuja does not matter, because they can visibly see proofs to justify the funds. So like the biblical blind man in the Bible—whether Dr. Alex Otti be a sinner or not, Ndi Abia know not—all they can say with the overall transformation currently ongoing across all sectors of the state is:
“Leave Dr. Alex Otti for us till 2031, because whereas we were blind, now we can see.”
The Saturday, November 8 governorship election in Anambra State has turned into a no-contest because the opposition is in total disarray. Like dazed boxers, the opposition candidates have apparently thrown in the towel in surrender. It is only the incumbent governor, Professor Chukwuma Charles Soludo, CFR, who is campaigning in all parts of the state, and getting all-round endorsements. His ill-assorted challengers are nowhere to be found.
Soludo’s opponents can be likened to UFOs, that is, Unidentified Flying Objects who are neither here nor there. They can’t count on any supporters whatsoever to power their campaigns. There is internal dissension in each of the opposition parties because they had organized fractious primaries as opposed to the seamless consensus agreement of the ruling All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) that returned Governor Soludo without any dissent from any angle.
The approval rating of Governor Soludo is sky-high while the opposition is next to sub-zero in the approval, or lack thereof, of Ndi Anambra. Soludo’s incomparable achievements in his first tenure have put him way ahead of the crippled opposition.
It has never happened in the history of Anambra elections seeing the opposition in such a sorry state. It is not even possible to rate any of them as the leading opposition candidate among the pack. The one that boasted of taking Anambra to the centre has been roundly snubbed by the Presidency and the leading lights of the party at the centre. The other opposition wannabe went to court to swear to an affidavit that he would serve for only one term – even as had never been seen campaigning to win the election anywhere! Another opposition prankster heaped two tipper loads of sand on a road that Governor Soludo had already awarded a contract for its construction!
These opposition underdogs ought to understand that ruling AnambraState must not be reduced to play-acting of the Onuku Odeku style! It is obviously too late in the day for them to get serious and busy.
It has to be admitted that Governor Soludo is a tough act to follow or match or challenge. The over-matched opposition candidates are like flyweights in the ring with a champion heavyweight at the height of his powers. The poor candidates are only gasping for breath, dying for oxygen while looking for the towel to throw in surrender.
Governor Soludo is to all intents and purposes the consensus candidate of all Ndi Anambra across the political party lines and divides. Remarkably, the former Governor of Anambra State, former Senator and former Minister, Dr. Chris Nwabueze Ngige, had in Abuja told Governor Soludo: “Odenigbo, carry go!”
The straight-talking no-nonsense Minister of Works, Engr. David Umahi, did not mince words when telling the opposition candidates seeking to take over the government in Anambra to wait till 2029, that is, after Soludo had completed his second term!
The fact that all communities are donating in support of the hardworking governor who they crowned as Oluatuegwu has completely overwhelmed the opposition. It is foolhardy doing battle with a “man who no dey fear work”! As Soludo works tirelessly, the opposition is caught napping in deep slumber.
The unpopularity of the Anambra opposition is writ large in the fact that the people have thus far stoutly refused to deploy their resources in support of their fledgling campaigns. Their talk of planning to rig the election flies in the face of reason because one must establish a presence first before hoping to rig an election! Even the hope of buying voters cannot fly because Anambra voters are too sophisticated to be bought by F9 failures and fake PhD wrecks.
Soludo stands tall as the one qualified candidate who basks in unsolicited and spontaneous support of the people of Anambra State. Pundits across board are predicting that Soludo will win about 90 percent of the votes on Saturday, November 8, as well as setting the record of winning 21/21 local government areas, 326/326 wards, 5720/5720 polling units.
The opposition candidates have only wobbly legs to stand on. That’s why they are struggling to throw in the towel. Maybe they need to save face by voting for Soludo as the consensus candidate.
A tear for all of them.
Dr Udemobi is a civil rights activist based in Onitsha, Anambra State.