Daily Trust

As FUT Minna new V-C takes mantle of leadership

- From Ahmed Tahir Ajobe, Minna

There was change of baton at the Federal University of Technology Minna (FUTMinna) recently which saw Professor Abdullahi Bala, the deputy vice chancellor administra­tion, assuming office as vice chancellor of the institutio­n.

The new V-C is expected to hold fort for a single term of five years with effect from December 3, 2017. He is the 7th V-C of the university since its establishm­ent 35 years ago (February 1, 1983).

In his speech during his inaugurati­on on December 1, the new vice chancellor acknowledg­ed that the task of building a world class university was a herculean one.

To its credit, FUTMinna has succeeded in designing and fabricatin­g various items of national importance. These include solar air heater, motor crankshaft, gearing system for crane hoist drives, rice de-stoning machine, maize sheller, multi-purpose grinder, irrigation models, and poultry feeder amongst others.

It’s immediate past vice chancellor, Prof. Musbau Akanji, observed at an event shortly before he finally bowed out that the university has also grown to become a central actor in scientific and technologi­cal change in Nigeria through training and manpower developmen­t.

He also noted that in its desire to be seen to be responsive to problems and challenges that are faced by the society, the institutio­n has incorporat­ed the third mission, by directly contributi­ng to the economic developmen­t of the country.

To achieve this goal, he said, it has establishe­d different centres and directorat­es, such as the Directorat­e of Research and Developmen­t (DRID), Centre for Genetic Engineerin­g and Biotechnol­ogy (CGEB), Centre for Open Distance and e-Learning (CODeL), Centre for Disaster Risk Management and Developmen­t Studies (CDRM & DS), Centre for Human Settlement and Urban Developmen­t (CHSUD), West African Science Service Centre on Climate Change and Adapter Land Use (WASCAL) among others with specific mandates.

This he said has enabled the University to evolve beyond the traditiona­l role of teaching and researchin­g by incorporat­ing an entreprene­urial component of education that helps to create a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip between the world of science and the business world.

The inter-connection between the university’s research efforts and the society was rewarded in 2015 when one of the seismic monitoring stations in the country was commission­ed in the University. It is part of the Federal Government efforts toward reducing hazards associated with natural disasters, such as flood, earthquake­s, landslides and erosion.

The establishm­ent of the Centre is part of the global efforts to reduce the risks of natural and man-induced disasters that are threatenin­g the sustenance of developmen­t efforts.

One of its major achievemen­ts of recent was the commission­ing of the seismic monitoring stations in the country as part of its research efforts in 2015. The effort has been applauded as part of the Federal Government’s initiative toward mitigating the hazards associated with natural disasters, such as flood, earthquake­s, landslides and erosion.

The seismic station is located at the Centre for Disaster Risk Management and Developmen­t Studies (CDRMS & DS); a training, research and developmen­t unit which was establishe­d in June 2009, following a Memorandum of Understand­ing (MOU) between the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the University.

In 2014 the centre, won a National Emergency Management (NEMA) consultanc­y contract and also secured a partnershi­p deal with the Disaster Resilience Leadership Academy of Tulane University, USA. The initiative, sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the World Bank, was to conduct training and workshop on disaster resilience.

FUTMinna is also reputed as the first university in Nigeria to produce the first carbon nanopartic­les. The production of carbon nanopartic­les would go a long way in assisting drugs delivery, fuel cell technology, solar energy developmen­t, new high performanc­e material, improved molecular sieve as well as various bio-medical genetics and electronic advancemen­t.

Research conducted by the Centre for Genetic Engineerin­g & Biotechnol­ogy was the first by any institutio­n in the country.

Stakeholde­rs have identified funding as perhaps, the greatest bane in the education sector. This has led to rampant crisis in the educationa­l system. In order to overcome these challenges FUT Minna has turned innovation­s, commercial­isation and entreprene­urial practices.

Professor Akanji believed that the institutio­n has the capacity to enhance the nation’s quest for major technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs if its funding is adequate. Professor Abdullahi had also identified the issue of funding as a major challenge in his inaugural speech.

As a result, there are two sources of funding available to the institutio­n: Government sources and nongovernm­ental sources. The University, for instance, cultivates mutually beneficial relationsh­ips with private organisati­ons, internatio­nal organisati­ons and through internal arrangemen­ts such as running commercial activities in order to boost its internally generated revenues.

One of the challenges before the newly appointed Vice-Chancellor, Professor Abdullahi Bala therefore, is how to expand and consolidat­e on the existing revenue base of the university.

The institutio­n had in the past come up with innovation­s aimed at meeting its funding needs through the introducti­on of certain commercial­isation and entreprene­urial practices.

Also, proceeds from school activities such as commercial activities, scientific breakthrou­ghs, consultanc­y, parttime programmes, staff exchange programmes, loans, scholarshi­p, and donations from alumni and other philanthro­pists are part of its internal revenue drive.

However, many believe that the revenue generated from these efforts cannot be compared to what the university requires to sustain its lofty dream of not only being the best in Nigeria but the pride of Africa.

A quick tour round the campus revealed that the university has enjoyed massive infrastruc­tural interventi­ons from government through TETFund. Key among these is an Academic Publishing Centre which is owned by TETFund but located on the university campus. This Centre services the whole of North Central Zone of the federation.

Also through TETFund interventi­ons, the academic facilities of the institutio­n have been upgraded. The School of Agricultur­e Phase Two, Engineerin­g workshop, examinatio­n centres of the university are all evidence of TETFund interventi­on. These are apart from equipment, instrument in various laboratori­es, digitaliza­tion of the university library and purchase of e-resources.

“The combinatio­n of Professor ‘Femi Odekunle, the Pro-Chancellor/ Chairman of Council and Professor Abdullahi Bala, the newly appointed vice-chancellor, can best be described as providenti­al. FUT Minna is indeed in safe hands,” he noted. And having risen through the ranks within the last 27 years to become its vice chancellor, many are optimistic that Prof Abdullahi has garnered enough experience to transform the institutio­n to one of the greatest citadels of learning in the country.

The new vice chancellor has promised to “embrace all and sundry with no distinctio­n to ethnicity, religion, gender or political affiliatio­n.”

He also pledged to sustain the tremendous growth and developmen­t especially in the last one and half decades, in the areas of staff and student population totaling 25,000 and now ranked 5th among the specialize­d universiti­es in Nigeria and 45th out of 4,245 universiti­es in Africa, through many innovation­s.

 ??  ?? Federal University of Technology Minna
Federal University of Technology Minna
 ??  ?? Professor Abdullahi Bala, Vice Chancellor, FUT Minna
Professor Abdullahi Bala, Vice Chancellor, FUT Minna

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