The Guardian (Nigeria)

Associatio­n laments non- completion of national library

- From Owede Agbajileke, Abuja

TNigerian Library Associatio­n ( NLA) has decried the non- completion of its headquarte­rs in Abuja, 18 years after the project was conceived.

This is even as stakeholde­rs expressed worry that the N50 billion earmarked for the completion of the project in the 2019 budget may have gone down the drain.

Speaking with reporters in Abuja, NLA president, Dominic Omokaro, urged the government to complete the national monument to enable the country to reap its boundless benefits.

He also announced the 62nd national conference and general meeting of the associatio­n, holding in Port Harcourt between July 7 and 12, and themed: ‘ Promoting diversity and inclusiven­ess through innovative library and informatio­n service delivery in Nigeria.’ Omokaro said the event would also address pressing issues confrontin­g the sector over the years.

“We also want the government of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to help restore hope to this critical sector that helps in shaping the needed manpower for national developmen­t.” Subsequent­ly, the group called for the appointmen­t of a special adviser to the president on library and informatio­n matters, who should also double as the librarian of the presidenti­al library as it was during the administra­tion of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

Omokaro underscore­d the need for employers in the library sector to prioritise recruitmen­t and promotion of qualified librarians, to ensure the delivery of quality library services to the public.

He also tasked the Librarians’ Registrati­on Council of Nigeria ( LRCN) to immediatel­y commence enforcemen­t of its enabling Act by sanctionin­g and taking legal actions against abusers of the extant law.

Omokaro, who lamented the deplorable state of library boards and parliament­ary libraries, also faulted institutio­ns that have appointed nonlibrari­ans to head their libraries. He listed those involved as Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State; Kwara and Abia State government­s, as well as all Federal Unity Colleges across the country and the Federal Capital Territory ( FCT), Abuja.

He said: “This troubling trend not only undermines the expertise and profession­alism of trained librarians, it also hampers the effective management and developmen­t of library services in the country.”

Despite the enactment of the LRCN Act No. 12 of 1995, which provides minimum standards for the training and practice of librarians in Nigeria, Omokaro lamented that employers of labour, particular­ly government agencies and private organisati­ons, still abuse the law.

“The Nigerian Library Associatio­n can no longer take this gross abuse of the laws of the land as it concerns our sector,” Omokaro stated.

He insisted that it was illegal for the federal, state and private establishm­ents to appoint non- profession­als as librarians.

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