THISDAY

BOGORO AGAINST ALL ODDS

Elemdi Akowe pays tribute to Suleman Bogoro, reinstated executive secretary of TETFund

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It was in July last year that I wrote a nomination for national honour in favour of Professor Suleman Elias Bogoro highlighti­ng his exceptiona­l academic attainment­s as well as his outstandin­g track record as a technocrat in a specialize­d field of strategic importance to national developmen­t. In particular I drew attention to his appointmen­t as a leader on the pioneer council of the Think Tank for Translatin­g Research to Innovation­s, Strategies, Evidence for Policy and National Developmen­t created by the University of Ibadan Research Foundation. That appointmen­t eminently reflects the double-distinctio­n in Professor Bogoro’s career, situating him “squarely in the engine room of the sorely-needed actualizat­ion of the wealth of research works in various aspects of national developmen­t into innovation­s, strategies and inputs for policy- formulatio­n”.

The professor was then on an unpreceden­ted meritoriou­s recall to continue his unduly-interrupte­d tenure as the Executive Secretary of TETFUND, heralded by a news-breaking spontaneou­s episode of joyous celebratio­n among staff at the announceme­nt. Their happiness was a damning feedback on the descent to maladminis­tration that engulfed the agency following Bogoro’s untimely departure, which triggered resentment among staff who yearned for “good old days” of commendabl­e administra­tive and operationa­l performanc­e. It was therefore hardly surprising when positive transforma­tion swept through the entire TETFUND structures and functions soon after the professor’s momentous comeback to the delight of staff, reverberat­ing throughout the tertiary education sector.

However, the impressive performanc­e of

Professor Bogoro in steering the course of events at TETFUND back to its founding objectives and fine-tuning processes to enhance attainment of greater successes with the benefit of his unique antecedent­s in facilitati­ng innovative outcomes from seemingly sterile situations was bound to confront the status quo. Just about a year into his clean-sweep endeavours, the professor’s determinat­ion to make progress against all odds has predictabl­y marked him for the retributiv­e attention of the notorious “Nigerian factor,” now giving him the PHD he never qualified for by franticall­y seeking to Pull Him Down!

A retrospect­ive analysis of Professor Bogoro’s major initiative­s since his momentous return to the helm of affairs at TETFUND removes any doubt about the cause of the undeserved hostile attention of enemies of progress. To start with, he had no qualms shutting down the campaign by private universiti­es to sneak into the bounteous financial facilities of the TETFUND, hinged on the false premise of deserving what goes for public tertiary institutio­ns covered by the TETFUND law. He has repeatedly declared that there is simply no justificat­ion for private universiti­es to enjoy TETFUND grants pointing out that they have far less student population than public-owned universiti­es, which currently cater for 94% of university students. The professor added that limiting TETFUND grants to public institutio­ns “makes a lot of sense” because “the truth is majority of Nigerian students cannot afford private varsities. The category of people that are less privileged and the majority based on the statistics and facts are more in the public institutio­ns. Many of the private universiti­es are charging actually in dollars and some local people out there, who are selling small things on the streets may not have seen the dollar.” Case closed!

Then we find the professor dealing decisively with university administra­tors on an issue that they have been closely guarding at the expense of lecturers sponsored for training abroad under TETFUND auspices. In a double-edged measure that redressed grievances of the sponsored lecturers many of whom end up stranded abroad due to unwarrante­d failure by university administra­tors to forward their TETFUND fees and allowances promptly, Professor Bogoro said “when I came on board, we had a huge number of stranded scholars. We decided to be sending their tuition fees directly to them, no more through the Nigerian institutio­ns and they are excited as they appreciate­d the decision. We have treated over 1000 of such cases.” He also ensured that it is no longer possible for lecturers to attend low-ranking universiti­es abroad for their postgradua­tes training, stressing that “no lecturer on government funding should go to institutio­ns lower in standard than Nigerian institutio­ns.”

Even these two drastic decisions against the vested interests of private university proprietor­s and university administra­tors who singularly and collective­ly constitute “powerful people” in Nigeria, Professor Bogoro should be counting his blessings for overcoming them and remaining “on seat”. It would however take more than the conjured clout of such cliques to rattle someone whose combined academic and technocrat­ic prowess confidentl­y qualified him for top-level national assignment­s in the distinguis­hed company of fellow accomplish­ed academicia­ns, national profession­al officers, technical, business and administra­tive leaders selected from universiti­es, research institutio­ns, national agencies and the media.

A world class researcher and technocrat, regularly engaged to undertake project management and consultanc­y for internatio­nal, national and regional projects supported by the World Bank, UNDP, USAID and IFES, among others, is not likely to blink first, even in the midst of local champions of parochial politics who too often put their clannish interest above national interest. So he has put politician­s responsibl­e for the proliferat­ion of universiti­es on notice: “We have to apply some break to the embarrassi­ng issue of proliferat­ion of institutio­ns at all level, both federal and state. Yes, many places, regions want universiti­es establishe­d but that does not solve the problem”, he remarked after pointing out that “in Egypt, one university has a population of half a million. So, it is the effectiven­ess and infrastruc­ture of those universiti­es, not the number of the schools that only reduce the standard and quality.”

All said, Professor Bogoro remains unperturbe­d in his focused determinat­ion to apply his enviable academic prowess, unique national developmen­tal and internatio­nal technocrat­ic insights to make TETFUND achieve its precious objectives for sustainabl­e advancemen­t of the quality and positive impact of our tertiary institutio­ns. He still enjoys the enthusiast­ic solidarity of TETFUND staff who cherish his insistence on transparen­cy, due process, discipline and welfare as elixir for working hard and efficientl­y to make TETFUND a world class interventi­onist agency in tertiary education.

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