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ASUU members are 419 – UNILORIN reacts to union’s petition to EFCC

Management of the University of Ilorin, UNILORIN, has denied allegations of fraud leveled against its Vice Chancellor (VC), Prof. AbdulGaniyu Ambali and his predecessor, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, by the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU.

Recall that ASUU last Thursday petitioned the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Ibadan Zonal office, alleging over N2 billion fraud against Oloyede and Ambali.

Reacting, Oloyede, the current Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), dismissed the claims, adding that Satan was using ASUU against him.

Rising in defence of the duo, UNILORIN in a statement yesterday described the allegations as “infantile lies, largely empty and merely rehearsed to make it look real”.

The institution stated that those behind the petition were “enemies of progress who are aghast at the pace of progress being recorded by the university daily”.

The statement by UNILORIN’s Head of Corporate Affairs, Kunle Akogun, said there was nothing new in the allegations.

He noted that, “the same fellows made the same allegations last August while shamefacedly kicking against the well-merited appointment of Prof. Oloyede as registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB)”.

“And, of course, no one took them seriously, as even President Muhammadu Buhari is not unaware of the due diligence credentials of the successive administrations of the University of Ilorin.

“What the administration of Prof. Oloyede did was what the law and ICPC directed all universities to do: that instead of the 7.5 per cent being hitherto deducted from the basic salary of workers, the deduction ought to have been from the gross emolument.”

Akogun added that the clarification had since guided the management’s action and the deductions were being credited to the Pension Fund Administrators’ (PFA) accounts as and when due, till the government started deducting from source.

“It is also a fallacy to allege that the university’s management did not carry the unions along in all these. The truth is that management met with the unions on the new development and all parties agreed that the PFAs should be credited the full 7.5 per cent.

“It was the initial under-deduction that was spread for payment over a 24-month period. This had since been concluded a couple of years ago”.

Akogun, who labelled the petitioners “disgruntled elements” and “remnants of the notorious 419,” stressed that “their activities within the last one year had been targeted at disrupting the university’s uninterrupted academic calendar.”

He urged the EFCC to discountenance the petition, noting that, “we are certain that the anti-graft agency will duly consign it to where it rightly belongs: the trash can.”

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