IN the build-up to the 2015 general elections, four opposition parties came together to form the All Progressives Congress, APC, and took the word ‘change’ as their party’s motto. The new party later went on to win the 2015 presidential election as well as several governorship seats across the country.

   It has been two years since the party came into office and the ‘change’ is indeed everywhere. Every Nigerian—from day-old suckling to age-bent seniors—can truly feel the ‘change’ Perhaps, nowhere is the ‘change’  better felt than on the premises of the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, LAUTECH, which has been under lock for almost two years.

   The Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso, was conceived by the military administration of Gen. Adetunji Olurin in 1987 to meet the scientific and technological needs of the Southwest, nay Nigeria. But the school did not commence academic activities until October 1990 when Col Sasaenia Adedeji Oresanya, Olurin’s successor, signed the edict establishing the university. When Osun-State was carved out of the old Oyo-State in 1991, an agreement was reached between the new state and what remained of the old Oyo-State to jointly own and fund the school. Thus, the school name was changed from Oyo State University of Technology, Ogbomoso, to its current name.

   Both sides have kept to this agreement and things have gone on seamlessly until the two governments  began to starve the school of funds thereby making it financially anaemic. Issues came to a head mid-last year when the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, LAUTECH chapter, called an industrial action to protest the non-payment of its members’ salaries.

   Since then, students of the school—the usual victims of such action—have been at home hoping against hope that their school will soon be reopened. But their hope is fast wearing thin as there appears to be no end in sight to their misery.

   The visitors to the school, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola of Osun-State and his Oyo-State counterpart, Abimbola Ajimobi, have been incoherent in their statements on the financial crisis facing the school, choosing to deflect their ineptitude by blaming the management of the school for the impecunious state the school finds itself.

Also, they blamed their helplessness on the drop in federal allocation to their states—the most irksome of their litany of excuses.

   Late last year, the federal government released twelve billion naira and thirteen billion naira respectively to the Osun-State and Oyo- State governments respectively as part of their share of the Paris Club refund. Many had hoped that a part of this money would go to the school to settle part of its staff’s outstanding salaries, but this was not to be. A big birthday celebration in Osun-State and the payment of contractors in Oyo-State were much more important to the governors than the reopening of the university.

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   Governor Abimbola Ajimobi has probably revealed his true thought about the place of the university in his government’s agenda when he told students of the school who had gone to his office to protest the prolonged closure of their school that the school was not the first to be shut down due to non-payment of its staff’s salary. ‘Se eni ni won tin ti school ni?’ he had said. Before he went on, like King Louis XIV, to declare himself the state—the constituted authority.

   These ‘progressive’ governors, in furtherance of their ‘change’ agenda, are mooting the idea of making LAUTECH financially independent, an unmistakable  euphemism for increment in tuition fees. Aregbesola had given a broad hint of this sinister plan when he said the Osun State University, solely owned by his state, is self-financing. He then wondered why LAUTECH, with more number of students, cannot fund itself.

   My heart really goes out to parents and guardians with wards in the school. Their burden is about to get heavier when the tuition fees go up.

After watching their wards’ education get halted, they are about to be asked to fork out more by the government that promised to lessen their burden. Well, such is the hue that ‘change’ has worn since the APC came into office.

   Nearly all Nigerians have a story to tell about the ‘change’ happening in their life. It is a sad story most of the time, accurately reflected by the sorry state of affairs in LAUTECH.

Like the late Chinua  Achebe said in his classic novel, Arrow of God, ‘When suffering knocks on your door and you say there is no seat for him, he tells you not to worry that he has brought his own seat.’ This ‘change’ seems to have brought his own seat as it now sits everywhere.

Odurombi Onabanjo

Lagos.