Anger
 and protest on Tuesday greeted the decision of President Goodluck 
Jonathan to rename the 50-year-old University of Lagos after the 
acclaimed winner of the 1993 presidential election, the late Chief 
Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola.
The renaming of UNILAG, now Moshood Abiola 
University, Lagos, after the late business mogul, came 14 years after 
the citizens hadAbiola’s clamoured for the recognition of his place in 
the democratic journey of the country.
But few minutes after Jonathan announced 
the renaming of the institution in his Democracy Day speech, students of
 the university trooped onto the streets in protest of the new name 
though they made it clear that they had nothing against the person of 
the late Abiola.
They described the renaming as “provocative and unpopular.”
Abiola’s daughters
But the Abiola family hailed the government for renaming UNILAG after their dead patriarch.
Abiola’s first child, Lola Abiola-Edewor; 
and Hafsat Abiola-Costello, said that the Federal Government should be 
commended for recognising the contribution of the late politician to the
 return of democracy in Nigeria.
Abiola-Edewor, a two-term member of the 
House of Representatives, condemned the protest by some UNILAG students 
against the decision by the Federal Government to name the institution 
after her late father.
The university, known more by its acronym, UNILAG, was established in 1962 by an Act of Parliament.
Against democratic norms
The National President, UNILAG Alumni 
Association, Prof. Olayide Abass; a former Vice-Chancellor of the 
institution, Prof. Oye Ibidapo-Obe; all the workers’ unions, including 
the Academic Staff Union of Universities, faulted the decision which 
they described as “illegal, provocative, absolutely incongruous and 
antithetical to democratic norms.”
The alumni association threatened to drag Jonathan and the Federal Government to court over the name change.
Abass said the President did not have the 
power to change the name of the university, which he said was created by
 an Act of Parliament.
“It’s either the President does not have a 
sense of history or that those who are his advisers are not in tune with
 the nation’s law. UNILAG is the first federal university in the country
 that was created by an Act of Parliament, so if he wants to change the 
name, he should go back to the National Assembly and press for the 
amendment of the university law. He is not a lawmaker and so does not 
have such power,” he said.
He advised the President to stop acting 
like a military leader in a democratic dispensation, adding if Abiola 
must be immortalised, UNILAG, which he said, had become a brand name 
globally, should not be demeaned.
Abass also faulted the decision, saying it 
came at a time the university was mourning its late VC, Prof. Tokunbo 
Sofoluwe, and was planning its golden jubilee.
Also, Ibidapo-Obe wondered why the President did not consult stakeholders before he made the ‘’totally unacceptable” decision.
“It is absolutely incongruous, totally 
unacceptable and antithetically opposed to democracy that he (President)
 preaches. Decisions in democracy are made through consultations that is
 why politicians arrive at all -inclusive decisions but in this case, 
the President did not consult anybody in UNILAG before he foists this on
 us.
“It is a deceitful decision made to satisfy
 people who are not happy with him in the South-West. We are not happy 
with the decision and that is why the students spontaneously went on the
 streets to protest it,” he said.
New name at age 50?
He added that it was wrong for the 
President to change the name of the institution when it was mourning its
 late VC and planning to celebrate its 50th anniversary.
“Have you ever seen a man who changes his name while celebrating his 50th birthday? This is totally wrong,” Ibidapo-Obe queried.
When reminded that the Federal Government 
had done a similar thing when it changed the name of the then University
 of Ife, to Obafemi Awolowo University, Ibidapo-Obe said the two 
institutions should not be compared.
“That argument cannot stand because Ife was
 a regional university started by the late Obafemi Awolowo and don’t 
forget that it was the military that did it without recourse to the law.
 But UNILAG is a creation of the law and its name can only be changed 
through the law, not by any presidential fiat,” he said.
He added that good universities all over the world, including UNILAG, were brands whose names should not be changed at will.
On the street
Also, the students who carried various 
placards with inscriptions such as: “This is not the change youths 
want,” “Jona has no shoes we gave him bata”, “We remain UNILAG” and 
“Jonathan, reverse this decision immediately,” barricaded the main gate 
of the university thus preventing people from coming in or going out of 
the campus.
From there they trooped to Abule-Oja and 
the university campus environs, singing anti-Jonathan songs. 
Consequently, vehicular movement was hampered while commuters were 
forced to place leaves on their vehicles as a sign of solidarity with 
the students.
They also blocked the Yaba end of the Murtala Muhammed Way for over thirty minutes.
The Lagos State Deputy Commissioner of 
Police in charge of operations, Mr. Tunde Sobulo, who led policemen who 
monitored the students’ protest made a strong appeal to them before they
 allowed a free flow of traffic about 12:33pm.
Some of them, who spoke with our correspondents, said that the decision was not well-thought out.
“If this decision is not reversed, it will 
affect the image and global ranking of the university. When this 
happens, all of us, past and present students, will suffer,” Mr. James 
Mgurujwen, a 400-Level student in the faculty of education said.
Another student, who simply identified 
himself as Stephen, said though he did not see anything wrong in 
immortalising Abiola, UNILAG should not be sacrificed for this purpose.
“I did not know Abiola. I was in primary 
one in 1993 but my dad told me he loved football and had a football 
club. If that is true the President should have named the National 
Stadium after him instead of our university,” the 200-Level student in 
the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences said.
Taiwo Rowaiye, a 400-level student, said it
 was unfortunate that the president could change the name of the 
university and close his eyes to the pitiable conditions in which they 
learn.
He said, “Its clear that we don’t have a 
caring president. Instead of making teaching and learning convenient for
 us he is renaming the university.
“There is epileptic supply of electricity 
to the university campus. Just yesterday(Monday) we only had two hours 
of power supply.
“Our hostels are in despicable conditions 
and we often times attend classes without taking our bath all because 
their is no electricity to pump water.
“Besides, our classrooms are overcrowded 
and we take lectures in suffocating classrooms and all he could do to 
better our lot is to rename our university.”
Unions fume
The Chairman, Senior Staff Association of 
Nigerian Universities, UNILAG Chapter, Mr. Adetola Adetomiwa; the 
Chairman, Non-Academic Staff Union, Mr. Ganiyu Oseni; and the ASUU 
Chairman, Dr. Ogbinaka Oghenekaro, also faulted the sudden name change. 
They described it as misguided and unthinkable.
Adetomiwa said, “His (Jonathan) decision to
 change the name of UNILAG, a national institution, is misguided. It 
shows that his advisers do not like him. If he desires to come back for 
re-election in 2015, he should reverse the decision immediately, 
otherwise we will mobilise against his political ambition.”
Oseni said that all the workers’ unions on 
the campus would meet after the burial of Sofoluwe on Thursday 
(tomorrow) to determine the next line of action that would be taken in 
ensuring that the decision was reversed.
“But I can tell you that this unthinkable decision will not stand,” he said.
Oseni added that Jonathan’s advisers ought 
to have advised him to name the Democracy Day after Abiola if truly they
 believed that he was the martyr of democracy.
MKO Abiola
Abiola, an accountant, politician, 
businessman and philanthropist, died on July 7, 1998, in the custody of 
the Federal Government, four years after he had been arrested and 
detained by the late dictator, Gen. Sani Abacha. Abiola was arrested for
 daring to declare himself President-elect after winning the 1993 poll 
later annulled by Abacha’s predecessor, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida.
The annulment and the death of Abiola 
enraged the citizens. Ditto the government’s continued refusal to 
acknowledge the place of Abiola in the nation’s democracy.
Both former presidents Olusegun Obasanjo, a
 kinsman of Abiola from Ogun State; and the late President Umaru 
Yar’Adua had ignored calls for the immortalisation of the late 
businessman who contested the 1993 poll on the platform of the defunct 
Social Democratic Party.
 
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