Ahmadu Bello University
Senate building of Ahmadu Bello University | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | October 4, 1962 |
Chancellor | Igwe Nnayelugo Alfred Nnaemeka Achebe |
Vice-Chancellor | Professor Ibrahim Garba[1] |
Location | Zaria, Kaduna State, Nigeria |
Campus | Urban |
Nickname | ABU |
Website | www.abu.edu.ng |
Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) is a federal government research university located in Zaria, Kaduna State.[2] ABU was founded on October 4, 1962, as the University of Northern Nigeria.[2]
The university operates two campuses: Samaru (main) and Kongo in Zaria. There is also pre-degree School located in Funtua few kilometres away from main campus owned by the university. The Samaru campus houses the administrative offices, faculties of; sciences, social-sciences, arts and languages, education, environmental design, engineering, medical sciences. agricultural sciences and research facilities. The Kongo campus hosts the faculties of Law and Administration. The Faculty of Administration consists of Accounting, Business Administration, Local Government and Development Studies and Public Administration Departments. Additionally, the university is responsible for a variety of other institutions and programs at other locations.
The university is named after the Sardauna of Sokoto, Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello, the first premier of Northern Nigeria.
The university runs a wide variety of undergraduate and graduate programs (and offers associate degrees and vocational and remedial programs). The university has a large medical program with its own A.B.U. Teaching Hospital, one of the largest teaching hospitals in Nigeria and Africa.
History
Foundation and first years
As Nigeria approached independence on October 1, 1960, it had only a single university: the University of Ibadan, established in 1948. The important Ashby Commission report[3] (submitted a month before independence) recommended adding new universities in each of Nigeria’s then-three regions, as well as the capital, Lagos. Even before the Commission report, however, the regional governments had begun planning universities. In May, 1960, the Northern Region had upgraded the School of Arabic Studies in Kano to become the Ahmadu Bello College for Arabic and Islamic Studies. (The college was named after the region’s dominant political leader, Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello.)
The Ashby Commission report recommendations gave a new impetus and direction, and it was ultimately decided to create a University of Northern Nigeria at Zaria (rather than Kano). The university would take over the facilities of the Nigerian College of Arts, Science and Technology at Samaru just outside Zaria, and would incorporate the Ahmadu Bello College in Kano, the Agricultural Research Institute at Samaru, the Institute of Administration at Zaria, and the Veterinary Research Institute at Vom on the Jos Plateau. The law establishing the new university was passed by the Northern Region legislature in 1961. It was decided to name the university after Ahmadu Bello, and the Kano college then took the name of Abdullahi Bayero, a past Emir of Kano.
At the opening on October 4, 1962, thanks in part to absorbing existing institutions, ABU claimed four faculties comprising 15 departments.[4] However, students in all programs numbered only 426. The challenges faced were enormous. Over 60 years of British colonial rule, education in the Northern Region had lagged far behind that of the two southern regions. Few students from the North had qualifications for university entrance, and fewer still northerners had qualifications for teaching appointments. Of the original student body, only 147 were from the North. ABU’s first vice chancellor (principal administrator and leader) was British, as were most of the professorial appointments. Only two Nigerians — Dr. Iya Abubakar (Mathematics) and Adamu Baikie (Education) — were among the earliest round of faculty appointments. Facilities on the main Samaru campus were inadequate, and the administration and integration of the physically separated pre-existing institutions was difficult.
Nevertheless, under the vice chancellorship of Dr. Norman S. Alexander, academic and administrative staffing was developed, new departments and programs were created, major building plans were undertaken, and student enrollments grew rapidly. By the end of Alexander’s tenure (1965–66), almost 1,000 students were enrolled. The New Zealand-born Alexander, from 1966, became a kind of "freelance vice-chancellor", offering his expertise to help in the setting up of other Commonwealth universities in the West Indies, Fiji and Africa.[5]
Development through the middle 1970s
In 1966, Dr. Alexander was succeeded as ABU vice chancellor by Dr. Ishaya Shuaibu Audu, a pediatrician and associate professor at the University of Lagos. Audu had been born in Wusasa, near Zaria, in 1928. A native Hausa, he was ABU’s first Nigerian vice chancellor and a northerner. However, his membership in the Hausa Christian community of Wusasa probably had some later impact on his tenure.
ABU was seriously affected by the coups and the anti-Igbo riots of 1966. But, under Dr. Audu’s leadership, ABU was to grow and develop at an even faster pace. Growth in student enrollments had been held hostage to growth and development of A-level training at the secondary school level. So beginning in 1968–69 ABU broke free from the British three-year heritage and established the School of Basic Studies to provide advanced secondary pre-degree training on campus.[6] Students who entered through the School of Basic Studies essentially embarked on a four-year program toward a bachelor's degree.
Opposed initially by some, the school proved a great success and enrollments expanded even more rapidly. By its tenth year ABU total enrollments including non- and pre-degree programs were put at over 7,000 of which more than half were in degree programs. In its first ten years, the University of Ibadan produced 615 graduates. At ABU the corresponding figure after 10 years was 2,333 first degrees, along with several advanced degrees.[7]
From the beginning, ABU was remarkable for the breadth of its ambition. In its institutions, but mainly on or close by the main campus by Samaru, ABU was creating a range of programs that only the very most comprehensive of U.S. state universities could have matched. Ranging far beyond the standard fields of the arts, languages, social sciences and sciences, it included engineering, medicine (the Zaria hospital was an ABU teaching hospital), pharmacy, architecture, and a wide variety of agricultural departments including veterinary medicine. What was called the Kongo campus just outside the old city in Zaria taught public administration and carried out a program of in-service training for local government throughout the north. The Faculty of Law was based at the Kongo campus. The Faculty of Education not only taught education courses but also managed the Advanced Teacher’s Colleges in the northern states. At the Kano campus (now called Abdullahi Bayero College) ABU taught courses in Hausa, Arabic and Islamic studies.
ABU was likewise remarkable among Nigeria’s universities for the breadth and national character of its student recruitment. ABU had been founded to be the University of Northern Nigeria. Yet, more than any other of Nigeria’s universities, ABU has served students from every state of the Nigerian federation.[8]
Professorial staffing to serve the burgeoning student enrollments and course offerings was a potential limitation during this period. In the early 1970s relatively abundant funding made it possible to send some senior academic staff to overseas institutions to complete advanced degrees. A small but increasing number of Nigerians with Ph.D.s or other advanced degrees were returning from abroad (but ABU had to compete with the other Nigerian universities to recruit them). In the meantime, appointment of expatriate teaching staff was essential and it expanded greatly and diversified in nationalities. Vice chancellor Audu endeavored to balance the goals of Nigerianization (and "northernization") of ABU’s professors with the commitment to maintaining all programs at an international level of academic quality.
By 1975, this balance was strained. The teaching faculty remained more than half expatriate overall; at senior levels still more so.[9] The development of Nigerian staffing (and especially of northern-origin teaching staff) was perceived as too slow. In 1975, ABU turned toward a much heavier emphasis on internal staff development as it adopted the Graduate Assistantship program. Under this program, the best graduates from the departments’ undergraduate programs are recruited to join the department as staff-in-training and undertake advanced training as they gain on-the-job experience. Within a few years, a significant proportion of ABU senior staff were products of the internal training programs. From 1975, the proportion of expatriate teaching staff diminished rapidly.[10]
Later development
By the end of the vice chancellorship of Ishaya Audu (mid-1975), ABU was solidly established as Nigeria’s largest university and among Africa’s academically strongest university institutions. Strong growth has continued. But ABU has been increasingly buffeted by external events and challenges. No vice-chancellorship has been as long (or, arguably, as successful) as that of Ishaya Audu. Beginning in the early 1980s, ABU was hit with sharply reduced funding as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank imposed the Structural Adjustment Programme: the value of the national currency plummeted in relation to international currencies. Staff salaries were reduced rapidly in cost-of-living terms, and funding for facilities, library acquisitions, and other necessary resources was abruptly curtailed. Further, ABU increasingly competed for students, staff and funding with all the other institutions within the rapidly expanding Nigerian university system.
In May 1986 the security forces killed around 20 demonstrators and bystanders at ABU in order to prevent a peaceful demonstration against the implementation of the Structural Adjustment Programme.[11]
Over the years, ABU has been affected by national political instability. The very fact of ABU’s strikingly "national character" (in drawing students and staff from an unusually broad range of Nigeria’s regional, ethnic and religious communities) may incline the institution to internal instability. Certainly, ABU has been among Nigeria’s universities that have suffered most from closures.
Yet ABU continues to occupy a particularly important place among Nigerian universities. As it approaches its half-century anniversary, ABU can claim to be the largest and the most extensive of universities in Sub-Saharan Africa. Currently, it covers a land area of 7,000 hectares and encompasses 12 academic faculties, a postgraduate school and 82 academic departments. It has five institutes, six specialized centers, a Division of Agricultural Colleges, demonstration secondary and primary schools, as well as extension and consultancy services which provide a variety of services to the wider society. The total student enrollment in the university’s degree and sub-degree programs is about 35,000, drawn from every state of Nigeria, from Africa and from the rest of world. There are about 1,400 academic and research staff and 5,000 support staff. The university has nurtured two new institutions: Bayero University Kano and the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University of Technology, Bauchi. Some 27 tertiary institutions made up of colleges of education, polytechnics and schools of basic or preliminary studies are affiliated to it.
Administration
Ahmadu Bello University has a chancellor as the ceremonial head of the university, while the vice-chancellor is the chief executive and academic officer of the university. The vice-chancellor is usually appointed for a 5-year, non-renewable term. The 14th and current vice-chancellor, Professor Ibrahim Garba, took office on 1 May 2015.[12] Below is the tabulated list of all ABU vice-chancellors. The number 8 in the series is a sole-administrator appointed by then Head of State Sani Abacha after a major conflict[13]
S/N | Name | Tenure | Profession |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Professor Norman Alexander | 1961–1966 | Physicist |
2 | Professor Ishaya Audu | 1966–1975 | Medical doctor |
3 | Professor Iya Abubakar | 1975–1978 | Mathematician |
4 | Professor Oladipo Akikugbe | 1978–1979 | Medical Doctor |
5 | Professor Ango Abdullahi | 1979–1986 | |
6 | Professor Adamu N Muhammad | 1986–1991 | |
7 | Professor Daniel Soror | 1991–1995 | |
8 | Major-General Mamman Kontagora | 1995–1998 | (Sole Administrator)[13] |
9 | Professor Abdullahi Mahadi | 1999–2004 | Historian |
10 | Professor Shehu Usman Abdullahi | 2004–2009 | Veterinarian |
11 | Professor Jarlath Udoudo Umoh | 2009–2009 | Veterinarian |
12 | Professor Aliyu | 2009–2010 | |
13 | Professor Abdullahi Mustapha | 2010–2015 | Pharmacist |
14 | Professor Ibrahim Garba | 2015-to date | Geologist |
Notable alumni
The Ahmadu Bello University is notable for producing numerous prominent people, and Nigerian leaders: including many former and serving state governors and Ministers. Amongst the alumni are: (In no particular order)
- Azubuike Ihejirika, former Chief of Army Staff
- Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, GCFR, former President, Federal Republic of Nigeria
- Namadi Sambo, former Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria
- Dahiru Musdapher, former Chief Justice of Nigeria
- Faruk Imam, Justice kogi state judiciary
- Atiku Abubakar GCON, former Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria
- Oladipo Diya, GCON, former Vice President/CGS, Federal Republic of Nigeria
- Yayale Ahmed, former Secretary to the Government of the Federation
- Ghali Umar Na'Abba, former Speaker, House of Representatives
- Sunday Awoniyi, Northern Yoruba Leader, Former chairman ACF
- Usman Bayero Nafada, former Deputy Speaker, House of Representatives
- Ayodele Awojobi, Scientist and Professor at University of Lagos
- Attahiru Jega, Professor, former chairman, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)
- Mansur Mukhtar, former executive director of the World Bank
- Mohammed Bello Adoke, former Minister of Justice & Attorney General of the Federation
- Nenadi Usman, former Finance Minister
- Turai Yar'Adua, former First Lady
- Shehu Ladan, former GMD, NNPC
- Jerry Gana, former Information Minister
- Idris Legbo Kutigi, former Chief Justice of Nigeria
- Rilwanu Lukman, former Secretary General OPEC & Petroleum Minister
- Nuhu Ribadu, former chairman, EFCC
- Ibrahim Lamorde, former chairman, EFCC
- Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, Governor Kaduna State
- Donald Duke, former Cross River state governor
- Isa Yuguda, former Governor, Bauchi State
- Umaru Tanko Al-Makura, Governor, Nasarawa State
- Shamsudeen Usman, former Minister of National Planning
- Ibrahim Hassan Dankwambo, Governor, Gombe State
- Usman Saidu Nasamu Dakingari, Governor, Kebbi State
- Ibrahim Geidam, Governor, Yobe State
- Danbaba Danfulani Suntai, former Governor, Taraba State
- Bukar Abba Ibrahim, former Governor, Yobe State
- Mohammed Bawa, former Ekiti State governor
- Abubakar El-Kanemi, Shehu of Borno
- Ibrahim Zakzaky prominent Shi'ite-Islam cleric
- Kabiru Ibrahim Gaya, former Kano state governor
- Zainab Abdulkadir Kure, politician
- Sanusi Lamido, former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), current Emir of Kano
- Ahmed Makarfi, former Kaduna state governor
- Adamu Mu'azu, former Bauchi State governor
- Samuel Oboh, architect
- Rebecca Ndjoze-Ojo, Namibian, politician
- Samuel Ioraer Ortom, former Minister of State Trade and Investments
- Aminu Safana, doctor/politician
- Ibrahim Shekarau, former Kano state governor
- Ibrahim Shema, former Governor, Katsina State
- Ussif Rashid Sumaila, economist
- Ibrahim H. Umar, former Vice Chancellor and scientist
- Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa, former Governor Kaduna state
- Abdullahi Mustapha, former Vice Chancellor (ABU)
- Ibrahim Garba, current Vice Chancellor (ABU)
- Solomon Arase, current IGP, Nigeria Police Force
- Maryam Ciroma, former Minister of Women Affairs
- Lawal Musa Daura, acting Director General Nigerian State Security Service
- Abdullahi Aliyu Sumaila former Principal Secretary to the first Executive Governor of Kano and Secretary Kano State Executive Council, Former Chairman Hadejia-Jamaare River Basin Development Authority and Chairman Kano State Television Corporation.
- Afakriya Gadzama, former Director General Nigerian State Security Service
- Professor John Idoko, Director General National Agency for the Control of AIDS Nigeria
- Professor Clement Onyeke Abah, former Deputy Vice Chancellor Benue State University Makurdi
- Andrew Yakubu, former group managing director and chief executive officer of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.[14][15]
- Yusuf Abubakar Yusuf, Senator for Taraba Central
- Isa Marte Hussaini, a Nigerian professor of Pharmacology and fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science[16]
- Saude Abdullahi Aliyu, former Principal F.G.G.C.Kazure,F.G.G.C.Minjibir,and retired Director, Federal Ministry of Education
See also
- Category:Ahmadu Bello University academics
References
- ↑ NUC. "List of Universities". Retrieved 5 May 2015.
- 1 2 "Ahmadu Bello University". Ahmadu Bello University. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
- ↑ Sir Eric Ashby. Investment in Education: The Report of the Commission on Post-School Certificate and Higher Education (Lagos, 1960)
- ↑ Details on all aspects of ABU's development are provided in the chapters and appendices of A History of Ahmadu Bello University, 1962–1987, Ahmadu Bello University Press, Zaria, 1989.
- ↑ "Obituary:Sir Norman Alexander". The Independent. 5 April 1997. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
- ↑ See History of Ahmadu Bello University, p. 270.
- ↑ Ten Years: The First Decade of Ahmadu Bello University, October 1962 - October 1972, Ahmadu Bello University Press, Zaria, 1972; and History of Ahmadu Bello University, pp. 267-282.
- ↑ Paul Beckett and James O’Connell, Education and Power In Nigeria, Hodder and Stoughton, 1977, pp. 26-30; and History of Ahmadu Bello University, Appendix V and VI, pp. 280-1.
- ↑ History of Ahmadu Bello University, Table X, p. 307.
- ↑ See Chapter Ten ("Staff Recruitment and Development in ABU, 1962–1987") in History of Ahmadu Bello University, pp. 196-219.
- ↑ "Structural Adjustment Program". The Whirled Bank Grou. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
- ↑ "ABU gets new VC". The Nation Newspaper. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
- 1 2 George Klay Kieh (2007). Beyond state failure and collapse: making the state relevant in Africa. Lexington Books. p. 174. ISBN 0-7391-0892-1.
- ↑ "Kachikwu's appointment as new NNPC GMD, change people had been clamouring for - Stakeholders - Vanguard News". Retrieved 2015-08-07.
- ↑ "Yakubu, NNPC GMD formally unveiled | P.M. NEWS Nigeria". www.pmnewsnigeria.com. Retrieved 2015-08-07.
- ↑ "Cancer cases’ll rise to 16 million by 2020 — IARC". The Punch News. Retrieved September 13, 2015.
External links
Coordinates: 11°04′N 7°42′E / 11.067°N 7.700°E
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