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21 Graduates Of Wellspring Varsity Inducted Into Computing Profession
Published
9 months agoon
By
Editor
The Computer Professional Registration Council of Nigeria (CPN) on Thursday inducted 21 graduates of the Wellspring University, Benin into computing profession.
The induction ceremony, first in the institution’s history, marked the graduates’ transition from students to professionals.
The inductees were graduates of Bachelor of Science in the fields of Computer Science, Software Engineering, Cybersecurity, and Information Technology as well as Master’s degree.
In his remark shortly before the oath taking, the Registrar of the council, Muhammed Aliyu stressed the importance of ethical conduct, continuous learning, and dedication to the field.
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Aliyu, who was represented by Mrs Elizabeth Adekunle, Graduates Induction Coordinator of the council, commended the university for raising solutions providers in a world that was moving in an unprecedented pace.
The registrar noted that the university was living up to its billing as a future forward institution responding to all African needs by raising solution providers in diverse areas of human endeavours.
In his address, Prof. Isaac Rotimi Ajayi, Vice Chancellor of the university, described the induction as historic and educative, charging the inductees to take advantage of an edge being created with their induction.
As a technology-compliant institution, Ajayi said the university had the mandate of exposing its students to modern technology breakthroughs via impactful curriculum and professionalising their skills.
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Prof. Dipo Akomolafe, Dean, College of Science and Computing, said the event aligned with the vision and mission of the university, which was to see to the professionalism of all courses in the Department of Computing
According to him, this singular step will see the inductees standing out amongst their peers in the world.
“What we are doing now is a life of testimony of the realisation of one of the mandates given to me,” he said.
Providing an overview, Dr Tosin Olayinka, Head of Department, Computing, said the maiden induction comprised 18 undergraduates, two postgraduates with one member of staff.
In her induction lecture, Prof. Veronica Osubor of the University of Benin took the inductees on ways to build a successful career in computing.
Osubor charged them on team work, problem solving analytical thinking, networking and others.
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News
BREAKing : Court Frees Fayose, Upholds No-case Submission In Money Laundering Trial
Published
1 hour agoon
July 16, 2025By
Editor
A Federal High Court in Lagos on Tuesday morning discharged and acquitted former Ekiti State Governor, Mr. Ayodele Fayose, of all charges in his long-standing money laundering case brought against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
The court upheld Fayose’s no-case submission, effectively ruling that the prosecution failed to establish a prima facie case against him to warrant further defence.
READ ALSO: EFCC Probes Man Nabbed With Undeclared $420,900 At Kano Airport
Fayose had been standing trial on allegations bordering on money laundering and fraud during his tenure as governor.
However, after years of legal proceedings, the court found that the evidence presented by the EFCC was insufficient to sustain the charges.

By Israel Adebiyi
In literature, few tales haunt the conscience as profoundly as that of Jean Valjean in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables. A former convict hardened by the cruelty of the world, Valjean was presented a second chance—one forged in grace, offered through the kindness of a Bishop. That moment became the fulcrum on which his life turned, from darkness to light, from bitterness to redemption. Hugo’s message was clear: second chances, rare and divine, must not be squandered.
Sadly, Nigeria’s former President, Muhammadu Buhari, squandered his.
Twice gifted with the reins of power—first as a military Head of State from 1983 to 1985, and later as a democratically elected President from 2015 to 2023—Buhari had before him a canvas few in history are offered. He had the rare privilege of rewriting his story, of cleansing the stain of his authoritarian past with the balm of democratic growth, reform, and inclusion. But instead, Nigerians witnessed a man whose second coming bore frightening resemblance to his first.
As a military leader, Buhari ruled with an iron fist, cloaked in the garb of national discipline. His regime dismantled civil liberties, wielded decrees like cudgels, and created a climate where dissent was criminalized. The infamous Decree Number 2 gave the state security service the authority to detain individuals indefinitely without charge—essentially legalizing tyranny. Decree Number 4, arguably more draconian, muzzled the press, silenced truth, and enshrined fear.
The civil service was purged, not reformed. About 200,000 workers were reportedly shown the door in a wave of retrenchment that carried no clear vision for recovery or sustainability. Strikes were banned. Musicians like Fela Kuti were jailed. Corruption trials, while applauded by some, often bore the unmistakable scent of vendetta. Public officers were bundled into prison cells—some deservedly, others questionably. The National Security Organization (NSO) became a state-sanctioned menace.
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It was in this furnace of repression that Buhari carved his reputation as rigid, unyielding, and unlistening.
Three decades later, Buhari returned, this time cloaked in the hope of democracy. Nigerians, wearied by years of underperformance, chose to believe in the rebranded General. This was a man, they thought, who had tasted the winepress of power and would now offer water to a thirsty nation. In 2015, he was swept into office on a wave of hope. Eight years later, that wave had receded, leaving behind the wreckage of dashed expectations.
Under his civilian rule, the country found itself battered on all fronts. The economy floundered under inconsistent policies and excessive borrowing. Inflation rose with a vengeance, while unemployment surged. National insecurity expanded with an alarming boldness—banditry, terrorism, and kidnappings claimed thousands of lives. Entire communities vanished overnight. Farmers abandoned their lands. Parents mourned their abducted children. And the president remained largely aloof, a distant figure in the Villa, often silent when his voice was most needed.
Even the petroleum sector—Buhari’s personal portfolio as Minister—suffered under an opaque, inefficient regime. The refineries remained comatose, salaries paid for jobs not done, and fuel subsidies ballooned into bottomless pits of corruption. Nigeria, Africa’s top oil producer, couldn’t provide fuel to her citizens without long queues and inflated prices. It was an irony so cruel it could only be Nigerian.
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Then came #EndSARS, the haunting proof that the voice of the Nigerian youth—brimming with pain, anger, and frustration—had reached its boiling point. Instead of dialogue, the administration responded with force. On October 20, 2020, at the Lekki Tollgate, gunshots echoed in a night of horror, and a nation’s hope was drenched in blood. The president’s silence was louder than the bullets. A moment for empathy and leadership was missed. It revealed a government disconnected from the emotional temperature of its people, especially the young who had dared to ask for better.
If that was emotional violence, then the Naira redesign policy was economic. Near the twilight of his administration, a sudden, chaotic push to swap the nation’s currency, allegedly to curb vote-buying and mop up excess cash, plunged Nigerians into financial paralysis. ATMs went dry, queues grew wild, and families scrambled just to afford food. Markets stalled, businesses collapsed, and citizens were humiliated in their own banks. It was a policy executed with such shocking lack of empathy that even his most ardent defenders found themselves bewildered. A president once sold as the messiah had returned as an indifferent king.
As his tenure crawled to a close, many looked back not with nostalgia, but with numbing relief. His second coming, hoped to be redemptive, proved retrogressive. Not only did he fail to correct the wrongs of the past, he institutionalized new ones: nepotism cloaked as federal character, ethno-religious favoritism masquerading as competence, and an inability to build bridges across the nation’s many divides.
Upon his passing, Nigeria did not weep with reverence, but reflected with resignation. The tributes that poured in were often polite, diplomatic, and carefully worded. But beneath them all was a collective sigh—a sense of a man who had been given everything, and yet changed very little.
In the end, Muhammadu Buhari’s tale reads not like that of a redeemer, but a ruler who walked twice through the corridors of power and left the halls colder than he met them. Even in death, his name has evoked more sighs than salutes.
He could have been the one to restore dignity to the Nigerian state, to reimagine governance, to redefine leadership. Instead, he will be remembered as the man who had two chances—and failed twice.
History will not be cruel to him—it will merely be truthful. And in that truth lies his legacy: not one of transformation, but of a tragic, missed redemption.
Adieu “Mai gaskiya”!
News
Buhari Shouted Jesus Christ Of Nazareth, I Asked Him Why – Bakare
Published
4 hours agoon
July 16, 2025By
Editor
Pastor Tunde Bakare has shared a moment he experienced with late president Muhammadu Buhari during the 2011 presidential campaign when they both ran under the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC).
Bakare said that after the official launch of their campaign in Kaduna, they returned home in the same vehicle.
In an interview with Channels TV, Bakare revealed that when they arrived, Buhari got out of the car and staggered.
He added that Buhari then suddenly shouted, “Jesus Christ of Nazareth”.
He said he was surprised and asked Buhari why he said that.
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Bakare said Buhari replied that he was simply thanking God.
He said Buhari also told him that he (Bakare) was not the only one who had the right to mention the name of Jesus.
Bakare’s words: “After the flag off of our campaign in Kaduna, we drove in the same car and when we got home he staggered. The next word he spoke, God is my witness, was Jesus Christ of Nazareth.
“I said, ‘General, what is that?’ He said, ‘You do not have monopoly of Jesus Christ, I am thanking God’. He just said that”
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