Former President, Olusegun Obasanjo, on Saturday in Abuja bagged a Master’s Degree in Theology at the fifth convocation of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN).
The Vice-Chancellor of the University, Prof. Vincent Tenebe,
said in his address at the ceremony that Obasanjo was among other
notable Nigerians in the list of the 10,653 graduands in which 15 of
them made first class honours.
Tenebe listed other outstanding graduands as the Emir of Hadejia, Jigawa State, Alhaji Adamu Abubakar and the traditional ruler of Awgu, Enugu State, Igwe Felix Okechukwu.
Others were over 70 years Rear Admiral Orisha, (Rtd), who bagged fist class in Mathematics and a 78-year-old, Chief Femi Balogun, who bagged LL.B from the School of Law.
``It
is interesting to note that Obasanjo will be graduating with a Master’s
Degree (MA-Christian Theology) having met the requirements for the
award during this convocation.
``Having been given the admission to study MA/PhD in Christian Theology, Obasanjo will continue with his Ph.D fully.
``This is very unique considering his age and commitments; he also made a very good cumulative grade point,’’ the VC said.
Tenebe said that NOUN had achieved its primary mandate of having study centres in all the state capitals across the country.
According
to him, the institution will commence the last aspect of its mandate,
which is to establish study centres in all the 774 local governments in
the next 15 years.
He said that the total number of study centre across the country stood at 72 alongside four new research centres.
Tenebe appealed to relevant authorities to admit graduates of NOUN into law school as was done in other countries.
``We
will not relent in our appeal to the Council for Legal Education to
give NOUN Law graduates the opportunity to attend the Law School and be
called to the Bar.
``If other countries such as
UK, India, South Africa, Tanzania, among others allow their Open
Universities’ Law graduates to attend Law School and are called to the
Bar, Nigeria has no justifiable reasons to hold her Open University
graduates down.
``We must move forward in all these areas as a progressive country,’’ he said.
In his address, NOUN’s Chancellor, Igwe Lawrence Agubuzu,
said that there were 59 open universities in the World, adding that
their graduates were treated differently from graduates of conventional
universities.
Agubuzu called on the National Youth
Service Corps and the Nigerian Law School to allow NOUN graduates to
participate in their progammes.
NAN reports that Chief Obasanjo received the award by proxy as he was said to unavoidably absent.
NOUN’s
2016 convocation was held for the first time at University Village,
Jabi, which was allocated to the institution in 1983.
Source: Pulse.ng

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