The
National Assembly is a place where laws are supposed to be made and bills
enacted for the proper governance of the country. Instead, it has become a cesspool of unending
corruption, probes and counter probe. From
the days of former youthful Speaker Salisu Buhari (Certificate forgery), Dimeji
Lawal (Purchase of vehicles), Elizabeth Ette (furnishing of official
residence), oil deals, bribery and sex scandals, Nigerians have never known
peace. Now, the ugly tale of “carefully
planned” 40 billion padded budgeting
emanating from the same NASS is unfortunately discouraging. An aggrieved member of the “inner caucus”
Abdulmumini, former Appropriation Committee Chairman was the one who “spilled”
the beans or better still: he “squealed” on their evil attempt to pad the
budget. He fingered Speaker Yakubu
Dogara, and some yet-to-be-named officers as those allegedly behind the
deal. What would you call this? Inhuman? And question is: How will an officer on oath
of the Federal Government conceive such a plan? The answer is left to your imagination! Call it
an afterthought, it is the way of life.
Appointed since 1 st April, 2015 till date, Prof. Adepoju Adeshola Olatunde, Director-General of the Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria (FRIN) has left no room to chance. The Ph.D holder in Agricultural and Environmental Economics (2002) from the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Kaduna State has taken extra-ordinary steps to see the Forestry Institute to the next level of existence. One of such steps is the repositioning of FRIN outstation for better research focus. Others include renovation of dilapidated structures, repositioning of staff members for optimum performance, reclaiming/security all encroached land and resources of the Institute, successfully enacting on Act to Establish Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria for Forestry Research; Education and Training; establishing Six strategic Rural Resource Centers for communities engagement, capacity building and extension services. Prof. Adepoju who also holds B.Agric (Agricultural Economics), 1995 ...
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