Forgotten Dairies

THE OLODO UPRISING: A Nation That Stops Respecting Knowledge Cannot Build Prosperity -By Fatoye Adeyemi Olufemi

History teaches us that, no nation has ever become prosperous by mocking education or diminishing expertise. Roads are not built by ignorance. Hospitals are not run by mediocrity. Aircraft are not designed through shortcuts. Nations rise because they choose to honor learning, reward excellence and create systems where merit triumphs over noise.

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Every generation has a defining moment that, forces a nation to look in the mirror. For Nigeria, the recent “Olodo Uprising” may be one of those moments for us as a nation to have a very deep reflection and a rethink about our nation and educational system.

This conversation is not really about social media influencers, celebrities or viral videos. It is about something far deeper which needs us to pay attention. It is about a country gradually losing its respect for knowledge, competence and excellence while people and the international communities watches.

When ignorance begins to trend more than intelligence, entertainment consistently overshadows education, and when mediocrity becomes aspirational, a nation should not laugh. It should worry.

The real tragedy is that this did not happen overnight.

We planted these seeds ourselves.

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The Higher Education System Is Crying for Help

For more than decades, our universities and other higher learning institutions have suffered from government neglect, as most institutions are either owned by federal or state government.

Lecture halls built for two hundred students now squeeze in over a thousand.

Laboratories have become museums.

Libraries are filled with outdated books, while the world is racing ahead with artificial intelligence, robotics, biotechnology, quantum computing and sustainable models.

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Many university curricula remain trapped in theories developed decades ago while industries are searching for graduates with digital, entrepreneurial and problem-solving skills.

Some of the courses need to be review, delisted and some new courses new to be introduced

Students graduate with certificates but without employable competencies.

Young people begin to question whether education is worth the sacrifice or not.

Sadly, the answer many now receive from society is “No.”

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Lecturers Cannot Build the Future While Fighting to Survive

No educational system rises above its teachers.

Yet Nigerian lecturers are among the most undervalued professionals on the globe.

Poor remuneration has created an environment where many brilliant academics leave for Europe, North America, the Middle East and other African countries.

Those who remain often struggle with inadequate research funding, overcrowded classrooms and poor working conditions.

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A nation that underpays those shaping its future should not be surprised when that future begins to collapse.

When Integrity Leaves the Classroom

Another painful cancer eating our institutions is the normalization of academic dishonesty.

Examination malpractice has become industrialized to the extent that even junior secondary and senior secondary school examinations have become cheating Arenas; many private schools encourage and collude with examiners to cheat in other to boost the image of their educational institutions.

Some students no longer prepare for examinations because they have greater confidence in leaked questions than in their own abilities.

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Even more disturbing are recurring allegations of “sex for grades. “Or even cash settlement for pass grades.

Every lecturer involved destroys not only a student’s dignity but also the credibility of the certificate issued by the institution and the national education system.

When marks can be bought, merit dies.

When merit dies, incompetence follows.

And eventually, society pays the price.

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Cultism: The Enemy Within

Cultism remains one of the darkest stains on Nigerian campuses.

What began many years ago as ideological student movements has, in many institutions, transformed into violent criminal networks and supply for thugs used by politicians to disrupt the electoral process and armed robbery.

Lives have been lost.

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Dreams have been buried.

Parents who sacrificed everything to educate their children have instead received coffins.

No university can produce global innovators while students live under the shadow of fear.

Learning requires safety.

The HND-BSc Divide

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Nigeria continues to maintain one of the most irrational educational discriminations in the world.

Two graduates may possess identical competence, identical experience and identical professional abilities.

Yet one is denied opportunities, simply because the certificate bears “HND” instead of “BSc.”

This artificial hierarchy discourages technical education and weakens the country’s industrial capacity.

Countries like Germany, South Korea and Switzerland became manufacturing giants because they respected technical skills.

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Nigeria continues to celebrate paper qualifications while undervaluing practical competence.

There was a time I visited a university in the south western part of the country. The central generator was faulty, nobody in the department of mechanical engineering even showed interest in fixing the problem, even when the vendors responsible for the said generator were not responding on time.

Our higher institutions should be Centre of practical solution and not theory.

Where Are the Vocational Skills?

Not every young Nigerian must become a lawyer, doctor or accountant.

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Modern economies require technicians, furniture makers, welders, programmers, electricians, robotics engineers, digital designers, renewable energy specialists and precision manufacturers.

Unfortunately, vocational education remains poorly funded and socially stigmatized.

Meanwhile, industries complain they cannot find skilled workers.

This contradiction should concern every policymaker.

Yahoo Culture and the Economics of Desperation

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Internet fraud, did not become attractive because Nigerians suddenly became dishonest.

It became attractive because many young people watched graduates remain unemployed while fraudsters and politicians displayed wealth.

This is not a justification.

It is a warning requiring urgent policy and political willingness from government.

When society repeatedly rewards shortcuts over honest labour, some young people begin to believe shortcuts are the only road to success.

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The solution is not merely stronger policing. It should be building an economy where integrity is economically rewarding.

The Silent Epidemic of Drug Abuse

Drug abuse has quietly become one of Nigeria’s greatest public health emergencies.

Many young people now use narcotics to escape unemployment, depression, academic pressure or social anxiety.

Drugs cloud judgment, destroy ambition and fuel violent behavior.

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A generation trapped between addiction and hopelessness cannot build a prosperous nation.

The Curriculum Must Change

Artificial intelligence is transforming every profession.

Universities should no longer produce graduates who only memorize theories.

Every undergraduate should graduate with practical skills in entrepreneurship, financial literacy, digital technology, artificial intelligence, emotional intelligence, communication, project management and problem-solving.

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Degrees should prepare students for the future, not merely for examinations.

The Rural Urban Migration gap

The rural areas are supposed to be center of Agriculture and food security.

Insecurity has become a major challenge, as so many farmers in northern Nigeria are afraid to go to their farmlands.

Poor road network, leading to spoiled farm produce that, never make it to the city centre.

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Dilapidated education centers abound in the local areas and many of the youth always want to come to the city centre to get better education and good life.

The farming population have become aged and with outdated manual farming methods and lower output.

The Way Forward

Nigeria does not have an intelligence problem.

Nigeria has a systems problem.

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We must:

  • Modernize university curricula to reflect the realities of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
  • Improve lecturers’ remuneration and invest seriously in research.
  • Enforce zero tolerance for examination malpractice, cultism and sexual exploitation.
  • Eliminate the discriminatory divide between HND and BSc by emphasizing competence.
  • Expand vocational and technical education as equal pathways to success with higher recognition and placement in public service.
  • Partner industries with universities so graduates acquire real workplace experience.
  • Invest heavily in youth mental health and drug prevention programmes.
  • Create economic opportunities that reward innovation, integrity and enterprise.
  • The government should give priority to every agriculture hub and ensure the road infrastructure, rail system, educational institutions in those localities are working as this will create jobs for the youth and curb urban rural migration.

Final Thoughts

The “Olodo Uprising” is not the disease.

It is the symptom.

The disease is a society that has gradually stopped rewarding knowledge, integrity and competence.

Young Nigerians are not devoid of brilliance. Every year they excel in universities across the world, lead global technology companies, win international scholarships and develop groundbreaking innovations. The challenge is that too many feel they must leave Nigeria before their talents are truly valued.

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History teaches us that, no nation has ever become prosperous by mocking education or diminishing expertise. Roads are not built by ignorance. Hospitals are not run by mediocrity. Aircraft are not designed through shortcuts. Nations rise because they choose to honor learning, reward excellence and create systems where merit triumphs over noise.

If Nigeria truly desires economic transformation, the greatest infrastructure project before us is not another highway or bridge. It is the rebuilding of our educational system, the restoration of respect for knowledge, ensuring food security, secure the citizens so everyone can undertake their business without fear, reliable power especially at the rural areas, with more government project and presence in the rural areas to curb rural urban migration.only then will today’s “Olodo Uprising” become tomorrow’s renaissance.

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M.scm, PFD CIPRMP, FCILSCM, FIMALE, DFIPMA, FAISM, CFPM.

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