November 14, 2024

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Education News

Gov Adeleke Receives Honorary Doctorate Degree From Valley View University

Gov Adeleke Receives Honorary Doctorate Degree From Valley View University

Governor Ademola Adeleke of Osun state  has received Honorary Doctorate Degree from Ghana’s premier chartered university, the Valley View University .

The governor’s Special Adviser, Mr Olawale Rasheed , who disclosed this in a statement made available to Team@orientactualmags.com  noted that the institution has called Adeleke ‘a model in Africa’s search for good governance’ while adding that he has  delivered good governance in Osun state in the  last one year.

The Vice -Chancellor of the University, Professor  William Koomsion said the institution   had reviewed Adeleke’s antecedents as a businessman and a former Senator alongside his ethical leadership since assuming  office as  governor of Osun state before making the decision to honour him with honorary doctorate degree.

The Vice-Chancellor lauded the governor’s multi-million naira  scholarship scheme as a Senator, his sterling record in respect of  welfare of workers as a governor, his performance on infrastructure upgrades and his commitment to due process, rule of law and fear of God.

The institution  which is a Seventh Day Adventist university also invited Adeleke as a convocation lecturer and he spoke on  ‘Imparting Excellence, Integrity and Service: Nurturing Ethical Leaders in Changing World’   during which the governor called on leaders to sustain good governance  in order to safe democracy in Africa.

Accepting the honorary doctorate degree, Governor Adeleke restated the importance of good governance to democracy, submitting that the  honour done to him was a testimony to his administration’s unbending desire to take Osun to new heights.

‘Our administration was only doing what we were elected to do- selfless pro-people service. Little did we know that we are being monitored even outside Nigeria. I did not know our modest effort had so much impact beyond our imagination. This is a challenge to do more’ the governor noted in his acceptance speech.

Earlier in his commencement speech, the governor had  bemoaned the increasing erosion of democratic culture due to the non-commitment of many leaders to good governance.

He  said leaders face the challenge of balancing questions of excellence and integrity in public service, while  expressing the need for them to play according to the rules and avoid unethical activities.

 ‘Doing the right thing as a leader in policy delivery is the expected output of every public leader. Ensuring best service delivery with the right moral compass is the best expectation in public life. Achieving both excellence and integrity is the calling of ethical leaders.

Ethical leaders are expected to be rule-driven, honest, consistent, goal-driven and oriented towards the aspirations of the people. He or she should avoid corruption and ensure public resources  are made to serve the public interest. In his mind, nothing should interfere with community’s joint vision. The well-being of the people is the driving force of all ethical leaders.

Such leaders exist within the African political space but they are increasingly few. Leaders in Africa are faced with multiple issues which undermine the drive for excellence. In the midst of deep poverty and high levels of under-development, the pursuit of excellence in governance is increasingly a goal hardly pursued. Pursuant of self-survival supersedes ideals that focus on responsible and people-driven governance. The environment of hunger, poverty, diseases and huge infrastructure deficit undercut the upholding of noble leadership ideals.

Much more complicated is the consequent political instability on the continent. Failure of leaders to be rule-driven by abiding by the Constitution brings new actors into the scene. Refusal to abide by term limits and free and fair elections creates an expanded level of leadership deficit. Many leaders lack credibility and legitimacy as the process of their ascendance to power is suspect. Governance thereafter becomes a difficult task as many leaders are engaged in continued suppression of the rule-driven system.

As a sitting governor and a former member of the Nigerian Senate, it is my considered opinion that embracing an ethical leadership model will speed up the achievement of public service excellence and good governance in Africa. The complicated social, economic and political challenges facing Africa can only be tackled by leaders who are married to the rule of law, and due process alongside practical fear of God. A leader holding power of life and death over the citizens must be accountable, responsive and citizen-centred.

Africa cannot achieve good governance if the constitutions are serially violated if elections are violently rigged, if leaders are of the sit tight model. The problem of underdevelopment will remain forever with Africa if public resources are diverted into private pockets, if public contracts are triply inflated and if poor quality projects are foisted on the populace.

Democracy remains the best vehicle to deliver good governance. Democracy is however sustainable only when leaders govern by the rule of the game. Increasingly, democracy is under serious threat by the low level of ethical leaders and the prevalence of despots pretending to be democrats. Military rule is creeping in across Africa and the continent is at a loss as to how to stem the negative trend.

At a time when democratic regression is surfacing in Africa, the world is changing at a very fast phase. The threat of climate change is unrelenting at a time when tech advancement is disrupting every facet of global society. Africa is however still battling to provide basic provision of lives for her citizens.

To achieve excellence in public leadership, Africa is in dire need of ethical leadership. We need leaders who will avoid corruption, a despotic mindset and support deep adherence to the rule of law. We must ensure survival of democracy by sticking to the rule and eschew disobedience of the electoral will of the citizens. Leaders must see their offices as a call to duty to serve and not to be served; to consult and not to dictate, and to observe and not violate the rule of law.

In my state back in Nigeria, I have four rules of engagement as a governor namely adherence to the rule of law, zero tolerance for corruption, commitment to good governance and fear of God in public leadership’  the governor was quoted to have submitted while adding that students and top dignitaries at the occasion gave  him  a standing ovation.

Governor Adeleke was accompanied to the event by the Chief of Staff, Hon Kazeem Akinleye, other top officials of the Osun state government and the publisher of Ovation magazine, Bashorun Dele Momodu -Team@orientactualmags.com
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