• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Sunday, August 24, 2025
Leadership Newspapers
Read in Hausa
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

Oloyede’s Burden Of Truth And Integrity

by Mahfouz A. Adedimeji
3 months ago
in Opinion
Prof Ishaq Oloyede, JAMB Registrar

Prof Ishaq Oloyede, JAMB Registrar

Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

The motto of Daily Trust newspaper is ‘Truth is a burden’. Apparently, the founding fathers of the newspaper appreciated that in a world where lie reigns and dresses like truth, it is onerous to bear truth. A striking metaphor of the tragedy of truth today is a 19th century legend, depicted by Jean-Léon Gérome’s 1896 painting, “The truth Coming out of the Well”.

Advertisement

A quick recap is that The Truth and The Lie met one fateful, beautiful morning beside a well. After exchanging pleasantries, The Lie suggested that they should take a bath together. The unsuspecting Truth felt that the water was nice and undressed with The Lie to bathe. Suddenly, The Lie jumped out of the water, put on the clothes of The Truth and ran away. The Truth ran out to pursue The Lie but the latter had disappeared into the world, which turned its gaze away in rage on seeing the naked Truth running around.  The poor Truth returned to the well to hide forever while The Lie moves around disguised as The Truth, satisfying the needs of the world because the world, and Nigeria is its microcosm, is not interested in seeing the naked Truth. The Yoruba sum it up in ‘Aiyekooto’, meaning ‘the world rejects the truth’, the name they give to the West African parrot.

The fate of the truth in the legend is similar to that of integrity. A Latin word that derives from ‘integer’, the same integer everyone learnt in primary school as depicting a whole number as opposed to a fraction, meaning whole, intact and complete, integrity describes the quality of being untainted, upright, honest or having strict moral and ethical code. Though the qualities of truth and integrity cannot be said to be extinct, among the few Nigerians that epitomise them in the public space is the Registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Emeritus Is-haq Olanrewaju Oloyede, the acclaimed winner of the maiden edition of the prestigious Gani Fawehinmi Integrity Award in 2018.

Ever since Oloyede started his current assignment in August 2016, some people with hideous agenda have sought every means to defame him or discredit his work. He has stood tall and fought entrenched personalities and principalities that had made JAMB a cesspool of corruption head-to-head for nine solid years. He introduced far-reaching innovations that sought to eliminate fraud and entrench quality. He turned JAMB to a beautiful bride and a topmost government agency reputed for efficiency and credibility. Apart from returning over 60 billion Naira to the coffers of the government, he also reduced the application fees for the examination from #5,000 to #3,500 nationally and from $20 to $2 internationally. He did many more including instituting awards to encourage institutions.

However, when immediate action was taken to review the results of the recent 2025 Unified Tertiary Matriculations Examinations (UTME) after complaints and it was indeed found out that an error occurred, someone without a burden of truth and integrity on his shoulders would have approached the findings differently. He would obfuscate the matter, stonewall the critics and give reasons to extricate himself. Afterall, it wasn’t his personal fault. But with the burden of integrity he bears, Prof. Oloyede spoke the unusual truth, took vicarious responsibility and the keyboard urchins roared with contempt and rage.

RELATED

Badenoch Proposes 15-year Wait For Immigrants To Gain UK Citizenship  

Of Badmouth And Diplomatic Insults

22 hours ago
2023 Polls: We’re Are Prosecuting 774 Offenders – INEC

Political Coalition And The Future Of Nigerians

22 hours ago
ADVERTISEMENT

But one truth remains incontrovertible. Prof. Oloyede has changed the narrative of public service in Nigeria, upped the ante and demonstrated what no public servant has done in recent memory. He invited his critics for co-investigation, explained the matter, identified the problem, apologised to the nation and could not control his emotions having been told just before his addressing Nigerians that a candidate committed suicide. He provided an immediate solution by rescheduling the examinations, which have now been concluded.

He had many options but he chose the path of honesty and accountability. In his 1915 poem, ‘The Road not Taken’, Robert Frost calls it the road ‘less travelled by. And that has made all the difference’. Only a person of Oloyede’s rare pedigree would have the courage to do what he did.

Despite the immaterial antics of ethnic chauvinists, religious bigots and misinformed pundits that revel in character assassination at the drop of a hat, it is clear to the sincere and perceptive Nigerians that it would be beyond a former Chairman of the Committee of Vice Chancellors of Nigerian Universities (CVCNU) and ex-Executive Secretary and National Coordinator of the Nigeria Inter-religious Council (NIREC) to stoop so low to target a religious or ethnic group in a national examination. To achieve what purpose at his age and stage in life? Nevertheless, as truth does not matter in our post-truth era, the uninformed, misinformed and ill-informed bared their fangs and poured venom, the only product in their possession.

ADVERTISEMENT

There are also those who even call for his resignation, oblivious of the fact that doing so is an easy decision to make for a man like him, with zero emotional attachment to the vain embellishments of the world, if only he has his way. Long beyond his detractors were born or be of relevance, Oloyede had resigned from a ‘juicy’ national appointment. Not too long ago, in 2011 precisely, he also resigned from his coveted position as President of the Association of African Universities as a matter patriotic principle just to pave way for another Nigerian, the Kogi-born Prof. Emeritus Olugbemiro Jegede, to become Secretary General of the Association. He burns the candle at both ends in the service of the country because of his patriotism, not based ó. an iota of personal interest.

One point is as clear as daylight ultimately. Oloyede’s sun is far beyond being stuck by his detractors’ sticky mud. Universities and other tertiary institutions, with their consortia in West Africa and Africa as a whole, individuals, organisations and bodies, including the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), have turned the table with their cornucopia of solidarity. They continue to appreciate Oloyede for his honesty, empathy, courage, nobility, probity and fair-mindedness in the face of glitch or an error of negligence by others. His hard-earned reputation and integrity are intact as he has handled the challenge to the admiration of many right-thinking Nigerians.

 But beyond Oloyede, my hope is that other conscientious leaders would not be discouraged from being truthful and vicariously responsible in future as a result of the vituperations being poured in some quarters on a national hero. My charge is that the youth should remain positive that Nigeria is still worth being served truthfully and with integrity. They should renew their hope in their country, just as E. B. White wrote long ago and as is evident in Oloyede: “As long as there is one upright man, as long as there is one compassionate woman, the contagion may spread and the scene is not desolate. Hope is the thing that is left to us in a bad time.”

– Prof Adedimeji is the pioneer Vice Chancellor of the African School of Economics (The Pan-African University of Excellence), Abuja


Join Our WhatsApp Channel

Nigerians can now earn US Dollars monthly by acquiring domains cheaply and reselling for profits up to $18,000 (nearly ₦30Million). Beneficiaries include professionals, entrepreneurs, civil servants and more. Click here to start.


Tags: Is'haq OloyedeJoint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB)
SendShare10172Tweet6358Share
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Despite Band A Tariff Increase, DisCos Power Sector’s Weakest Link – Adelabu

Next Post

Delayed Appointment Of Ambassadors: A Strategic Lapse With National Security Implications

Mahfouz A. Adedimeji

Mahfouz A. Adedimeji

You May Like

Badenoch Proposes 15-year Wait For Immigrants To Gain UK Citizenship  
Opinion

Of Badmouth And Diplomatic Insults

2025/08/23
2023 Polls: We’re Are Prosecuting 774 Offenders – INEC
Opinion

Political Coalition And The Future Of Nigerians

2025/08/23
Agwu Becomes Fellow Of NIPR
Columns

My Encounter With Mufu The Vulcanizer

2025/08/23
By-Elections And The Reality Check
Columns

By-Elections And The Reality Check

2025/08/23
33.3% Nigerians, Ghanaians Risk Developing Kidney Disease — Study
Editorial

Beyond The Subsidy On Kidney Dialysis

2025/08/23
Unveiling Some Jumu’ah Matters
Columns

Unveiling Some Jumu’ah Matters

2025/08/22
Leadership Conference advertisement

LATEST

Remi Tinubu Empowers Lagos Families, Pledges Nationwide Elderly Support

Arsenal Thrash Leeds United 5-0 To Maintain Winning Streak

Katsina Gov’t Procures 8 New Armoured Vehicles To Combat Insecurity

Tinubu Mourns Ex-Plateau Military Gov Mana

Yoruba Nation Agitator Sunday Igboho Apologises To Ooni, Seeks Help To Get Name Off Security Watchlist

Police Arrest Armed Robbery, Car-snatching Syndicate In Abuja

Annual Confab: NBA President Leads Lawyers On 10km Health Walk In Enugu

Federal Gov’t Warns Kebbi, Niger, Kwara Residents To Leave Flood-prone Areas

‘You’re Collecting Salaries But Can’t Defend Gov’t,’ Oyebanji Slams ‘Disloyal Appointees’

Reps Query NERC, Others Over Disbursement Of N59bn National Metering Fund

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.