For the past few days now, there are two things that have mostly preoccupied my mind: my 4th MBBS exam which I’m working so tirelessly hard to concentrate on and my most esteemed well-wishers out there in UNEC that cut across both staff and students and whom I sometimes wonder how they even manage to sleep these days in the face of all the controversies making the rounds on campus. Some doubtless would be asking: could Ekene-Finally really have done those things? The answer is NO! Yet I know that there are many of you out there with a certain type of unwavering belief in me that you are willing to suffer any level of social persecution so long as the fact is effectively driven home that I can never be the kind of person my political foes are painting me to be.
But to all of you out there reading this, I’m most delighted to inform you that there was never any mistake in having reposed such high level of confidence in me that you gave me a record-breaking 2,198 of your coveted votes in order to make me your president. I want to say thank you and to reassure you that I’m still who you’ve always known me to be – and perhaps much better.
Before I start addressing some burning issues, permit me to officially welcome you the returning lions and lionesses back to the den. And to our new students I want to say congratulations and to ask that you accept my unreserved apology for having to bamboozle you with an atmosphere of controversy at a period in your life when your wish would have been that we in the SUG join you to celebrate your remarkable victory in the last post-UME examinations that has now awarded you the much coveted honour of joining in the struggle ‘To Restore The Dignity Of Man’. Then to our prestigious ‘Cross-Over’ students, I cannot hide my joy that you all made it to the land of UNEC.
I would equally want to dedicated a full paragraph to our own Daddy, the Vice Chancellor of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Prof. B. C. Ozumba and all members of his divine team among whom are the indefatigable duo of the DVC, Prof. Mrs Ifeoma Enemo and the Associate Dean of Students Affairs, Dr. Mrs Edith Nwosu. I’m sure you would always expect me to acknowledge the VC like I’ve always done. But come to think of it: who wouldn’t when we all can see a true father, a tireless worker who has within this very short period of time in office produced a level of performance that the poorest way to describing it would be to say: “SIMPLY DAZZLING”. And I blame that on my not very rich vocabulary. It’s difficult to reconcile with the reality that within a few months in office, the VC has in his uncommon magnanimity slashed down our school fees by a whopping six thousand naira. Where has it ever happened in any Nigerian University? Yet the quality of education in our school has immensely improved. Space would not allow me to talk about the Ozumbic wind of transformation blowing across our school in the areas of health, infrastructure, roads, electricity, and even efforts geared towards dramatically improving the welfare of both staff and students of this University. We can all see the flurry of activities by the Works Department in laying down brand-new networks of pipes to enhance adequate provision of free potable water to all hostels and quarters. I make bold to say that Prof B. C. Ozumba is the much-awaited messiah God has sent to wipe our tears away. Sometimes I even wish I was in first year and not final year.
May God continue to bless and strengthen him and his lovely family.
Now having done that, I’d move straight to addressing the recent issues cropping up on campus that borders largely on my credibility as a leader: THE MANY SINS THEY CLAIM I HAD COMMITTED. Some aggrieved members of the Executive Council were purported to have passed a vote of no confidence on me and played right into the waiting hands of the Speaker of the SUG House and his cohorts who wasted no time in delivering a verdict that is bound to go down in the annals of legislative history as the most shameful performance of all time. The Speaker whom many have always been very critical of for his hatred for me and a concomitant penchant for my office as the president was of course able to shanghai some Honourable members of the House, majority of whom are greenhorns in legislative affairs, into unconstitutionally declaring me removed from office on account of some unverified allegation against me without recourse to inviting me to the House in order to defend myself.
More like Jungle Justice! For the fact that it took them just one House-sitting to try to unseat me makes it even more laughable. Now neither me nor the Council Of SUG Presidents in Enugu would fold our hands and accept such absurdity in our present generation. If we do, then posterity would never forgive us as we would have set a precedent for abuse of legislative power.
To start with, I’m yet to receive any official letter of removal from office up till today. The said document on vote of no confidence by some Executive officers is still to reach my office. That notwithstanding, I do know that I owe the good students of UNEC an explanation as to the malicious allegations leveled against me. These allegations you please must know are last-ditch attempts at soiling my enviable reputation that has taken me years of hard-work in the fight for the oppressed to build. I personally would have loved to honour you all with my physical presence in your hostels to clear the air with respect to those lies and half-truths being peddled by few elements that are against the growth of our Unionism. However, going by the advice I got from the Associate Dean of Students Affairs as regards the idea, I honestly think it would not be prudent to come now to avoid crisis as you may be shocked at the frightening and disturbing revelations that I would have made concerning my travails in the hands of the Speaker, his cohort and the conduct of some Executive officers of the Union. But I assure you that after my exams I am going to come and mingle with you once again because if there is one thing that has caused a certain level of depression in, it is the fact that I have missed you guys so very much especially during the break.
Before I continue, I want to refresh your memory on the names of some of the Executive officers of the Union that you voted for earlier this year in no particular order of importance.
They are: Incumbent SUG President – EZE EKENE, VP – EZENWEKWE VIVIAN, SEC GEN – AGBO JONHFRIDAY, ASSISTANT SEC GEN – UZOIGWE EKENE, FINANCIAL SECRETARY – AWE PROMISE, WELFARE OFFICER – EZECHI-IKO NNANA, PRO – ILOGEBE CHIDI, DIRECTOR OF GAMES – OBOT UBON-ABASI, DIRECTOR OF TRANSPORT – OMOCHO PETER, DIRECTOR OF SOCIALS – SECO SOCHIMA, and TREASURER – EMENIKE CHIMEZIE.
Apart from the FIN SEC, ASG, and the TREASURER, the rest of them participated in drafting the vote of no confidence document with their signatures duly appended which was later forwarded to the House by Mr Speaker’s cohort and classmates in persons of the SEC GEN and the PRO.
However, recent combined lamentations coming from the offices of the DOG and DOT are beginning to give us the arguable impression that after a certain illegal emergency EXCO meeting held on the 21st of November 2014 as desperately arranged by the SEC GEN, it is quite probable that some of this officers signed the document ignorant of its content and implication, or they are trying to play a fast one on the watching audience? They called to tell me that they never signed any letter of vote of no confidence even as they affirmed that they were both flabbergasted to see their signatures on notice board in a letter probably captioned: vote of no confidence on Mr President.
The ASG confided in me (forgive me Mr ASG) that he had deliberately avoided coming for the meeting despite relentless pressure from the SEC GEN knowing full well their plots against me. For the FIN SEC, they’ve always known that one to be as impenetrable as a rock; so neither the PRO nor the SEC GEN bothered to approach him. As for Mr Treasurer who was yet to be called back from a long period of suspension for having forged my signature in the bank to withdraw money for some officers (possibly with no ill-intention though), I cannot say if he would have signed or not. But having learned a bitter lesson by carrying out a criminal with good intention – an idea that was first suggested by the PRO in the first place from what I gathered from Mr Treasurer and the SEC GEN those days – then my best bet is that he would not as that may be yet another set-up. The story went that during the UBA saga, with the mindset that I may not survive it, an emergency EXCO meeting was arranged by the same SEC GEN to determine whether the next line of action to take. That was when the Treasurer and the VP suggested they immediately pass a vote of confidence on me before things would get out of hand. But I learned that the idea was later jettisoned by the same VP who foresaw that getting me removed from office would automatically put the withdrawals of our take-off grants on hold. That was when the PRO (the only officer who never came to visit me throughout the UBA saga) proposed the idea of forging my easy-to-practise signature. There was moment of silence as everyone cast a look of surprise at the originator of the idea. Only God knew what went through each officer mind. But it was the Treasurer who first put it to practice. This was around July this year. The SEC GEN divulged the details to me at the end of the aforementioned saga unknown to him that I knew the even worse things he did during the same period: his betrayal. I played along.
It was the SEC GEN that told me that an officer had forged my signature while I was away: the Treasurer. His sinister advice was that I should write officially to the bank and by extension the police and get this guy JAILED. Then the SEC GEN and the Mr Treasurer were always at each other’s throat. Thank God I rejected the advice. He was disappointed. But I later did go to the bank to verify anyway. That happened to be the best decision of my life.
When I called the Treasurer to ask whether he did or not, he was fumbling but with no sign of remorse.
I decided to write the SUG House concerning the development. By then there was already a petition on floor of the House against me and the VP by the SEC GEN. When the power-hungry Speaker saw my petition against the Treasurer, he in company of the SEC GEN (his next door neighbor), the PRO (his classmate), and the Welfare officer (his course mate) went and ill-advised Mr Treasurer to fabricate a petition against me bordering on some fictitious money that I misappropriated. The ultimate plan was for the House to unconstitutionally suspend both the VP and I in order for the Speaker to become Acting President for reasons you shall soon find out.
Now my reactions to the spurious allegations:
1. MY 4-MONTH FAILURE TO CALL FOR AN EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING:
To address this issue, I'd like to ask the returning students this one question: Recall the day I took the VP round all the hostels accompanied by all members of the executive council; begging that she should be forgiven her arrogance and disloyalty to the students that gave her power. From that day to when most departments started writing their exams, was it even up to a week? Please check your diary. Or should all of us have met officially during the break? Around the same period, we had already met as an EXCO in a certain meeting tagged 'UNITY MEETING' where we had the opportunity to mend some frosty relationships existing within the EXCO. Earlier that day we had played our UNITY football match with the help of the DOG at IJ Airport to the delight of the ladies in both Ibiam and Manua hostels who were all watching enthusiastically from their windows. Later on we all went to Jennifer to have cold soft drinks and hot pepper-soup which I had already directed the Welfare officer to arrange. In that same meeting I gave every officer an opportunity to make bare their different plans for the Union and equally enjoined them to submit their budgets as soon as possible.
Talking about the regularity of our meetings, it's still very vivid in my memory how some of the officers - especially the VP - kicked against my frequently calling for meetings during the early days of this administration. Then she would hurl insults at me, walk out on us anytime she manages to come, and even incites other officers against me. Hence, you have a situation whereby if you call for a meeting, only about 5 and when they are on a very good mood up to 6 or seven might turn up. Some would even claim they are not in Enugu on the day of the meeting. And those that would eventually come would be showing lackadaisical attitudes towards the meeting: chewing of gums, making and answering of calls, pinging and browsing, unprovoked tantrums, name them. And these could be happening all at the same time with different officers taking turns to display their own. But like I said, that of the VP was the worst, followed closely by that of Welfare officer - and who of course was following the footstep of the VP. The VP once threatened that she would use her connection to frustrate us by blocking all the letters we shall be sending out to source for fund.
Reason? She claimed the SEC GEN did not add 'Comrade' to the 'Her Excellency' that was already ascribe to her on the SUG letterhead. She wanted it to go this way: 'HER EXCELLENCY COMRADE EZENWEKWE VIVIAN'. You can imagine what her anger and tantrums at everybody especially the SEC GEN were all about. Things came to head that we had to take the matter to the the then Dean for expert advice. I even had to ask the Chief Judge to draft a document on CODE OF CONDUCT for us. We never complied with it! But due to all these, we reduced the frequency of our meetings from twice a week to twice every fortnight or as circumstances may demand.
2. REFUSAL TO PREPARE UNION'S BUDGET:
Disregard such information as it can never be true. When we started, we had deemed it necessary to first apply for our take-off grant from the immediate past VC before we begin preparing the Union’s budget.
That was the initial plan but for some inexplicable reasons the letter for the 4 million naira requested for never got to the table of the VC whom I know would have immediately approved some amount for UNEC SUG. But the letter got stuck somewhere and we didn't know. Days turned into weeks, weeks turned into months, yet there was no news from Nsukka. The SEC GEN and I were always shuttling to and fro Nsukka every now and then to trace the letter and possibly take it to the VC ourselves. Some principal persons within the Union claimed to have a hand in the poor attention given to our letter because their own share in the take-off grant wasn't as big as they would want. Fortunately and after many months, the letter finally got to the VC. And just as I anticipated, he attended to it immediately and 2 million was approved. This happened close to when he was already rounding up as VC.
Then a different problem developed altogether. The Bursary department then announced to us that there wasn't any fund available for us here in UNEC as at that time. Nobody was happy. The Council of Hall Governors was aversed to lending us money claiming they had their own pressing and capital-intensive projects to execute. They were even at loggerheads with their chairman citing financial impropriety on his part. So that was a no go area. Many of my officers lost hope. The ginger to work was no longer there despite my repeated assurances and encouragements. In fact, attitude towards meetings further deteriorated. We didn't even have enough money to go on courtesy visits to source for fund. Those who claimed to have connections never used their connections to help the Union. It was our current VC through the help of our DVC that eventually came to our rescue asking those at the Bursary in Nsukka to look for money anywhere to help us. To our relief, 1.5 million naira was later released. May God bless him.
It was even during the period of disbursing the funds that the UBA saga started unfortunately. But God took care of the situation. Now despite the fact that we were yet to collect the remaining 500,000 naira, we still had hope that we could still draft the Union’s Budget and the VC would approve it. Just when we started planning it, the Speaker and his foot soldiers plotted my suspension. That drew the Union further steps backward. When I came back I started calling for the submission of budgets.
Based on the provision of the constitution, there shall be a budget committee comprising the President of the Union as the Chairman, the FIN SEC as the Secretary and all the executive officer as members. We are to prepare the Union’s budget for the Executive, Legislature, and the Judiciary. Submissions are made to the committee through its Secretary.
The preliminary phase is concluded when the Chairman and the Secretary collate and reasonably modify outrageously high budgets. The second phase sees the collated budgets thoroughly discussed by the Committee as a whole as they make further corrections. The third phase is complete when the House of Reps finally ratifies the budget as submitted and defended by the Chairman and the Secretary. The Chief Judge’s budget was the first to come to our table. About 4.5 million naira or so. He even called it a pre-budget. We rejected it and asked that His Lordship submits something more realistic. In the end, I think he made slight modifications and renamed it as the Judicial Budget. That was much better. But for some unknown reason the executive officers didn’t submit theirs on time even after the said UNITY meeting that saw us discuss about our individual projects and plans for the union. And when they started sending it in, the sheer total was unimaginably prodigious. VP’s budget was above 4 million, DOS about 3 million, PRO between 2 and 3 million.
DOT 8 million, SEC GEN approximately 1 million. The Senate demanded about 4.7 million. The sheer amount revolving around 20 million naira and most especially the fact that some officers were yet to submit theirs really slowed phase 1 down. The last submission was even made barely 3 weeks ago. Worst still, the Secretary was yet to see the Welfare officer’s budget even up till today. Rumor has it that he sidetracked the budget committee to submit directly to the House due to its large size. The Speaker to probably spite me accepted the budget which was an act in gross contravention of the law.
When I and the Committee’s Secretary eventually called EXCO officials for the budget meeting to be held on the 23rd of November 2014 and with a 48-hours’ notice, only the ASG, FIN SEC and the DOG turned up. Then the news filtered through the air that night that I was going to be removed from office the next day by the House on account of a certain vote of no confidence passed by members of the executive. The rest is history. But in summary, those holding me responsible for not passing the Union’s budget are not been honest with themselves. Even our counterparts in Nsukka had their own of 13 million rejected. Non of the two unions have submitted fresh budgets.
And contrary to the report that the VC approved a costa bus for our UNN counterparts through their budget, please there is no credibility in that story even as I know that there is absolutely no way the VC would get them a bus and would not get us our own which we had already requested when we had a meeting with him earlier when he assumed office and had invited the both SUGs. That's about that. Please read on.
3. INABILITY TO ACCOUNT FOR N68,000 NANS MONEY.
That is again not true. The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) was to have their convention in Asaba, Delta State to elect a new President and other officials of NANS. In NANS, Union presidents are referred to as senators. And in the Association, only the senators have the right to vote. Yet, when the convention came calling I thought it would be wise to go along with some principal officers of the Union for them to get the necessary exposure. I decided I would go with 10 persons. I applied for fund, about 400,000 naira.
The mistake was that I allowed the SEC GEN (a next door neighbor and course mate to Mr Speaker) to sign the letter with me instead of FIN SEC. I was to go with some Principal Officers of the Union including the Chief Judge, the Speaker, and at least 6 others. When the Speaker was secretly informed by his good neighbor that money would soon come, it was then that my suspension and that of the VP was fast-tracked. The political calculation there by him and his cohort was that if they can get both the president and VP temporarily suspended, the Speaker automatically becomes the President.
Please note that Mr Treasurer never had any intention of fabricating those petitions against me, but the trio of the Speaker, the PRO, and the Welfare officer as I later gathered from reliable sources including the Treasurer himself, were the individuals that goaded him into writing his own petitions against me as a form of retaliation that I had already submitted mine against him for forging my signature at the bank. Mr Treasurer reluctantly obliged.
Mine was submitted a week or two prior to his own but all three petitions (including that against the VP by the SEC GEN) were considered together by the House. What baffled me most was that the SEC GEN had even indicted me in his petition to the House and not just madam VP. Agbo used to be my best friend. But he betrayed me during the UBA saga. I don’t know whether to blame it on sheer wickedness or a way of saving only his head, he was being equivocal in his testimonies about me during the UBA saga complicating things in the process. Now back to the main story.
The three of us (me, the VP, and the Treasurer) eventually got suspended without following due process which would have been that the Speaker mandates a committee in the House called Petition and Privileges who would have first ascertain the case and then do preliminary investigation to know whether the petitions were substantial enough to warrant full scale investigations. It is after that that they would report to House and advise them during the next House session to set up an investigative panel to lunch a more thorough investigation. Only when the panel begins her investigation that the affected officers stand suspended.
But instead of doing what is constitutional, the Speaker connived with few Honourables promising to give part of the NANS money if it comes, that they should just suspend the three of us as soon as possible if they are to stand any chance of accessing the yet-to-be-released N400,000. They agreed, but how were they to go about that since other neutral and more seasoned Honourables were likely going to kick against it? Read on!
On the day of the House session, the Speaker tactically added many other irrelevant items as part of the agenda. The session started by 5pm.
They wasted time discussing those inconsequential issues keeping the items bordering on petitions as the last. When they eventually got to the items on petition, it was already 1:30 am. Almost all the neutral House members had left leaving mainly the Speaker and his cohort to continue the deliberations. Hence, it was easy to ‘murder’ the constitution and get us suspended by simple majority votes.
Mr Speaker was immediately made the Acting President while his Deputy became the Acting Speaker. Students were shocked to hear about our suspension the following day. The following Monday he began the process of changing the Union’S signatory from my own to his own but his effort proved abortive. And as God would have it the NANS Convention was postponed and the N400,000 was never approved. They were all disappointed. His scheming to hold onto power in order to pave way for his classmate, the PRO to become the next SUG president had also failed as I got reinstated.
Some weeks later, the NANS convention came calling again. But this time I decided to go with 6 persons on the Dean’s advice since only N250,000 was approved. The onus fell on me to choose those that would come with me. Like I said only the presidents are eligible to vote and the only ones invited. But I convinced our new Dean that I would like to go with the Speaker, the Chief Judge, SEC GEN, VP, and FIN SEC. the VP was later replaced with one Honourable because of her exams that period. I just wanted peace. The N250,000 was to take care of our Transportation, Hotel accommodation, Feeding, Accreditation and other logistics. Yet immediately we got to Asaba in the night, the Speaker and the SEC GEN wanted to fight me, insisting the N250,000 must be split equally amongst the 6 of us. I couldn’t believe my ears and eyes! It took the intervention of Presidents from other institutions in Nigeria to rescue me telling them it was a privilege for them to have even been chosen to come with me. Others never came with their Speakers or SEC GEN. The Speaker had the bottle to wake the DVC and Dean up in the middle of the night to report me. The two good mothers called me and I explained everything to them. They advised me on what to do and I obeyed. By the end of the 3-day convention, everybody had received at least N17,000 each and they all thanked me.
The little that remained if any was to be used to run my office. Despite the fact that the House has no right over any money released for NANS conventions by the School (since it’s always for the president alone to attend), I still told my FIN SEC to document how the money was spent for the sake of accountability. He did and I’m to present everything about the Union’s account just before the end of our tenure. We are yet to do that, so, I don’t know where they got the information that N68,000 was remaining. I can’t remember the FIN SEC presenting the account to any individual or group.
4. THAT I POCKETED N500,000 GIVEN TO THE UNION AT A RALLY.
This is the most ludicrous of all the allegations made by the 7-man gang.
Please note that the organizer of the modest political rally was the SSA to the current minister for power and his organization called YILARD in conjunction with the council of SUG Presidents in Enugu State. Truth is I wasn’t even doing much for him as I was busy with preparation for my 4th MBBS exams. I only managed to put up a few appearances in their meetings. VP’s were not allowed to represent their Presidents in those meetings.
They were not happy but they all knew my hands were tied. Then on the eve of the rally, I was asked to mobilize some students to represent support from UNEC axis for M President and Gburugburu. I never wanted to let them down again. But I was smart enough to ask the SSA how much each student that attends the rally would be given at the end of the day. He told our Council that it was going to be at least N500 (five hundred naira) depending on the success of the program. While other presidents promised to bring hundreds of their students to the rally, I was modest enough to say 50 due to the short notice. He promised to provide buses for the rally. I had to call my PA (i.e. Zimuzo) to as much as he can try to go round and inform interested students about the rally and the amount for each of them. The next day students picked from all the recognized tertiary institutions in Enugu and even including few from our sister campus in Nsukka all gathered at Okpara square. I can even remember calling the Mr Speaker that morning to inform him. There was no response but later sent me a message that he was in a lecture. I still have the message on my phone.
After the program and to everybody’s amazement that day, the SSA of whom I had asked our students to get his number from him decided that the money was no longer going to be given at the rally ground to avoid a stampede. We all protested but later dispersed in anger. That same night the SSA called all the SUG presidents for a meeting and gave each school an amount commensurate with the number of names for each list that students submitted. UNEC was given about N50,000 (FIFTY THOUSAND NAIRA) and that same night I called Zimuzo to inform all the students that attended the rally that the money has been made available. The idea was that they should gather in the morning at Mbonu Ojike hostel and collect their N500 naira each. I wanted him to come that morning to Old UNTH (where fifth and final year medical students stay, outside UNEC) and collect the money himself for onward disbursement to those that attended, but on a second thought I decided he should just gather them for me to come and do that myself in order to avoid controversy. That morning I rushed into UNEC, thanked the students and gave each of them present there N600 instead of the N500 originally promised. About 40 students benefitted. The remaining amount was shared among the stakeholders like Zimuzo and his assistants. Hence, you can understand my shock when the next day I heard some ingrates were accusing me of having received N500,000 from the SSA. Isn’t that ridiculous? Even the said fifty thousand was not officially for the Union, it was for those students that attended the rally. The peddlers of such rumours are only trying to justify their impeachment plans against me. Please for more clarification on how much was released for UNEC, please kindly call the SSA to the minister for Power (popularly called Igwe Wawa) on: 08037622533. Or you can equally reach the Chairman, Council of SUG PRESIDENT (ie ESUT SUG President – Afam) on: 07035620210 – or even any other SUG president in Enugu that you know. The fact remains that it would be naïve of me to have pocketed N470,000 and expect to go scot free.
My conscience and my desire for good reputation would never allow me do such a thing. I guess my political enemies think I’m just as dirty as them.
5. THAT I AM THE NUCLEUS OF DISUNITY WITHIN THE EXCO.
When we all assumed office newly, my hopes were that we would work together as a team. That hope soon got dashed when I realized that the VP and the Welfare officer were stirring rebellion in the executive council. Sometimes, to register her insubordination and penchant for power, she insults me in public and even walks out on us in EXCO meetings. At other times she would complain she has other important things to do and would stay away from meetings without cogent reasons. This practice gradually started permeating the entire EXCO and most times I would call for meetings and only 5 persons out of 11 would make it. Very early in the administration, the VP started indoctrinating the Welfare officer and the DOS not to report officially to me anymore pointing at the fact that everybody sponsored their campaign alone. I was devastated. We took the issue to the then Dean who was quite frank with us and explained to the VP that she was answerable to me constitutionally. We left, thinking she would improve but no way. The conducts of officers even deteriorated further: chewing of gums, noisily answering or making calls, pinging and watsapping. Hmm! Some were a bit reasonable though.
But I was suffering as a leader. It got so bad in the EXCO that we had to ask the Chief Judge to help us draft a code of conduct document to see if attitudes would improve. It never did.
The EXCO members were always at one another’s throat. I hate remembering those things. But God knows I did my best to foster peace such as the UNITY football match and dinner I told you about. I forgave my VP all she did to me after her wonderful mom talked to me. I had to take her round all the hostels to beg students who had by then hated her so much that they never wanted to see her around their hostels. All the officers came along with us. This happened just before the second semester exams started. Remember? What did I not do to bring us together? The VP did not even turn up for that UNITY dinner. But we achieved a lot though that evening at Jennifer. The SEC GEN and the DOG exchanged beautiful text messages for the first time since my administration started. I delighted. I made peace with the PRO and Welfare officer but by the next day, they had returned to their old ways because they felt I was not openly supporting their SUG Presidential aspirations.
Hmm! There are still a few other things to address even regarding our students week. If not that I am currently in the middle of my exams. I would have loved to put them all down in black and white. But just as our movie producers would say: watch out for part 2! AND PLEASE DO SHARE THIS WITH ALL YOUR FRIENDS TOO. I LOVE YOU.
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