Senate President Godswill Akpabio acknowledged the challenges currently facing Nigeria but reassured citizens that President Bola Tinubu’s administration would leave behind a lasting legacy that ensures a better future for the country.
Speaking at the 2024 University of Calabar (UNICAL) ’87 Law Class Reunion in Calabar, Akpabio attributed the present hardships to past maladministration, expressing confidence that the government’s efforts would lead to improvements over time. He emphasized the commitment of Tinubu’s administration to addressing the issues and fostering long-term national growth.
The Senate President, a law graduate of the University of Calabar, said: “The difficulties we are witnessing in our nation today were not caused by the present administration. These are as a result of years of maladministration.”
“Any country that does not have backbone infrastructure, you don’t have something to develop, you don’t save for the rainy day, when there is economic malaise such as we are witnessing in the world today, such country is bound to be affected.”
“The good news is that under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, we have hope today, that there is light at the end of the tunnel. The things that we are trying to do now, we are doing it for posterity. Not for ourselves. Be assured that this administration will leave behind lasting legacies that will guarantee a better future.”
Earlier, Akpabio led his old classmates to pay separate courtesy visits to the Governor of Cross River State, Prince Bassey Otu and the Vice Chancellor of UNICAL, Professor Florence Obi, who later narrated legion of challenges currently facing the institution, particularly in the area of infrastructure.
He told the university management that the ’87 Law Class decided to congregate at the institution primarily to do an evaluation on the state of affairs of their alma mater and to see how best they could be of assistance to the institution that nurtured them.
Akpabio announced, on behalf of the ’87 Law Class, donation of two Coaster buses for the Faculty of Law and UNICAL Student Union Government (SUG).
Otu, also a UNICAL graduate, assured the ’87 Law Class that visited him that the government of Cross River State would partner with them on whatever they planned to do for the institution.
“We want to look at what you will do and Cross River State will also partner with you and add to whatever you are going to do,” Governor Otu said.
Also speaking at the re-union, the Patron of the ’87 Law Class, Justice Okon Abang of the Court of Appeal, observed that the journey of his former classmates to the level they are now had not been without challenges.
“As I reflect on the accomplishment of this class, I am overwhelmed by how much we have collectively contributed to the legal profession and to the progress of our great nation and the entire commonwealth of nations,” Justice Abang said.