UNILAG Alumni Association unveils 55th anniversary dinner, enjoins support to advance education

The President of the University of Lagos Alumni Association Worldwide, Engr. Ifeoluwa Oyedele, FNSE, FAEng, has announced plans for the Association’s 55th Anniversary Awards and Recognition Dinner, even as he raised concerns over the state of Nigeria’s education sector.

Speaking at a press conference held at the UNILAG Alumni Jubilee House, Lagos, Engr. Oyedele said the forthcoming Dinner and Award Night would take place on Friday, October 17, 2025, at Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island, Lagos.

Engr. Ifeoluwa Oyedele, FNSE, FAEng,

According to him, the event will celebrate excellence, honour distinguished alumni, and raise funds to support scholarships and critical infrastructure projects at the University of Lagos. Vice President of Nigeria, Senator Kashim Shettima, GCON, will serve as the Special Guest of Honour, while Olor’ogun Dr. Sonny Kuku, OFR, FAS, Ogbeni Oja of Ijebuland, will chair the occasion.

Meanwhile, Otunba Lekan Ajisafe, 2nd Vice President of the Association and Chairman of the 55th Anniversary, explained that the Awards and Recognition Dinner is the second phase of the celebration which commenced last year. According to him:

“Great Nigerians have been carefully selected for their contributions to education, society, and the University of Lagos. Let me inform you that the award is for only deserving Nigerians. We want people to know that investment in education is not a waste but nation building”.

Beyond the planned celebration, Engr, Oyedele used the platform to call attention to what he described as “sobering truths” about Nigeria’s educational system. He listed underfunding, brain drain, outdated curricula, and poor welfare for teachers and lecturers as challenges threatening the sector.

“If education collapses, every other sector will eventually collapse. Without quality education, we cannot innovate, we cannot compete globally, and we cannot secure a prosperous future for Nigeria,” Oyedele warned.

He commended the Federal Government, under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, for initiatives such as the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND), increased budgetary allocation to education, and scholarships for vocational and technical students. However, he urged the government to translate policy pronouncements into sustainable action.

Highlighting the contributions of UNILAG Alumni over the years, Oyedele cited scholarship programmes, equipment donations, and construction of learning facilities. He revealed that the Association will soon begin the construction of a new 1,800-bed student hostel, expected to be completed within 18 months.

He called on government, the private sector, and individuals to partner with the alumni in strengthening Nigerian education.

“We call on the private sector to see investments in education not as charity, but as enlightened self-interest. The future workforce, the innovators, and the entrepreneurs who will power their businesses tomorrow are sitting in our classrooms today,” he said.

Oyedele concluded on an optimistic note, affirming that with the right investment, Nigerian universities could compete globally and drive national development across all sectors. He urged esteemed citizens, and especially every alumnus, to give back, whether through mentorship, financial support, or advocacy, noting that every contribution matters.

“Distinguished members of the press, despite the challenges, I stand before you today full of optimism. Nigeria is blessed with talent, resilience, and creativity. With the right support, our universities will not only compete with their global counterparts, but also drive national development in science, technology, the arts, and governance.

Our forthcoming Dinner and Award Night is therefore more than a social gathering. It is a rallying call. A visible demonstration of our determination to strengthen the legacy of the University of Lagos and to build a stronger foundation for Nigerian education”, he noted.

The press conference, attended by members of the media and alumni, served both as a prelude to the October 17 dinner and as a rallying call to stakeholders to prioritize education in national development.


L-R: Dr. Aaron Akinloye, Chairman, Awards Committee; Mrs. Funmi Falobi, National Publicity Secretary, Unilag Alumni Association; Otunba Lekan Ajisafe, 2nd National Vice President & Chairman, 55th Anniversary Planning Committee; Chief Dr. Bala Yesufu, 1st National Vice President; Engr. Ifeoluwa Olushola Oyedele, FNSE, FAEng, President Worldwide and Chief Host, 55th Anniversary; Asiwaju Dr. Michael Olawale-Cole, MFR, CON, CNIM, FNIM, CIOD, Former National President; Barr. Adebayo Osikoya, National Secretary and Rev. Olatunde Ayadi, FCA, National Internal Auditor at the press conference.

APC, DIDEOLU FALOBI AND OSUN GOVERNORSHIP RUN: WHEN LEGACY MEETS POSSIBILITY

The stage is set, the lights are on, and Osun State once again finds itself at the edge of political drama. The question before us is not new, yet it carries fresh weight: with the incumbent governor of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) seeking another term, who dares to wrestle power away from him?

Ordinarily, such a debate belongs to professional politicians, party strategists, and the endless chatter of political analysts. Yet in Osun, politics is not the pastime of politicians alone — it is the heartbeat of the people. Whether one shrugs it off or follows it passionately, the reality remains: the decision of who governs Osun is not merely the headache of the gladiators in politIcal Agbada, but the collective burden — and aspirations of its citizens.

For the All Progressives Congress (APC), the leading opposition party in Osun State, the next two to three months are critical. The Party must answer the defining question: Who shall bear the party’s flag against the PDP incumbent?
Big names and known political power brokers have already thrown their hats into the ring, plotting and lobbying, whispering in corridors of influence. Some of them have tasted power before; won elections, lost elections and have failed re-contested elections. Some of them were asked to step aside, and now stepping up their game, aiming for the highest political office available. Some have, hanging on their neck, public perception of under-performance, low performance, and twisted self-centred performance.
The inter-play of politics in Nigeria is often a mixed bag, and every political gladiator seeking for the office of the Osun State Governor is constitutional guaranteed to do so; it’s a race open for the good, the not so good, and the bad; irrespective of what the perception is.
However, in the midst of the political gladiators, one name that is beginning to rise like a quiet storm within the Osun APC fold is that of Engr. Dideolu Falobi, FNSE, FIoD.

The Power of a name, the Weight of a Legacy
In Osun, names are not mere syllables. They are signatures. They carry history, trust, and sometimes scars. Each political era in the State has been defined by names etched in either service or controversy, cross-cutting the tenures of Isiaka Adeleke, Bisi Akande, Rauf Aregbesola, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, Gboyega Oyetola, and now Ademola Adeleke. These names are more than individuals; they are associated with political seasons, and the public perception of either performance, under performance or bad performance is a reality that the people of Osun live with.

As the decision ahead the Osun 2026 governorship election gather momentum, there appears a light in the horizon via a fresh, relatively unfamiliar name — Dideolu Falobi.
On the surface, he is not a product of entrenched political blocs, nor a veteran of the Osun political power wars.
That should make him a push-over in the conventional political script. Yet politics in today’s Nigeria is no longer conventional.
Beneath the surface, something intriguing is happening: a ‘newcomer’ is gathering momentum, powered not by patronage of “stomach infrastructure,” but by goodwill, service, and the quiet force of community trust.

This is where legacy meets possibility. For Dideolu Falobi, his bloodline does not entitle him to power. Instead, his strength comes from a different foundation: years of building, serving, and inspiring. His heritage is not a political burden but a mantle of service waiting to be extended into leadership.

Dideolu Falobi: The New Breed Leader
So, who is this man daring to interrupt the political chessboard of Osun?
Dideolu Falobi is not your typical politician. He is a technocrat, a community builder, and a leader by achievement rather than ambition. Born in Iwoye-Ijesa in Oriade LGA of Osun East, Dideolu Falobi grew up in Ilesa where he attended Methodist High School before proceeding to the University of Lagos, graduating with a B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering in 1987.
His professional path is both impressive and instructive. From rising to Junior Partner at Edison Group & Partners, to leading electrification projects across Nigeria and The Gambia, to becoming Managing Director of Kresta Laurel Limited in 2005, Dideolu Falobi has consistently turned challenges into landmarks.

Under his leadership, Kresta Laurel executed projects for institutions like the Central Bank, Shell, UBA, Silverbird Group, and the Bank of Industry. He also chairs Hieno Technologies Limited, extending his influence into Nigeria’s industrial growth.


Yet beyond boardrooms and skyscrapers, Dideolu Falobi has written his story in the heart of communities. For nearly two decades, he transformed his alma mater as President of the Methodist High School Old Students’ Association, delivering modern classrooms, labs, a library, a multipurpose hall, water projects, and even an astronomy observatory — the first in Osun State.
He didn’t stop there. He founded the Ijesaland Development Foundation, advancing rural and regional development. He chairs the Iwoye-Ijesa Development Committee, proving that rural voices matter. On the national stage, he convenes the Think Tank on Nigeria, a platform of over 250 professionals brainstorming policy reforms. He served as National Chairman of the UNILAG Faculty of Engineering Alumni Association, mobilising resources to uplift education.

While his leadership résumé is decorated with fellowships, recognitions, and thought leadership, more importantly, his name tells of someone who has been working where politicians often fail: in real problem-solving.

Beyond an aspiration, what stuff is Dideolu Falobi made up of?
Running for governor of Osun is not a tea party. It demands grit, vision, and capacity. And in these, Dideolu Falobi does not come empty-handed. The roles he has played over the years has been the manual of competence:
• Bobajiro of Ilesa; custodian of tradition.
• Convener, Think Tank on Nigeria; A reform driver.
• Founder, Ijesaland Development Foundation; a regional development advocate.
• MD, Kresta Laurel Limited; a business leader.
• Chairman, Board of Fellows, Nigerian Institution of Safety Engineers; Professional depth.
• Vice President, Board of Trustees, Osun Country Club; Socially relevant.
• APC member, rooted in Ward 4, Iwoye-Ijesa, Oriade LGA; politically committed.

But beyond the résumé, his candidacy signals something refreshing:
• He is free from old political baggage.
• He has demonstrated results, not just promises.
• He embodies a generational bridge — carrying heritage, yet aligned with the yearnings of the youth.
• He channels energy, competence, and integrity in equal measure.

Who shall bell the cat?
As political permutations dance across Osun’s West, East, and Central divides, the APC faces a choice. Will they recycle the usual faces, weighed down by yesterday’s battles, or will they dare to offer a fresh, credible alternative?

In all of these, Engr. Dideolu Falobi is emerging as a symbol of rebirth — the bridge between the legacy of yesterday and the innovation of tomorrow. And perhaps, just perhaps, the story of governance of Osun is about to turn a new, fresh and flourishing page.

However, power, in all ramifications, ultimately belongs not to the moneybags or the career political gladiators, but to God, who rules in the affairs of men — and who sometimes chooses the least expected vessels to reset history, and who resets history, in the most unexpected ways, in the space of times and seasons.
…. It’s all a matter of time. As day and night happens, so does the Creator shape the affairs and paths of humanity, and Dideolu Falobi, at the central, definitely has a part to play in turning the tide of things for the good of Osun, the State of the Living Spring. There’s work to be done; in parts, in pieces and in holistic service.

This article is written by Oluwasanmi Owokusile, a social advocate, cum strategic media-communications consultant.

ECI @ 25: TINUBU COMMENDS LEADERS FOR UPHOLDING CORE VALUES

The leaders and members of Eko Club International (ECI), the premier global organisation of Lagos indigenes, has been commended for upholding its core values by President Bola Tinubu. This is coming on the heels of the club’s 25th anniversary this month.

In a congratulatory message from the Presidency, President Tinubu acknowledged ECI’s significant contributions in promoting Lagos’s rich cultural heritage, sponsoring medical outreach programs, providing scholarships to the underprivileged, financing skill acquisition initiatives, and supporting entrepreneurship.

‘As Eko Club International celebrates 25 years of remarkable growth with 25 active chapters across the USA, UK, Canada, and Europe, President Tinubu affirms that the organisation’s unique history and impactful activities have positioned it for enduring generational influence’, the statement from the Presidency stated.

While encouraging ECI’s leaders and members to reflect on past achievements and prepare for even greater contributions in the future, the President thanked the members for their steadfast support and wishes the organisation continued success and greater impact in the years ahead.

ECI, is a community-based organisation of Lagosians in the Diaspora, established to foster cooperation and collaboration, unity, brotherhood and sisterhood amongst its members, to empower its members politically, socially and economically and to contribute positively to the advancement and prosperity of Lagos State.

According to available information, the genesis of Eko Club International, can be attributed to the vision of a group of Lagosians from Eko Club Houston and Canada, made up of the trio of Sam Dipeolu, T.J Abass and Yesir Ganiyu representing Eko Club Houston at a meeting with members of Eko Club Canada. The meeting was held at Mrs. Abiola Nosiru’s residence on February 15th, 2000.