Education

FG Nullifies Appointment Of FUTO VC Aides

By Alice Etuka, Abuja

The Federal Ministry of Education has ordered the Vice-Chancellor of Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO) to immediately withdraw the appointment of 24 aides in his office over alleged breaches of due process.

This was contained in a leaked directive from the Ministry on Thursday. The confidential correspondence dated June 25, 2026, and obtained by our correspondent, shows that the ministry faulted the appointments and directed the Vice-Chancellor to reverse them “forthwith” and provide evidence of compliance without delay.

The letter, signed by the Acting Director of University Education, Dr. Kareem O. L., on behalf of the Minister of Education, described the appointments as irregular and inconsistent with regulations governing Nigeria’s federal universities.

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The directive followed the Ministry’s review of an internal university memorandum dated June 22, 2026, through which the appointments were reportedly made.

In the leaked communication, the ministry stated that after a careful examination of the appointments and the circumstances surrounding them, the Minister observed that they were “at variance with the extant regulations, established procedures, and the principles of due process governing appointments within the Federal University System.”

The ministry subsequently ordered the immediate withdrawal of the appointments and demanded documentary proof that the directive had been implemented.

The development signals an unusually strong intervention by the Federal Government in the administration of one of the country’s foremost technology universities and raises fresh questions about governance practices within federal tertiary institutions.

Beyond the order to cancel the appointments, the leaked letter also summoned the Vice-Chancellor to Abuja for an urgent meeting with officials of the Ministry on June 29.

According to the document, discussions at the meeting will extend beyond the controversial appointments to cover wider concerns relating to institutional governance, administrative accountability, due process, and compliance with the regulatory framework guiding federal universities.

The summons suggests that the Ministry may be scrutinising broader administrative decisions within the institution amid growing concerns over adherence to established procedures.

“The Ministry remains committed to promoting transparency, prudence and best practices in the management of our tertiary institutions,” the letter stated, while expressing confidence that the university would comply with the directive.

A copy of the communication was also forwarded to the National Universities Commission (NUC), a move observers say underscores the seriousness of the matter and the potential implications for university governance.

As of the time of filing this report, neither the management of FUTO nor officials of the Federal Ministry of Education had publicly commented on the leaked directive.

The revelation is expected to trigger intense debate within academic circles, with stakeholders closely watching the outcome of the scheduled engagement between the Vice-Chancellor and the ministry, as well as its implications for governance, accountability and administrative discretion in Nigeria’s federal university system.

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