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ICAN visits CU,
proposes collaboration
History was made on Tuesday February 13,
2007, when Covenant University played host to a high-powered
delegation from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of
Nigeria (ICAN).
The visit was historic for many reasons.
Apart from being the first time in the annals of the premier
Institute’s history that an incumbent President, six past
Presidents and its entire Council members were attending an
event outside its annual Accountants Conference, it was also
the first time such an array of doyens of the profession
were visiting a university in the country.
The visit opened a new vista of
collaborative opportunities for the University. The
delegation led by the President of the Institute, Dr
Catherine Okparaeke, announced its desire to initiate a
working partnership that would see the two institutions
building skills and expanding the frontiers of learning.
Dr Okparaeke said the partnership was
aimed at upgrading the entire professional development and
research base in accountancy in the country, adding that the
collaboration would see the accreditation of CU’s accounting
programme by ICAN such that its graduates would be exempted
from some levels of the Institute’s professional
examination.
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The
Chancellor (centre), Vice
Chancellor (4th left) with the ICAN Council members |
The ICAN boss, who is also an honorary
alumna of the University, said ICAN could proudly attest to
the excellent pioneering track record of the University in
the areas of entrepreneurship education, creation of an
information technology laboratory for its Accounting
students, inclusion and teaching of oil and gas accounting
at undergraduate level as well as teaching of ethics and
standards in its accounting curriculum.
Dr Okparaeke, also said that her
institute, which has membership of over 22,000 Chartered
Accountants and 12,500 Accounting Technicians, is looking
forward to the establishment of a base for continuing
professional development as she desired that CU introduce a
specialized Master of Science (M.Sc) programme in Applied
Accounting for ICAN members who do not currently have
university education and also for those who desire
postgraduate academic qualifications.
While receiving the ICAN delegation in
his office, the Chancellor, Dr David Oyedepo, warmly welcome
them, acknowledging the professionalism that ICAN has been
identified with over time.
The Chancellor, who also acknowledged the
pivotal role of ICAN in the development of the nation, said
it would take professional bodies like the Institute
remaining tireless in the pursuit of professionalism in all
aspects of national life and speaking up constructively on
national issues for the country to witness the desired
changes.
He identified lack of human capital and a
pervasive culture of gross mismanagement as responsible for
the slow growth of the nation’s economy in recent years.
According to Dr Oyedepo, Nigeria is in
its present state of under-development, not for the lack of
resources but good management, ethics and human capital,
which form the basis for any nation’s wealth.
"Today in Nigeria where we have well-trained human capital,
we do not use them. And when we use them, it is often a case
of round pegs in square holes. This is why our institution
is out to revolutionise education and also raise a new
generation of leaders as agents of change," he said.
Dr Oyedepo lamented the passive attitude
of public office holders to issues affecting the well being
of the people. He said in order to reverse the trend and
move the nation forward, that there was need to put people
who have the right values, irrespective of ethnicity or
religion to pilot the affairs of the country.
He said ICAN as a focus and leading
professional body should work out modalities of having
acceptable incursions into major policy decisions of
government. "Anybody can be a critic, I believe professional
bodies like ICAN are best positioned to lead Nigerians to
steer the needed change", the Chancellor added.
Earlier in her address at the occasion, the Vice Chancellor,
Professor Aize Obayan, thanked the president of ICAN for the
offer of collaboration and partnership, saying that the
collaboration was bound to bring a professional depth into
the University’s accounting curriculum and strengthen its
research base.
The Vice Chancellor said the University
already had a very strong penchant for driving excellence
along the cutting edge of learning and in all ramifications
as far as its programme was concerned, adding that the
proposed collaboration was a very worthy and viable
partnership to foster the University’s goal of becoming a
corporate university.
She also expressed optimism that the
partnership would spark off continuing professional
development in the country. "Many a time when we look at the
context of professionalism particularly in our nation
Nigerian, there’s a very important strand that is missing
and that is with respect to standards, value and an ethical
base. I am touched and particularly to note that ICAN is one
very corporate association that respects all of those
standards".
Professor Obayan commended the ICAN
President for her dogged commitment in repositioning the
Institute and said that she was an embodiment of the new
face of ICAN in terms of a new contribution to the human
development perspective that the Institute was set to drive.
She also thanked ICAN for giving
validation to Covenant University’s professional and
academic base through its success in its accreditation
exercise conducted last year.
Earlier in his welcome speech, the
Registrar of Covenant University, Yemi Nathaniel, who
extolled importance of the accounting profession, said the
profession would remain relevant as institutions and nations
continue to get more complex.
He said a nation would lose
accountability in stewardship when it fails to properly
account for the resources that God has given to it, adding
that ICAN through it drive for professionalism had always
ensured that the resources of the nation could be properly
accounted for.
The visit was also an occasion for
outpouring of encomiums on the young visionary University
for its giant strides within the short period of its
existence. The six past Presidents of the Institute, who
were obviously overwhelmed by what they saw, could not hide
their feelings as they took turns to praise the University.
Professor Michael Adepoju Adeyemo, one of
the founding pillars of the Institute and a pioneer staff of
the University of Lagos, was amazed by the CU campus and
prayed for the success of the partnership.
Mr E. F. Oke, who said he first entered
into the CU campus during the conferment of an honorary
doctorate on the ICAN president put his experience thus: "I
was totally lost in wonder by what I saw on that occasion
and I have never stopped telling anybody who cares to hear
that something is happening in Nigeria and I am proud to say
Ogun State. I believe this is what will turn this continent
around. What is happening in CU is what will turn this race
of people around and I congratulate the VC and through her
to the Chancellor, for this wonderful vision put into
action."
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A Cross section
of the ICAN Council members |
Mr Dele Owolabi, who has a child in the
University, extolled the rich spiritual and academic depth
of CU curriculum and declared that the University was the
best private University in the world. Mr. Soji Alabi agreed
with Mr Owolabi added that CU’s neat and serene campus and
its dress code for students were also fascinating and
innovative.
In the cause of their visit, the ICAN
delegation had interactive sessions with University’s
Management team and the graduating students of Accounting.
They were also given a guided tour round the University
campus and the entire Canaan Land.
Click here for pictures of event
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