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Bulgarian varsities offering admission to Nigerian students fleeing Ukraine – Envoy

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Bulgarian varsities offering admission to Nigerian students fleeing Ukraine - Envoy

Bulgarian varsities offering admission to Nigerian students fleeing Ukraine – Envoy

Bulgarian Ambassador to Nigeria Mr Yanko Yardonov has said that Bulgarian universities are offering admission to Nigerian students whose academic pursuits in Ukraine were cut short by Russia’s invasion.

Yardonov also said that some Nigerian citizens had been offered jobs by Bulgarian universities.

The Bulgarian ambassador disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

Prior to the onset of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, approximately 4,300 Nigerian students were studying in the eastern European country.

The number was the fifth-largest (5.4%) of the 80,000 international students in Ukraine, according to data from Ukraine’s ministry of education and science.

The students have said before that they found Ukrainian education’s appeal mostly in its affordability, a better standard of life, and the safe environment it provided.

Although the envoy did not say how many Nigerian students have been offered admission, he said the decision to help create an atmosphere conducive for the scholars to study without interruptions and to solidify the bilateral cooperation agreement in place between Nigeria and Bulgaria.

“Let me say that Bulgarian universities have already offered admissions to Nigerian citizens who started their studies in Ukraine but cannot graduate from there due to the war.

“It is only for Nigerian students that have this kind of offer from Bulgaria Universities throughout the world.

“I think that this fact alone is a clear manifestation that Bulgaria is very serious in developing the bilateral cooperation in every possible way, including in education, by admitting Nigerians citizens legally to study and work in Bulgaria,’’ he said.

He acknowledged the good relationship that Nigeria and Bulgaria have enjoyed over the years, saying that available statistics indicated that a significant number of Nigerians had been allowed to travel to Bulgaria and reside in the country either on a short-term basis or for the long term.

“There is a lot of good news in this regard as well, but what I am proud of is the gracious offer that Bulgaria has made.

“Those who have been deprived of their rights to get access to their own universities in Ukraine to finalise their studies have been given access in Bulgaria.

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ACADEMICS

A History of Biu” (2015) and The Lingering Bura-Pabir Question (2) 

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A History of Biu” (2015) and The Lingering Bura- Pabir Question (2) 

By:  Balami Lazarus 

This is the conclusion of my previous article on the above caption. I appreciated those who commented positively with respect to Part 1  on the one hand. While some tongue lashed at me, calling me an agent of disunity, forgetting that the piece is and for the purpose of Bura cultural identity, coupled with some historical corrections of Dr. Bukar Usman’s book “A History of Biu” (22015) that carried some false historical virus of Babur as cultural identity. The conveyors of such identity are merely bears in the market of cultural history of Biu people on the other hand. 

Therefore, the Bura-Pabir question is full of divides and indeed hooded in sentiments that have affected relationships intentionally seasoned by some selfish individuals nailed in the coffin of a fake Babur identity that has no origin or history. And this brings to the heavily tinted manipulation in order to disintegrate and displace the Bura people of their proud cultural identity, deliberately stirred in black mark to incapacitate them in a cultural identity crisis with the term Babur, a self-created identity that has become ingrained in the minds of many. 

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Recently, my attention was drawn to a book “Bura Language for Beginners” (2021) by Dr. Ahmed Dahiru Balami, where some people wanted to add Pabir to the title to read Bura-PPabir Language for Beginners, but the author refused and rejected the idea vehemently. This shows that Pabir has no cultural identity to stand independently on its own. Why must it lean on the Bura language? What is the position of Babur during and after Yamtara-WWala? 

One of the major challenges among many of the indigines of Biu town is basically the issue of cultural identity that many are faced with as either Pabir or Babur. And when and if you addressed them as Pabir or Babur, you put them on a crossroads. 

Similarly, the word Babur is the name of an ancient Oriental Emperor who once ruled India centuries ago. May be or may not, those who called and addressed themselves as Babur might have come from the bloodline of Emperor Babur through Yamtara-WWala. 

The Bura man is very conscious of his cultural identity through his first name, like Thalma, Anjikwi, or Hyelni. And more importantly, his clan name. Their clan names are living cultural histories that give them a high sense of belonging among themselves, which equally distinguishes them from other clans such as Zoaka, Mshelia, Bwala, Shalangwa, Dibal, Balami, Mhya, Mbaya, Ndahi, Mshellbwala, Mibwala, and Mshelizah, among many others. What are the Pabir or Babur cultural identity/clan names called? 

Therefore, for the reason of your book and for the clarity of cultural identity and understanding, I ask you, Dr. Bukar Usman, what and who are you? Do you have a clan name or ancestral root? 

Finally, I came to understand that some of the families in Biu that I had interacted with, who are claiming to be Pabir, are really not, but Bura, who are infested by the bug of Babur, are now surfing in an inferiority complex cloaked and lost in the mist of cultural identities like “Piano and Drums” (clash of cultures), one of the works of Gabriel Okara. 

This set of people is long conditioned to feel it is wrong, blemish, and clammish to be Bura but okay to be Babur. Probably Dr. Bukar Usman is one of such individuals.  And for the sake of historical and cultural identity, I hereby rest my pen. 

Balami, a publisher and columnist.

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A History of Biu” (2015) and The Lingering Bura-Pabir Question (2) 

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A History of Biu” (2015) and The Lingering Bura-Pabir Question (1) 

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A History of Biu” (2015) and The Lingering Bura-Pabir Question (1) 

By: Balami Lazarus 

The Bura-Pabir question has been on the front burner among the Bura and Pabir people in recent times. I was privileged to have read some works, both soft and hard copies, where such issues were briefly raised and treated lightly with no rationality or objectivity, plugged in historical infidelity, dishonesty, and bankruptcy by some authors and writers. 

Unfortunately, this seems to be the preferred trajectory and ho-hum of these authors and writers, who relied more on hypothesis than empirical evidence, misleading some to believe that Bura and Pabir are the same in history, culture, and tradition. Thus, they have saturated the Bura and Pabir spaces with wrong information and sentiments that lack historical viscosity because of the absence of essential historical ingredients to lubricate them. 

And these authors and writers want some of us to believe in their works as historical caveats. Was there Pabir as a people, circa 1535 AD? Definitely No. Why join this distinct group of people together? The protagonists of this porous notion are deliberately out to destroy and erase the origin, history, culture, and tradition of the Bura ethnic nation. 

Therefore, their origin, history, and tradition are interwoven in their cultural source materials as part of their civilization. Never before now, there were no people known, called, and addressed as Pabir who are today wrongfully addressed as Babur by many who are not aware of their origin. Pabir is the name given to them by the Bura, who are the aborigines of the vast area known as the Biu Plateau (Viu original name and spelling) in northeast Nigeria. 

Take notice that the word pabir is a noun that is related to a living thing, such as a species of ant While Babur is nowhere to be found in the Bura language as a noun or verb, And for this reason, a Bura man has for long distanced himself from being called and addressed as a Pabir or Babur man. 

In history, I was taught that man is the source of history and its source materials are logged in economic and socio-political activities that formed his growth and development over a period of time. In this regard, you can never remove man from historical developments or otherwise. And when I read the work of one Dr. Bukar Usman, “A History of Biu” (22015), I have been trying to put it behind me, but my sense of history and discipline as a historian could not permit me to withstand the erroneousness and falsification I noticed in the said work in question, where Dr. Bukar was able to catalogue, classify, and index the exploits of Yamtra-WWala and those he met, fought, and conquered. 

Who are the people with whom he fought?  Therefore, I decided to put up this write-up as my contribution to this issue. I hope my teachers who taught me history will not be disappointed but rather be proud of some of the subjective knuckle punches I launched herein. However, I commend Dr. Usman in his attempt to bring Biu history to the fore, having limited the scope of his work to the emergence of the Biu Royal Dynasty, dwelling more on wars and conquests led by Prince Abdullah, Yamtra, and Ola (original Bura spelling) of the Kanem Empire from Birnin N’gazargamu, a Kenembu by tribe, with his band of 70 men who the Pabir traced their patrilineal origin to. 

How it was changed to Yamtra: Wala came probably at the same time with the change from Pabir to Babur. The author, Dr. Bukar Usman, attempted to historically re-engineer Bura history to de-historize it of its Buranization properties in a gerrymeandering scheme simply to de-Buranize the Bura people in the History of Biu of their ethnic qualities, who see themselves as homogeneous tribes in language, culture, and tradition as their source materials.

Take, for instance, the yearly Bura Cultural Festival known as Marama Day. Where is the Pabir culture then? And why are some people deceiving others into thinking that Bura and Pabir are the same? Note that the Bura man is not, will not, shall not, and never will he call or address himself as a Pabir or Babur man, as they are wrongly addressed. Bura and Pabir are parallel to each other in culture, tradition, and language. 

One is a dialect twisted in the concept of Babur. While the other is a tribe in a body of ethnic nation.  As a page filler, Dr. Usman said “Wild Animals Commonly Found in Biu Territory,” such as tigers, cheetahs, ostriches, giraffes, zebras, and others. The tigers mentioned by the author in his book are not natives of the African wild and can never be found in the Biu Plateau wild territory. 

Therefore, tigers have never lived freely in Africa except in captivity in zoos and parks. What we have are leopards (Tengvwa) in the Bura language. I will hereby, on a historical affidavit, put it to you, Dr. Bukar Usman, that you are wrong and have inflicted maximum fatal historical injury to the wild life history of Biu Plateau. 

Balami, a publisher and columnist.

A History of Biu” (2015) and The Lingering Bura-Pabir Question (1) 

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Soyinka, nine others bag Cambridge varsity honorary degrees

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Soyinka, nine others bag Cambridge varsity honorary degrees

Soyinka, nine others bag Cambridge varsity honorary degrees

Nigerian Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, was, alongside nine others, conferred with an honorary degree from the University of Cambridge.

One of the most prestigious honours in the world, the Cambridge varsity honorary degree is bestowed upon people “who have made outstanding achievements in their respective fields,” the varsity’s official site noted.

The ceremony, which took place on Wednesday, was held at the varsity’s Senate House with over 400 staff, students and other guests in attendance.

Chancellor of the varsity, Lord Sainsbury of Turville, presided over the ceremony, which was conducted in Latin and English.

Soyinka, who is a playwright, poet, novelist and political activist, won the prestigious Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986.

He has held visiting appointments at higher institutions in Cambridge, Legon, Atlanta, and Yale.

Recipients of this year’s University of Cambridge’s honorary degree, asides from Soyinka, include Ghanian philosopher, Professor Kwame Appiah; literary scholar, Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr; developmental biologist, Professor Edith Heard; music composer, Dr Judith Weir; and a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, Dr Ali Smith.

Other recipients, who are all professors, include mathematical physicist, Sir Roger Penrose; developmental biologist, Elizabeth Robertson; art historian, Simon Schama; ad molecular biologist, John Walker.

Soyinka is presently a Professor Emeritus of Dramatic Literature at the Obafemi Awolowo University.

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