EducationLocalNews

OAU to immortalise staff killed by lion

By Dorcas Elusogbon
Ile-Ife (Osun), Feb. 20, 2025

The management of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, has promised to immortalise Mr. Olabode Olawuyi, a veterinary technologist who was killed by a lion in the university’s zoo.

The Registrar of the University, Mr. Adetunji Bakare, stated this on Wednesday at a one-day workshop to mark the first anniversary of Olawuyi’s death, held at the Pit Theatre, Department of Dramatic Arts, OAU.

The workshop, organised by the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) was titled “Workplace Safety Awareness.”

The News Agency of Nigeria(NAN) reports that Olawuyi died on Feb. 19, 2024, while attempting to rescue a junior colleague who was attacked by the lion during feeding.

The Registrar stated that people were not gathering to celebrates Olawuyi’s death, “but his heroism.”

Bakare assured that the university authorities would immortalise the memory of late Olawuyi.

The Registrar saluted Olawuyi’s courage for standing in the gap of death of another person.

He assured that measures have been put in place to prioritise workplace safety for staff and to create a conducive environment for them to work.

Speaking at the event, NAAT National President, Mr. Ibeji Nwokoma, said Olawuyi was a martyr who died saving another life.

Nwokoma, who was represented by the immediate past National Treasurer, Dr Rachel Hassan-Olajokun, urged the university management to rename the zoo in Olawuyi’s honour.

Similarly, Mr. Reuben Temerigha, the Managing Director, Western Diamond Energy Limited (WEDEL), charged every organisation to provide a safe and healthy environment for their staff.

Represented by Mr. Harry Ipalibo, the Manager, Health, Safety, Security and Environment, WEDEL, Temerigha maintained that workplace injuries and hazards remain a pressing challenge.

He added that the deceased’s bravery and selflessness served as a stark reminder of the risks many workers face on a daily basis, calling for prioritising of safety and implementing measures that would prevent such incidents in the future.

Temerigha identified lack of awareness and training, non-compliance with safety regulations, hazardous work environments, fatigue and human error, as well as poor safety culture among others as the challenges to workplace safety.

He suggested comprehensive training programmes, strict enforcement of safety technology, encouraging a culture of safety, regular safety audits and risk assessments, employee well-being programmes as some of the ways to safeguard the workers.

Also speaking, the Chairman, NAAT-OAU, Mr. Matthew Oluwaniyi, said that the programme was to honour the deceased whose demise serves as a solemn reminder of the risks many workers face daily.

Oluwaniyi emphasised that the late Zoologist left a legacy that demands actions, not just remembrance, calling for Olawuyi’s immortalisation by naming the OAU Zoological Garden after him.

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