Dear Vasco,

I have read closely your arguement against establishment of a public
university in Westnile. You have made a compelling case for infrastructure
development as a top development priority for the region. In many of your
previous postings, you have made great policy proposals for development of
the region. Unfortunately, you are undoing all the previous good
arguements by saying establishing a university is a misplaced
priority for addressing the real development issues of the region. You have
argued in favor of power, airport, a sewer system and a stable communication
network. Why do you find it problematic if we have a public university and
still address the issues you have listed? These are not mutually exclusive
issues.

You have adviced that our focus should instead be on the dilapidated
educational infrasture at lower levels. This line of arguement is
self-defeating because when you improve our primary and secondary schools,
they produce students who would like to access university education. Through
teaching, research and outreach activities, public universities improve
overall educational systems in a region, including primary and secondary
schools. Also, public universities have abilities, independent of
government, to attract resources to a region. A public university has very
many other associated development benefits that  seem to escape your
thinking. I suggest that you take some time to educate yourself on the role
of public universities in regional development. You will probably discover
that your arguement against establishing a public university as a top
priority is actually anti-development of the region. I am really
disappointed that you think a focus on a public university is misleading.
One of the main aims of WNF is is raise educational standards in the region
by producing more masters and PhDs in the region. Given this aim, do you
really believe having a public university in the region is a misplaced
priority?

Thank you for being very active on this forum.

Ben
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 8:22 PM, Vasco Oguzua <[email protected]> wrote:

> Reading from the various submissions about the Public University there is
> a sense that the operation of this given University will have the greatest
> impact and help develop the West Nile region more than ensuring West Nile
> has stable power supply, a good supply of clean water and sewerage system,
> Arua Airport is developed to international status, a stable communication
> network (all of these are infrastructure developments that are vital for the
> development of a region).
> I know I may be a lone dissenter, but I still submit that the idea of
> rushing for a university is a misplaced priority for the development of West
> Nile as a region. Many have mentioned the impact of  Gulu university and
> Mbarara University as examples of how the respective areas where these
> Universities are found have developed. One thing they have not mentioned in
> their submission is that these two areas have been with relatively stable
> and sufficient electricity supply for more than 30 years and they are in the
> National Grid. Has the West nile region ever been in the National Grid.
> Take a view of the news which is in the papers:
>
> http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/855174/-/whyave/-/index.html
>
> Is West Nile not a part of the country that it has been excluded in the
> Nation rigid of Fibre Optics? Has the President be the one to give us or do
> us another favour of allowing Arua to be included in the National Grid of
> Fibre Optics. Infrastructure (roads, energy, water, airport, communications
> network) are what will provide more jobs, improve the economy and improve
> living conditions of the people in West Nile not a University. We should
> rather address the dilapidated conditions in our Primary and Secondary
> schools with such money and perhaps build more Vocational Technical schools
> which will train hands on skills for our young men and women. I think we
> really need to put in perspective the development priorities of West Nile
> Region as a whole and strategize on priorities we set rather than getting
> excited about what is given.
> The issue of organizing workshops to discuss development priority issues in
> West Nile  therefore becomes a must, and a cross-section of the population
> in the region need to be invited for such a workshop because the general
> view of the people who we may be talking for advocating development for need
> to be corroborated into the decision process of the elite and
> professionals.  May be that should be where we should begin rather than
> delve into a University which I am sure the local people on the ground have
> no knowledge of or are not informed about. The WNF as a civic organization
> should take the lead in organizing such workshops and people of various
> walks and interests should be invited and allowed to openly discuss these
> issues without fear and favour.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Vasco Oguzua
>
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