Olawale Adeniji Ige

Olawale Adeniji Ige Member of the Order of the Federal Republic, MFR (Born 13 October 1938) is a Nigerian Electrical engineer and former Minister of the Federal Ministry of Communications (1990-1992).[1] He also served as the Minister of the Federal Ministry of Aviation (1993).[2]

Olawale Adeniji Ige
Minister of the Federal Ministry of Aviation
In office
1993–1994
Minister of the Federal Ministry of Communications
In office
1990–1992
Personal details
Born (1938-10-13) 13 October 1938
Oyo State, Nigeria
Political partyNon-Partisan

Life and career

He was born on 13 October 1938 in Ogbomosho, a city in Oyo State, Nigeria. He was educated at Baptist Boys High School, Abeokuta, the capital of Ogun State, Nigeria (1951-1956) where he obtained the West African School Certificate (WASC). He proceeded to the Polytechnic, Regent Street, London now University of Westminster where he obtained a Diploma in Electrical engineering.[3] He later became a graduate of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers in 1965.[4] He returned to Nigeria as a chartered Engineer in 1967 to join the services of the Federal Ministry of Communications where he rose to the position of a Director General in 1989.[5][6] He was appointed as the honorable Ministre of the Federal Ministry of Communications in 1990, a tenure that ended in 1992 and later reappointed as the Minister of the Federal Ministry of Aviation in 1993.[7] He was the first Civilian Chairman of Nigerian Telecommunications Limited, NITEL, and currently the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Nigerian Internet Group[8] and also on the Board of the Nigerian Communications Commission, NCC.[9]

Awards and fellowship

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gollark: ... did I say it was?
gollark: Even if it actually *is* true that living in an authoritarian regime is similar to living in... well, I guess the comparison is just a "relatively standard reasonably free Western country" or something... for the average non-politically-active person (which is probably the case for *some* authoritarian regimes), that doesn't really make authoritarian regimes okay.
gollark: I mean, authoritarian regimes... aren't very good, I think, even if they can *sometimes* produce good outcomes.
gollark: IIRC China *did* silence people warning about it back in 2019, though.

See also

  • List of notable engineers in Nigeria

References

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