A few days ago at Tansian University, Umunya, Rev. Fr. Edwin Obiorah, acting as the Chancellor of the institution, made assertions that have raised eyebrows and sparked controversy. In a public address to a gathering of academic and non-academic staff, alongside a handful of students, Obiorah controversially claimed that Tansian University now falls under the jurisdiction of the Catholic Diocese of Ekwulobia, overseen by His Eminence, Peter Cardinal Okpalaeke. According to Obiorah, this purported transition means that the university is a collective institution of the Church, not merely the domain of an individual or group.
However, the reaction from the Catholic hierarchy has been swift and unequivocal. Cardinal Okpalaeke has publicly disavowed these claims, affirming that the Diocese has no interest in assuming ownership of Tansian University. This stark contradiction brings into question the credibility of Obiorah’s declarations and reflects poorly on his role as a clergy member.
Fr. Obiorah’s declaration—lacking any verifiable legal or ecclesiastical substantiation—has engendered widespread consternation among stakeholders. Critics contend that the pronouncement was not merely ill-conceived but deliberately duplicitous, designed to foment a contrived narrative that consolidates his personal authority under a spurious ecclesiastical aegis.
Utilising the gravitas of Church affiliation as a rhetorical shield, Obiorah has advanced a falsehood that undermines both the juridical framework and the founding principles of Tansian University. By evoking the name and institutional stature of the Catholic Diocese—without canonical approval or legal entitlement—he has embroiled the institution in a crisis of legitimacy.
What renders this episode particularly egregious is its performative context: a public address on university premises, thereby projecting the illusion of procedural finality and ecclesiastical sanction.
Tansian University was established by the late Rev. Fr. Prof. Johnbosco Akam, a scholar-cleric of venerable repute representing Missionary Servants of the church, whose vision was predicated upon intellectual rigour, moral rectitude, and communal upliftment and Jas Industries Limited chaired by Chief Sam Obaji
Its founding ethos was never tethered to diocesan oversight but entrusted instead to the Missionary Servants of the Church (MSC)—a congregation distinct in structure and mission from diocesan institutions and also Jas Industries Limited who has quality education as one of their objective to promote learning for our people.
Nowhere in the founders testament or institutional charter is there an indication of intent to cede ownership to the Diocese of Ekwulobia. Indeed, the testamentary disposition of the founders entrusted governance to a body of trustees and religious collaborators committed to academic and spiritual excellence. Obiorah’s attempt to appropriate the institution under diocesan jurisdiction thus constitutes a subversive distortion of the founder’s will and raises serious ethical and legal concerns.
Within the university community, Obiorah’s proclamation has precipitated institutional disarray. Academic departments have expressed apprehension regarding administrative continuity, while non-academic staff report uncertainty about lines of authority and decision-making protocols. Students, too, have been left in a state of bewilderment. Many fear that the university’s accreditation, autonomy, and pedagogical standards could be compromised should such false claims gain traction or be perceived externally as legitimate.
“It’s unsettling to think that our education could be weaponised for ecclesiastical politics,” remarked one final-year student. “We deserve truth, not posturing.”
The categorical repudiation issued by Peter Cardinal Okpalaeke has, in many respects, salvaged the institutional integrity of the Church in this matter. By distancing the Diocese from Obiorah’s actions, the Cardinal has effectively preserved the doctrinal and administrative propriety of ecclesiastical governance.
However, Fr. Obiorah’s refusal to retract or revise his statements continues to compromise his clerical credibility. His silence in the face of official repudiation suggests either an obstinate defiance or a calculated gamble on public acquiescence.
Observers within and beyond the Church have consequently called for his immediate resignation. “It is untenable,” said one MSC-affiliated trustee, “for an individual to persist in a role of leadership whilst peddling claims so demonstrably false.”
Beyond the personal failings of Fr. Obiorah, this incident underscores a broader imperative: the restoration of governance rooted in transparency, legality, and fidelity to founding values. Tansian University stands today at a crossroads—not merely between competing administrative visions, but between institutional truth and ecclesiastical appropriation. Its future hinges on the capacity of its stakeholders to reaffirm legal custodianship, resist clerical overreach, and safeguard the university’s autonomy.
The MSC, as co-architects of the university’s spiritual and administrative identity, must reclaim their role with clarity and resolve. Likewise, the academic community must demand accountability and eschew any form of leadership based on fabrication.
The episode surrounding Rev. Fr. Edwin Obiorah’s claims is more than a clerical indiscretion; it is a microcosm of the perils of unchecked authority within educational institutions. It raises fundamental questions about leadership, legitimacy, and the role of truth in public discourse. Tansian University, conceived as a crucible of learning and moral development, cannot be allowed to become the casualty of ecclesiastical ambition. Its survival—and indeed, its flourishing—depends on adherence to truth, fidelity to its founding vision, and the expulsion of falsehood from its corridors.
The time for equivocation has passed. A definitive restoration of order, legitimacy, and trust must now begin.
Discussion about this post