Maurice Mmaduakolam Iwu is a Nigerian Professor of Pharmacognosy who was appointed Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in June 2005, and was removed from office in
April 2010.
Background
Maurice Mmaduakolam Iwu was born on 21 April 1950 in Umuezeala, Umukabia, Ehime
Mbano in Imo
State. He attended Saint Pius X College, Bodo-Ogoni for his secondary education. He studied at the University of Bradford, England, receiving a Master of Pharmacy degree in 1976 and a Ph.D in
1978.
He was WHO Visiting Scholar to Dyson Perrins Laboratory, University of Oxford (1980), Fulbright Senior Scholar, Ohio State University and won the U.S National Research International Prize
for Ethonobiolology in 1999. He was a Professor of Pharmacognosy at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (1984–1993).
Career
Entering business, Iwu became Vice-President,
Research and Development of Tom's of Maine, a personal care manufacturing
company, and member of the Board of Directors, Axxon Biopharm inc. He served on
the Board of InterCEDD, Fund for integrated Rural Development and Traditional
Medicine, and Center for Economic and Social Justice. He was the United
Nation's Lead Consultant for the development of Nigeria's National Biodiversity
Strategy and Action Plan. Iwu has published more than 100 research articles and
is the author of four books.
Professor Iwu was President of the
International Society of ethnobiology (1996–2002), member and ex-President of
the Nigerian Society of Pharmacognosy, Member of the American Society of
Tropical Medicine and Hygiene and Member of the International Society for Medicinal
Plant Research. He was the Executive Director, Bioresources Development and
Conservation Program and a Senior Research Associate at the Division of
Experimental Therapeutics of Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Washington
D.C.
INEC
Iwu was appointed INEC commissioner for Imo State in August 2003 by
President Olusegun Obasanjo.
In June 2005, he succeeded Abel Guobadia as Chairman of INEC. Soon
after being appointed, Iwu announced that foreign monitors would not be allowed
during elections, but only foreign election observers. This decision was
condemned by politicians and civil society groups who called for his immediate
removal from office.
In December 2008 Abubakar Rimi called on Maurice Iwu, to
resign from office, citing irregularities in the previous presidential
election. Michael Aondoakaa,
the Attorney General, opposed sacking Maurice Iwu despite criticism of Iwu's
conduct of the 2007 elections.
In March 2009 the Vice-Chairman of Senate
Committee on the Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC) Maina Maaji Lawan spoke against a motion
that questioned the integrity of INEC Chairman Maurice Iwu. Iwu's tenure
was due to expire on 13 June 2010. However, on 28 April 2010 Acting
President Goodluck Jonathan,
who has committed himself to pursuing electoral reform, removed Iwu from
office.
No comments:
Post a Comment