 An indigenous of Cuara-South sanitary districts in Cuara state have raised concerns over a continued marginalization of its district, educationally by sighting and concentrating major higher institutions of learning by state and federal government, only in the state capital and Cuara-North district of the states, ignoring the south. The secretary general of a sociocultural group, Cuara-South Consultative Forum, Daramola Simon, gave the hint during a press conference in Elori, the state capital. As I said, there are mainly higher institutions of learning in Elori in the Cuara state capital, both public and privately owned. The state currently has three colleges of education, both but plans are underway by the state government to convert one such into a university of education with a view to giving a modern touch to teachers' education in the state. As it is now, Cuara-South is the only one among the three sanitary districts without a full-fledged government-owned university. Cuara state university malete is in Cuara-North. We see this as nothing more than greed and selfishness. Presently, the following government-owned tertiary institutions are located in Elori, Cuara state polytechnic, College of Education, College of Arabic and Islamic Studies, University of Elori, Cuasu campuses, Cuara state university teaching hospital, School of Nursing. The demands of IDPU, if allowed to stay, will not only enjoy our unity, but also stall every effort at engineering, even spread of development across the state. The name of the University of Elori in Elori in bracket after the founder of Alimi Dynasty. This is a highly provocative suggestion, which is indifferent to the diversity and divergent history of other ethnic groups in Cuara state. The fact that the university is located in Elori does not confer ownership on the city. The privilege of being the host community should not be misconstrued to mean exclusive either. It will therefore be unjust and unreasonable to impose a name that does not have a statewide spread on our collective inheritance. The group however calls on the state government to tread softly because university business is highly capital intensive and for proper funding it requires. We are however constrained to advise the state government to be cautious about this. With Cuasu in place and the proposed University of Education, the government should tread softly because university business is highly capital intensive and for proper funding it requires careful planning. But whenever government decides to establish the university it should certainly not be in Elori again.