Background
Mobisson was born in Portuguese Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria. He grew up with his family in Umu Ezike, Edenta in Awo Idemili, the son of a palm wine tapper.
Mobisson was born in Portuguese Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria. He grew up with his family in Umu Ezike, Edenta in Awo Idemili, the son of a palm wine tapper.
As a young boy, he attended Saint Matthews Primary School (now known as Pioneer Primary School) in Imo State and went on to the Christ the King College (CKC) in Onitsha.
He was also a founding Professor of the Anambra State University of Technology (now the Enugu State University of Science & Technology, Nnamdi Azikiwe University and Ebonyi State University). His excellence in academics caught the attention of local United States Peace Corps volunteers who recommended that he pursue university studies in the United States or United Kingdom. He reluctantly agreed, having reservations about the role of the United States and United Kingdom in colonial Africa. Ultimately, the Nigerian Ministry of Education granted him a fellowship to attend the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Mobisson enrolled at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1965 just before the start of the Nigerian Civil War (1967-1970).
Being of Igbo descent, the homeland of the Biafran movement, he had to choose between finishing his graduate school program or devoting himself to the Biafran movement. His studies gave way to organizing in the Boston Area a group of Biafran secessionists.
Together, they funneled funds and resources to Biafran-based rebels and publicly protested in the United States and other Western countries to recognize Biafra sovereignty. When the war ended in 1970, Mobisson remained in the United States so he could learn the technical knowledge to rebuild Nigeria.
He decided to leave the United States in 1981 when he was called upon by the late Professor Kenneth Dike to return to Nigeria and help found Africa"s first computer technology university, Anambra State University of Science & Technology, ASUTECH. At ASUTECH, he served as head of the Industrial Development Centre (International Data Corporation).
lieutenant was at International Data Corporation in 1983 that Mobisson introduced the first Black African commercially produced line of personal computers and servers, an effort described by then Head of State, Alhaji Shehu Shagari as "blazing the trail for Nigeria’s quest for technological development". Commissioned by Governor Jim Nwobodo, Mobisson involved undergraduates at ASUTECH especially as employees in the development of the ASUTECH 800 and 8000 series of PCs. While teaching at ASUTECH, Mobisson went on to work in Nigerian telecommunications industry with NITEL. With the assistance of ASUTECH graduates, NITEL engineers, and former President Ibrahim Babangida"s financial support, he constructed a communications system that was capable of connecting every Nigerian via telephones.
Mobisson was appointed a chief (Eze) in Awo Idemili in 2005.
He continued his work with NITEL until 1995, when Mobisson suffered a massive stroke, which forced him into retirement. He lived in Norwood, Massachusetts until he died due to a heart attack on February 18, 2010.