Category: South West

  • Fayemi presents staff of office to Ahun-Ekiti monarch

    Fayemi presents staff of office to Ahun-Ekiti monarch

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi yesterday presented staff of office and instrument of appointment to the first Alahun of Ahun-Ekiti in Efon Local Government, Oba Jacob Adelowo.

    The installation of Oba Adelowo followed the granting of autonomy to Ahun-Ekiti from Efon- Alaaye in Efon Local Government, which the governor described as a remarkable day in the history of the new community.

    Speaking at the ceremony performed at the Conference Hall of the Governor’s Office, Dr. Fayemi, represented by Deputy Governor Bisi Egbeyemi, said it was a joy for him to share in the celebration of a new dawn for the people of Ahun-Ekiti

    The governor stressed that “granting of autonomy to any community is not an attempt to fractionise or disintegrate a hitherto compact community for any ulterior motive of political gains.”

    An umbrella township association, Efon Development League, has opposed granting autonomy to Ahun community by the state government.

    The association, in a statement by its President-General, Bode Fagbemiro, said: “The issue is subjudice, as the matter is part of the subjects of cases pending at the state High Court in Ado-Ekiti and Supreme Court.”

    The government had in its White Paper on the report of Justice Aladejana Committee noted that the case of Efon Alaaye community Vs Ahun could not be treated because of court cases.

    “It is, therefore, worrisome that a democratically-elected government can in a twist contemptuously commit such an affront against the highest court in the land. This is nothing short of pushing the people to self-help and instigation to violence five days to the exit of Governor Fayemi.

    “We stand with the Alaaye of Efon-Alaaye, Oba Emmanuel Adesanya Aladejare that Efon-Alaaye is one indivisible and indissoluble entity with recorded history dated back to 11th century. This position is the position of the League and all Efon-Alaaye people, which we are prepared to defend,” the association said.

    Another group, Efon Alaaye Ekiti Socio-Cultural Group, said the recognition of Ahun-Ekiti as an autonomous community by the outgoing Governor Fayemi administration was an affront on the judiciary, “as the matter is still a subject of litigation at the Supreme Court.”

    In a statement yesterday by its President, Bode Fagbemiro, in Abuja, the body, which is part of Efon Alaaye Development League, said it received with shock, purported recognition of an “Ahun-Ekiti” from the ancient Efon-Alaaye community.

  • Afenifere congratulates Olusi at 86

    Afenifere congratulates Olusi at 86

    A pan-Yoruba socio-cultural organisation, Afenifere Egbe Ilosiwaju Yoruba, has felicitated their leader, Prince Tajudeen Olusi, on his 86th birthday.

    A statement yesterday by the group’s Publicity Secretary, Mr. Morris Awosile, hailed Olusi for his  achievements over the years.

    “You are not just a Yoruba leader, but also a patriotic Nigerian whose wisdom and high moral values reflect impeccable virtues desired by every human organisation and which they strive to emulate.

    “Your commitment to national service, hard work, resoluteness and immense contributions to the enthronement of democracy in Nigeria is enough proof of your living legendary,” Afenifere said.

    It said the ‘Prince of Peace’, as Olusi is fondly called, has over the years proved to be a dependable and reliable individual, whose contributions to the development of Lagos, Southwest and the country as a whole are inestimable.

    “Baba Olusi is one of the leading vanguards of the progressives’ school of thought; a true, sincere, committed, passionate and loyal Awoist.  At 86, we are proud of your achievements. We pray to God to spare your life to be able to contribute further not only to the Yoruba race, but also Nigeria at large,” the group said.

  • Appoint indigenes to key positions, group tells Ogun

    Appoint indigenes to key positions, group tells Ogun

    A group, The Ogun Collectives, has appealed to the Ogun State Government to always consider indigenes for key appointments.

    Secretary General of the group, Mr Adekunle Odutade, in a statement, kicked against the alleged appointment of non-indigenes to key positions by Governor Dapo Abiodun.

    The group called on Abiodun to stop depriving Ogun indigenes of their rights.

    It explained that the recent appointments of non-indigenes to key positions were counter productive to the growth and development of Ogun State.

    It cited the nomination of Prof. Ayodeji Agboola, an indigene of Ekiti State as the new Vice-Chancellor of Olabisi Onabanjo University, adding that there were better qualified indigenes of Ogun State for the position.

    The statement reads: “The group also wondered why the Governor appointed Mr Babatunde Aregbesola from Ondo State as the Accountant-General of Ogun State when there are several better candidates with superior qualifications from Ogun State.”

    The OCG appealed to the Governor to look critically to into these appointments with a view to reviewing them in favour of indigenes of Ogun State, which the Governor swore to protect.

    “A meeting by members of the group and other critical stakeholders has been scheduled for October 21, 2022 to sensitise the people of Ogun State and map out strategies for the way forward,” it reads.

  • Ogun to introduce gas-enabled vehicles, electric motorcycles

    Ogun to introduce gas-enabled vehicles, electric motorcycles

    Ogun State Government has said plans are underway to convert vehicles running on petrol to gas, to reduce carbon emission.

    Governor Dapo Abiodun made this known at a meeting with transport union members from Ogun Central, at June 12 Cultural Centre, Kuto, Abeokuta.

    He said the conversion project labelled: ‘Ogun Going Green Project’, was necessitated by the hazard posed to the environment by carbon emission.

    Abiodun said: “It is no news that Ogun State enjoys the crisscross of gas pipelines coming from the Delta and going to neighbouring countries. This is why we have proliferation of industries, and we have decided to take advantage of the network of gas pipelines. We have ‘Ogun Going Green Project’. This project allows for the reduction of carbon emissions as it is done all over the world.

    “We want to start by ensuring that our vehicles utilise other sources of fuel that will reduce the amount of emissions, which is the largest contributor to global warming. So, we are starting with our transportation sector.

    “We are going to provide them with vehicles. These vehicles and with the one they have now, will be converted through a pilot project. We will be using a combination of gas and fuel, but the fuel will only be used to start the vehicles and after that, the gas takes over.”

    He said the first set of kits for the project would arrive in the state in the next three weeks, adding that buses, trucks and taxis would be the first to benefit from the project, while motorcycles would be converted to electric ones.

    The governor added that besides reducing consumption and reliance on fuel, the project would reduce environmental pollution and cost of transportation, as the cost of gas was almost a quarter of that of fossil fuel.

    He said the state would facilitate new vehicles for the transporters on a part-payment basis, noting that the Ministry of Transportation had been directed to work out modalities with the unions on how to go about the plans.

    Abiodun, who described the transportation sector as the live wire of any economy, said his administration regarded the union members as important stakeholders in achieving its: “Building our Future Together agenda”.

    He stressed that transporters were too important to ignore in the scheme of things.

    “From time to time, we must sit down with people like this and share with them what the administration has done for the avoidance of doubt and to further solicit from them what we want them to do. We want them to ply the roads responsively. We want them to drive safely and be our ambassadors.

    “We want to know what their needs are and what we can do to make road transportation safer and more efficient,” he said.

    The governor said his administration had embarked on massive infrastructural development across the state, especially good road network in the three senatorial districts, to ease the movement of goods and people, promising that the current administration would implement workable programmes and policies that would be of benefit to the people.

    The Chairman, Ogun State Drivers Association, Akinwunmi Dauda, State Secretary Road Transport Employers Association of Nigeria (RTEAN) Tiwalade Akingbade and Secretary Ogun State Parks and Management Haruna Adekujo called for the building of a world-class park in the state capital and address of issue of touts, who harassed their members on a daily basis.

  • Fayemi, Olujimi agree to work on Ekiti international airport

    Fayemi, Olujimi agree to work on Ekiti international airport

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi and the Chairman, Senate Committee on Aviation, Senator Abiodun Olujimi, have pledged to collaborate to make Ekiti State International Cargo Airport, still under construction, a success story.

    The duo made the pledge yesterday when they jointly made an assessment visit to the airport to determine the level of its readiness for inauguration.

    Dr. Fayemi, accompanied to the construction site by the Bishop of the Ekiti Catholic Diocese, Bishop Felix Ajakaye, said he and Senator Olujimi had pledged to make the lofty initiative a reality.

    Olujimi, representing Ekiti South Senatorial District, hailed the governor for turning the vision of the airport into a reality for Ekiti indigenes.

    She said her committee would soon visit the airport as part of its oversight functions to know what could be captured in the next budget.

    Fayemi said: “When I heard about your appointment as the chairman, Senate Committee on Aviation, I told myself that Ekiti is a very lucky state, because I know the type of person you are. You will use your good office to help this project. This is an Ekiti Airport project; it has nothing to do with any party. We are all in Ekiti party.”

    Bishop Ajakaye praised Fayemi and Olujimi for setting aside their political differences for the progress of their state.

    “I want to express my happiness today because we are talking about Ekiti interests, instead of selfish, individual interests. It’s all about Ekiti, even when we talk of Ado-Ekiti, Isan- Ekiti, or Omuo-Ekiti. It is not about any party, it is about our dear state and our collective welfare.”

    The governor, who had assured the people that the Agro-allied Cargo Airport and other legacy projects embarked on by his administration would be completed for use before the end of his tenure, said the airport’s 3.2km runway was built with the capacity to accommodate all types of aircraft.

    He added that the airport would also have facilities for the Nigeria Air Force to have their operations as well as for maintenance and associated engineering components.

  • Fayemi approves dissolution of governing councils

    Fayemi approves dissolution of governing councils

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi has approved the dissolution of the governing councils of higher institutions, with immediate effect.

    The Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Mr. Yinka Oyebode, said this in a statement yesterday in Ado-Ekiti.

    Read Also; Ekiti: Fayemi’s unfinished greatness birthing BAO’s strategic approach to governance

    He said the affected institutions included the state-owned universities, state polytechnic at Isan-Ekiti and College of Health Technology, Ijero-Ekiti.

    He said the dissolution was in line with extant transition policy of the state.

    “The governor thanked the chairmen and members of the councils for the services rendered and wished them success in their future endeavours,” he said.

  • Omo-Agege, Sanwo-Olu, others for GCUOBA annual dinner

    Omo-Agege, Sanwo-Olu, others for GCUOBA annual dinner

    Deputy Senate President Ovie Omo-Agege, Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu and his Delta State counterpart, Ifeanyi Okowa, are to attend Government College Ughelli Old Boys Association (GCUOBA) 9th annual dinner billed for Saturday in Lagos.

    It will be chaired by banker and businessman King Ebitimi Emmanuel Banigo, Amanyanabo of Okpoama Kingdom in Bayelsa State.

    This was made known by the association’s President, Charles Majoroh, an architect, at a news conference.

    Read Also; APC Convention: Buhari hosts Tinubu, Akande, other founding fathers to dinner

    He said the event would feature a lecture titled: “The future of public schools”, to be delivered by the Director General of Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, Prof. Eghosa Osaghae, an old boy of the college.

    Majoroh said the association had committed resources to address infrastructural deficit in the college.

    “We have committed resources to rebuild hostels, libraries, classrooms, sports facilities, employ additional teachers,” he said.

    He said much remained to be done, hence the dinner was an avenue to raise funds and collaborate with the Delta State Government for development and repositioning of the institution.

    The GCUOBA president said the college had produced personalities, including popular columnist Peter Enahoro (Peter Pan), Vanguard publisher Sam Amuka, Chairman Editorial Board of The Nation Sam Omatseye, legal luminary Prof. Itse Sagay, the late poet, Prof. John Pepper Clark and the late Gamaliel Onosode, among others.

  • Celebrating international day of the girl child

    Celebrating international day of the girl child

    Nigeria acknowledges October 11 for the girl child who has stood up to stop physical abuse, sexual harassment, and brutalities. The girl child is a biological female offspring from birth to 18 years of age.

    During this period, the young girl is totally under the care of the adult who may be her parents, guardian, or elder siblings. It is also a period when the girl child is malleable, building and developing her personality and character. She is very dependent on others on who she models her behaviour through observation, repetition, and imitation. Her physical, mental, social, spiritual, and emotional development starts and progresses to get to the peak at the young adult age.Also at this stage, most especially in this 21st century, girl child wants to feel among themselves, at this stage they are materialistic, and they want to hang out with rich guys which they might not know their source of income. Through this, most girls have been vulnerable to rape, ritual killing, and brutalities.

    Read Also: I’m passionate about girl child, says Patience Ozokwor

    A girl child needs to be educated and with good morals. Education saves and improves the lives of girls and women. It allows them to have greater control of their lives and provides them with skills to contribute to their societal sustainable development. A girl child should also be taught that educated women have played and are still playing pivotal roles as presidents, prime ministers, chancellors orcas competitive political leaders, consultants, and researchers of various countries.

    Essentially, the girl child must be educated in terms of their role in society, whether as producers of reproducers, they are mainly responsible for the care and well-being of their families, they play an important role as educators of future generations, they perform economic and social functions. As more and more women are educated, the health of the nation improves.

    With rising education among the girl child, there will also be a rise of women in the labour force, women’s education aids in the protection of the environment and also improve agricultural practices. For our society to be developed, the Girl child must be allowed access to good qualitative education

    • Animasaun, a girl child rights activist, wrote from Adeyemi College of Education, Ondo. She is available on oluwatoyinanimasaun@gmail.com

  • Arogundade, the King of Boys, @ 60

    Arogundade, the King of Boys, @ 60

    Gals-and our younger Lanruze used to have a large army of them- may also insist he’s theirs. Perhaps, he belonged to them more… Lanre, who now wears a clean skull,  used to flaunt a fairly curly hair on the head. And he really could be meticulous taming it. I used to wonder, during our National Concord days, how the tough former NANS guy could spare enough time to tend the head.

    But candidly, Lanruze, the one who shares same birthday anniversary with Wole ‘Kongi’ Soyinka, is masculine in every sense, reiterating the strength of the spirit of the day he shares with the Nobel laureate. Thrice, yes, three distinct times, Lanre led me through perilous but fulfilling paths. What do boys do, other than court challenges?  Blanket greetings of gentlemen of the press for the males and females in journalism seemed to have foreseen the entry of the likes of Lanre. Lanre not only courted, but dragged us, friends and colleagues, into what has turned to be an endless struggle. Since 1984, Buhari, then head of a military  government, had stoked some fiery instinct in us… Today Lanre and several friends remain eternally charged with much of the sustenance and support from the likes of my darling King of Boys.

    In 1984, the brutal and parochial military government of Buhari/Idiagbon could not think out of the box but fell for a policy that would victimize perhaps the most helpless among the weaklings in the society, the students.  That government, at the end of the nationally fairly stable academic year, ordered the very final stoppage of subsidy to the cafeterias of the universities in Nigeria. It ushered in a most challenging era for students who, until that time, had only insufficient on-campus accommodation to battle with. NANS leadership, therefore, had to activate its consultation machinery afterwards before arriving at what action could be taken to liberate the sinking ship of the students. The authorities of my University of Ilorin would have none of it. Sola (Mike) Olorunyomi, now  a professor, held sway as the president of the union was all for the NANS big meeting. Newspapers and other media kept on running NANS insistence on fight-back as being advocated by the Lanre Arogundade leadership. The intolerant government soon got Lanre arrested and detained for months. Sola Mike, for defying the authorities to host NANS meeting, got expelled. Other Unilorin students’ leaders handed suspension in various measures were Sec Gen Mathew Keyi, ASG Femi ‘Straightaway’ Ibrahim and PRO Joseph Abereoran. All universities were shut down indefinitely leaving the country somewhat hopeless. No be today dem start o!  The universities were later reopened without recalling the union leaders and even with very strict conditions for the rest of us.

    Read Also: A Witness to the Steady Ascent of the Great LASU Amazon

    But the obstinate Ijesha-Ekiti boy with the unmistakably suggestive surname name for addiction to struggle, could not be stopped.  He had become what, in his Yoruba culture, could be labeled ageku ejo with its own extreme venom. The struggle had become his life, as was and still is, for most of us.  W e had been toughened to, not only be impatient for injustice, but to also have zero tolerance for it.

    Lanre eventually sought his way into mainstream journalism and became an editor at the defunct The Republic newspaper. A few years afterwards, he found his way to National Concord where, again, we became collaborators in the never-ending struggle for a better Nigeria.

    Lanre later became the features editor, captaining my team, a model team. The team comprised energetic and creative hands in the likes of Sam Nwanze, Jide Orintunsin, Beifoh Osewele as well as bevy of beautiful gals who came for internship turning the desk to the most frequented by Concord male staff from adjoining editorial units and other departments.

    Lanre had a unique editing style: He would rather source a replacement for an unsuitable intro from the same report, thus strengthening the reporter’s self confidence and cultivating another budding editor at the same time. Lanre never hid his admiration and respect for anyone who crafted flawless, poetic prose either. He was no less strong on keen competition with features published by Concord’s only rival then, The Guardian. Akin Adesokan of the Guardian’s feature desk then, now a professor in the US had done a feature on the political crisis in Osun State when Governor Adetunji Adeleke was the governor in 1991. Commissioned by Lanre, yours sincerely, did another, published the same week. While The Guardian’s was titled “Osun State: Handshake Beyond the Elbow”, Concord’s was headlined “Osun State: Whither Runs the Living Spring?” Osun state is otherwise referred to as the State of the living spring. Our review meeting for the week openly acknowledged that we were surely not in want of wits under Editor Lanre.

    Never an armchair editor, Lanre led me and a few others including the inimitable poet, Sam Omatseye, to conduct what turned out to be the last major interview for the winner of the June 12 1993 presidential election, Basorun MKO Abiola at the height of the debacle. Abiola openly hailed my boss, Activi-st! MKO  later led only Lanre into a private room for an intimate discussion as a show of love and proper acknowledgement. Beyond being sheer  reporters, our activism also attracted heavy patronage to Concord newspaper too. The very day soldiers came to seal up the premises following the proscription order by the military government of the tyrannical Abacha, late Didi Adodo and Olaitan Oyerinde, both of them Sec Gen and ASG of the Iron and Steel Assocaition of Nigeriarespectively then, passed on to us a full page advert from their union. Following the forced closure same day, not only did it become impossible for us to run the ad,  the cash for the advert was also trapped in there for several months…

    Beyond the confines of his employers, Lanre was most sought after and subsequently emerged as the Chair of the Lagos State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalist, NUJ. Obviously still as strong spirited as he was for NANS leadership, Lanre’s tenure as NUJ leader in Lagos State has incontrovertibly remained the most politically accomplished and in particular, indomitably intellectually refreshing. Journalism in Nigeria: Issues and Perspectives edited by Olatunji Dare and Adidi Uyo, conceptualized and published by the Lanre administration has turned out to be globally well received. I got this confirmed in far away Harlem New York, specifically at Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. While on a fellowship at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, SIPA, in 1998, I needed to do a presentation for which that book seemed indispensable. A librarian at Columbia University thus suggested the center for me. It was the most authoritative book there at that time on any aspect of Nigerian media history.  Though due for a revised edition, that publication remains an outstanding veritable Nigerian media history resource.

    Coming next to Ladi Lawal’s regime bedeviled by the challenges of proscription of newspapers, Lanre not only braced up but rolled out a reassuring programme for colleagues who were faced with threat of uncertainty following the proscription of all titles on the stables of  Concord, Guardian and the Punch. In spite of the rancour unleashed by some timid and envious rivals, long time after leaving office, Lanre remains the central issue in NUJ politics in Lagos State till date.

    Relentless Lanre has soared even beyond the local level.  He has since cultivated and keeps nurturing and leading about the most good corporate governance compliant  media development organization in Nigeria today, the International Press Centre, IPC. His invaluable presence in the media community now cannot be over-emphasised at a time digitech induced distruption’s effect on the finances of the media industry and professionals is most stifling. IPC provides assorted refuge for many in the media across the industry and the academia. Lanre is indeed only a little short of the last man standing in the sector, really. Sixty hearty cheers to the uncommon leader.     

    • Tunde Akanni, PhD, assosciate professor of journalism, doubles as the pioneer director of the Digital Media Research Centre, DMRC, of the Lagos State University. Follow him via:tundeakanni.com and @AkintundeAkanni(Twitter)

  • Oyo APC knocks Makinde over comments on ex-deputy

    Oyo APC knocks Makinde over comments on ex-deputy

    The All Progressives Congress in Oyo state (APC) has berated Governor Seyi Makinde over some comments he made against his erstwhile deputy, Rauf Olaniyan, describing the development as not only unfortunate and shameful but also least expected from a sitting Executive Governor of a state.

    Makinde who featured on a radio programme, State Affairs on an Ibadan based radio station, responded to many questions bothering on the crisis confronting his party (PDP) at all levels, governance in Oyo state, his chances in 2023 among other things.

    The governor also made some startling revelation on why he moved against Olaniyan who he got impeached by the State House of Assembly on July 18, 2022 and replaced immediately with Barrister Bayo Lawal.

    Oyo APC while reacting to Makinde’s revelation said, in a statement issued yesterday by its Publicity Secretary, Olawale Sadare, that the governor deserved condemnation for what it described as “an act of Executive recklessness coming from a power drunk and vindictive character who found himself in power by default.

    “It is most uncharitable for a governor to have sponsored the removal of somebody who shared a joint ticket with him midway to their tenure of office over hear-says and unsubstantiated allegations of disloyalty and corruption.