Category: Southwest

  • Lagos partners Osun on calisthenics training

    The Lagos State Government on Monday said its training of students and youths on fundamentals of calisthenics was being done in partnership with the Osun State government.

    Deputy Governor Idiat Adebule spoke on the partnership while receiving a six-man delegation from Osun in her office at Alausa.

    Adebule said the training in calisthenics would help in developing the students mentally, physically and socially.

    Calisthenics consists of a variety of movements often performed rhythmical and usually conducted in concerts with stretches to depict specific symbols.

    The calisthenics training is in preparation of the ‘Lagos @ 50’ celebrations coming up in May.

    Adebule said the calisthenics display of students at the 25th anniversary of the creation of the State of Osun in Aug. 2016 spurred Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode into the partnership.

    “Governor Ambode was impressed by the breathtaking calisthenics performances at the Osogbo City Stadium and has decided to replicate same in Lagos State.

    “We are partnering with Osun State to share ideas and learn from them to ensure a historic performance at the Lagos @50 celebration and beyond.

    “One of the components of calisthenics is to give meaning to the total package of educational training for young minds.

    “We are starting this training with our students and we will extend it to the youth in the state,” Adebule said.

    Mr Adebayo Ojo, Director, Department for Social and Grassroots Mobilisation and Guidance, Office of the Governor, Osun, who led the visiting team, said the school calisthenics programme had been a success in Osun State.

    He said the calisthenics programme was conceived to enhance the emergence of a new generation of students who were physically fit, mentally sound and socially responsible individuals that would be well-adjusted to societal needs.

    “Osun State is the first in the country to revive this sterling and rewarding initiative in about more than three decades.

    “We shall do our best to ensure that we bring out the best in the students who will be trained to produce Eko-Calisthenics that will be of global standard,” he said.

     

  • Good times for women

    Lagos State Governor Akinwumi Ambode has reassured Lagosians of his administration’s commitment to alleviating poverty through continuous empowerment of the people in the state.

    Ambode made the remark during the mega empowerment progr-amme for women organised by the Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation (WAPA).

    Over 3,000 women drawn from different local government areas of the state benefitted from the programme held at LTV complex, Agidingbi, Ikeja. The beneciaroes went home with various items like sewing machines, grinding machines, vulcanising machine, cash among others.

    Addressing the beneficiary, the governor, who was represented by his deputy, Idiat Adebule, said: ”Today’s programme is another giant step among several empowerment programmes of this administration meant to take care of the needs of widows, vulnerable women, and graduates of skill acquisition centres as well as senior citizens spread across the state. Over 3,000 Lagosians are today empowered to make them self-reliant through this enablement materials and financial provision. I want to state that this administration is committed to alleviating poverty among its populace and will continue to empower its citizenry.”

    Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation Commissioner Lola Akande said:  ”It is heartwarming to state that the programme is meant to take care of the needs of some categories of women in all the 20 local government councils and 37 local council development areas in the state and it involves distribution of tools such grinding machines, sewing machines, vulcanizing machines as well as financial support to senior citizens and widows.

    “This is one step taken by this administration to cushion the effects of the global economic recession being witnessed by Lagosians especially women so as to make them self-reliant as well as supporting the family income. We will carry out another mega one before the end of the year. This is in addition to several mini empowerment programmes that we have plans to execute as the year draws along.”

    The beneficiaries expressed gratitude to the state government for empowering them.

    One of them, Joseph Oluwaseun, who got a hair dryer, said: “Lagos State government has by this gesture put an end to my quest to have a dryer. I have been working manually  for the past five years that I have been a hairdresser. This gesture will make me have more customers and ease the stress of attending to people manually.”

  • Media firm honours Galaxy TV founder, others

    FOUNDER Galaxy Television Chief Steve Ojo was among those honoured by Eyegate Media Limited for their contributions to national development.

    Others were  Mrs Oluremi Adesola  Openibo, an engineer and politician; Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Augustine Chime,  the second in command, Area ‘E Command, FESTAC, Lagos, Toriola Abudulafiz,  director, Vehicle Inspection, Ministry of Transportation, Lagos State and Chairman/Chief Executive Officer (CEO), G. O.D., Dynamic  Company Nigeria Limited,  Mr Godwin Ikechukwu Nwaenyi.

    Eyegate CEO Edward Ndukwe said the awardees were honoured under the firm’s Community Pillars Awards for their commitment to improve lives, adding that the ceremony should have been held last year but for logistics.

    He cited Ojo, who said, boosted broadcasting by introducing computer editing and graphics into television, adding that he set up the first broadcasting station in the country with licence number 001. Ojo, a graduate of Communication, an ex-staff member of Nigeria Television Authority (NTA), he is reputed to have pioneered the use of a 300,000-pounds editing vehicle in motion in the media industry.

    Gbolahan has established 25 workstations in the ministry to boost its services to Lagosians. These have helped to reduce the lingering traffic problem in the state.

    Ndukwe said Chime is ‘a super cop’, who started from the mobile unit of Nigeria Police Force, where he made his mark before he was redeployed to regular policing. Though he joined the Force as a youth with a mere secondary school certificate, he had since honed his skills at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), where he studied Criminology. Like a rolling stone, he gathered moss, along his long career. He rose through the ranks over the years to become an ASP.

    Nwaenyi’s story was that of grass to grace. As a boy, he abandoned school to learn trade. Upon graduation, he set up his business and soon hit gold. As an importer, one of his product, a water heater, manufactured in Germany, is the best in the market. He also has his tentacles in other areas and sits atop a conglomerate.

    Guest speaker Mrs Joy Anizoba, a lawyer in a paper entitled: Corporate community action: An essential tool for societal development urged organisations to have vision for their host communities, saying that their success depended on this. She listed empowerment programmes as areas firm owners could train their periscopes, adding that they should ask the people what they really wanted and not what they felt they should offer them.

     

  • Osun: Savouring the fruits of innovative governance

    Osun: Savouring the fruits of innovative governance

    As South Western Nigerian leaders of thought, policy implementors and technocrats converge at the ancient city of Abeokuta for the Southwest  governance innovations summit, I am moved to recall two past incidents;  the one, a historic meeting which started at about 6pm and rounded up just before 6am sometime in December 2010.

    The venue was the “situation room” at the Bourdillion Road, Ikoyi residence of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. A new Governor had just been sworn in, a week prior, after three and half years of protracted litigation to regain a misappropriated mandate. That Governor is Rauf Aregbesola.

    The purpose of the meeting was to share thoughts with the core leadership of the then Action Congress and a handful of key elements who served in the Lagos cabinet when  Asiwaju Tinubu held sway as the Chief Executive, on the policy thrusts and the direction in which the new government in Osun was going to drive the implementation of its electoral promises. Seated at the long table were the party chairman, Chief Bisi Akande, the National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, and, as I recall vividly, also present were Prof Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, Yemi Cardoso, Dele Alake, Leke Pitan,   Dr. Charles Diji Akinola,  the Osun Deputy Governor, Mrs Titilayo Laoye- Tomori , this writer, and a couple of other associates from Osun.

    At this meeting, those of us close associates of the new governor who were key architects of the Osun renewal took turns to unfold the vision and invited those with cognate experience to critique our game plan and how we were going to execute the “PACT” of Rauf Aregbesola with the people of Osun. The conversations were robust, and centred around the narrative of “Government unusual.” This new governor was going to demystify the office and get really down to the task of serving. Key radical reforms were going to be put in place in vital areas of massive food  production, roads, infrastructure, functional education, youth empowerment, communal security, affordable healthcare delivery, restoring the status of Osogbo as a vital commercial hub, and engendering socio- economic inclusion.

    During the course of the night, we addressed the issue of the declining economic fortunes of the country insofar as it continued to rely only on oil as its main revenue base, and came to the conclusion that something drastic had to be done to address the humongous cost of governance occasioned largely by an over bloated bureaucracy, as it was not sustainable. We told the audience that our principal was going to make a stab at pruning down the number of MDAs and collapsing them into efficient and manageable units with appropriate nomenclature.

    Recalling the glorious days of the old West with nostalgia, the necessity to harness individual strategic strengths of the  sub-region’s components was not lost on anybody around that long table. We therefore agreed that impetus was to be given to the on-going endeavour efforts to  institutionalize the peer review mechanism that would allow the weak to benefit from the experience of the strong through cross border replication of success stories with a view to better the lot of our peoples  and create sustainable even development.

    One key point that stood out is Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola’s declaration that there was going to be a Ministry of Regional Integration and Special duties that would institutionalise  the interface with other states in the region and that other Governors in the South West were to be encouraged to establish similar structure in their respective states.

    The other incident; sometime in 2011, I had a one-on-one discussion with a Southwest governor in his private study which, again, drew far into the night during which the Governor lamented with regret: “ Papa Awo (Chief Obafemi Awolowo) had no business trying to rule at the centre.”

    According to him, he had it very well made and the old West was notches ahead of the pack at a pace which, if sustained, would have engendered unprecedented growth and development. The forays into national politics, in his view, truncated the rapid economic growth of our people. I couldn’t agree with him more. Six years on, current trends in the polity has reinforced my conviction that this error has now become a conundrum which the Southwest  must quickly disembark from.

    Although the  “error” seemed an unending dialogue, akin only to the conversations on Nigeria’s proverbial “potentials” , yet some people were not going to just sit down and moan.

    Not surprisingly, a community of interests and tendencies had arisen, working tenaciously parallel to the self-determination, restructuring and diverse agendas, to ensure that the economic emancipation and therefore the developmental growth agenda of the South-west was to be rigorously pursued. And how better to do this than to create a United  common platform for the actualization of the noble task of reversing the diminished opportunities of the South-west for advancement and developmental growth.

    It soon began to dawn (pun intended) on Yoruba thinkers that the future portends grave danger for any component of our federation tying its economic fortunes to handouts from the centre which, itself depends on a failing international commodity.

    It was time to be creative and innovative. And those elements eventually found a round peg for this round hole, in the person of Oladipo Famakinwa. A new platform was formally launched  and called Development Agenda  for Western  Nigeria.( DAWN) with this dynamic young man as the first Director General. This is not an attempt to rewrite the DAWN story. Indeed it has been, and continues to be written by the appropriate authority through the plethora of initiatives and activities it has undertaken so far in pursuance of its mandate either suo motu, or in collaboration with other agencies.

    Perhaps, one Governor who personified innovation in governance is Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. He hit the ground running in 2010 and in a matter of days he embarked on the rebranding project which saw Osun having an Armorial bearing (a replica of the Old Western Nigeria coat of Arms), a state anthem, flag, the components of which, when interpreted, speak to the struggle, rich historical, socio-economic and cultural heritage of Yorubaland. Then of course was the flagship Osun Youth Employment Scheme (OYES), through which the governor had promised 20,000 jobs in the first 100 days – a promise that was actually delivered in 97 days!

    What followed was a comprehensive package of radical reforms in the Education sector; notably, the introduction of the Educational Learning Aid (Opon Imo), an unprecedented schools infrastructure project, and, perhaps, the largest volume of road construction projects ever embarked upon by any government in Nigeria. But he didn’t stop there. He wanted an OMBUDSMAN and due process office that would put all policy implementers on their toes, in order to achieve maximum delivery.

    And this brings to mind the remarks of Ban Ki- Moon, the then UN Secretary General in his remarks to the Council on Timor- Leste on December 19 2009:

    “…as we all know, infrastructure is not just a matter of roads, schools and power grids. It is equally a question of strengthening democratic governance and the rule of law. Without accountability, not only of the government to its people but of the people to each other, there is no hope for a viable democratic state. .”

    This statement aptly describes the mission of the Bureau of Social Services (BOSS). Having been involved in the design, incubation and execution of this pioneering initiative, I am moved to congratulate Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola for the success stories that Osun has brought to the table during the just concluded Southwest Governance Innovation Summit 2017.

    Ogbeni’s reforms in good governance through radical interventions are too numerous to be mentioned here, but permit me to single out three particular polices reforms which have been selected by DAWN and deemed worthy of replication by other states. The first is the Agricultural Land Holding and Development Authority Bill, which, though yet to be passed by the State of Osun House of Assembly, however,the Executive Order has has been signed by the Governor in order to meet current exigencies. This Law is designed to mitigate hardships occasioned by the Land Use Act militating against agricultural land ownership by small holder farmers and cooperatives.

    The second is (O-Meal) the elementary School Lunch programme which received high acclaim and concerning which the governor had course to address a session before a committee of the British House of Commons.

    The third one is the establishment of the Bureau of Social Services (BOSS), an OMBUDSMAN agency with overarching powers to ensure accountability and public value delivery across the parameters of Programs, Policies, and Projects.

    Innovation has thousands of differently documented definitions. There are diverse interdisciplinary perspectives to defining this word the simplest of which is to be found in WIKKIPEDIA:  ”innovation is a new idea, device, or method”. In the domain of practical economic analysis, and I daresay, governance, innovation can generally be considered to be the result of a process that brings together novel ideals in a way that they affect society. (Still quoting Wikkipedia), innovation drives idea to value. Creativity is the capacity to generate novel and pragmatic ideas, but unless applied, it remains just an idea.

    Innovation therefore can safely, in my view, be described as Applied Creativity.

    What Ogbeni has done in Osun is not only to bring creativity to designing his ‘government unusual’, but also to apply that creativity in the delivery of public value. It certainly gives one a sense of pride to be part of that effort.

     

    • Ifaturoti is the Director General, Bureau of Social Services, Osun State.

     

  • Amputee footballers boycott training for dearth of competition

    Worried by dearth of competitions, amputee footballers no longer attend their training, leading their coach Victor Nwaewe, clamour for sponsorships from the corporate world and philanthropists.

    The National Coach of Nigeria Amputee Football Federation (NAFF) on Monday confirmed that the response of players to training activities has dropped since the beginning of the year.

    Nwaewe told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the footballers observed their training on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays in the field behind Stadium Hotel, Surulere, Lagos.

    “Before now, our training used to be full and lively because of the huge turnout of players but things are no longer the same because the response has reduced.

    “But those who are passionate about the career makes extra effort to come for training and I try as much as I can to encourage them,’’ he said.

    He said that training was important as it was a way to keep the players in shape and prepare them ahead of national and international competitions which were not forthcoming.

    The coach while expressing displeasure in the state of affairs said that players were no longer inspired to commit their time to training and would have no ground to exhibit their skills.

    “The truth is that the players are not happy and can no longer continue to train aimlessly without any competition to showcase their skills and develop their talents.

    “Some have gone as far as doing other sports allows for their form of disability, one of our national player have changed to table tennis and his doing well,’’ he said.

    Nwaewe said the sport was meant to be a tool for integration for soccer, especially among persons living with physical challenges in their arms or legs with the help of crutches.

    He urged the NAFF board member to address the issue of sponsorship, which, according to him, has left the sport stagnant for a period of time.

    NAN reports that disabled athletes played amputee football with seven players on each team (six outfield players and one goalkeeper).

    Outfield players have lower extremity amputations, and goalkeepers have an upper extremity amputation, outfield players use loft strand (forearm) crutches and play without their prosthesis.

     

  • Recession: Cleric urges Christians to embrace prayers

    Christians have been advised to turn to God as the only solution to the recession and other challenges facing the country.

    This was the crux of a media event organised to herald the Annual Kingdom Life Summit of the New Estate Baptist Church, Surulere, Lagos.

    Chairman /convener of the programme Samson Aderinto Adedokun said the 2017 edition of the programme was intended to bring the people to realise that only God has the solution to numerous problems facing the country.

    He said: ”The summit is designed to bring us to the reality that except we prioritise Jesus over and above all else, our numerous concerns will not give way.”

    He stated that there was nothing a Christian can achieve on earth without Christ.

    “It is needless for us to recount the issues that are ongoing in the life of our nation as we are all conversant with these happening,” the cleric.

    Adedokun lamented that despite the increasing number of churches and mosques, which supposed to draw the people and country nearer to God, the country continues to face myriads of problems.

    He added that the leadership “is bedeviled by selfishness and corruption, a situation which has helped in increasing neglect and poverty”.

    “We are challenged with the ongoing economic pains, financial recklessness, corrupt and selfish expenditure, monstrous inflation, dwindling disposable income and rising poverty.”

    The clergy man urged the Federal Government to remain focus on its promise to deliver dividends of democracy to the people.

    On the faceoff between Apostle Johnson Suleiman and Directorate of State Services (DSS) officials, Adedokun stated that there was nothing wrong with the call for self-defence by Suleiman, adding that it was within the provision of the constitution.

    He stressed that there would not be “any need for self-defence if the country embrace Christ because he is able to handle any situation”.

    Rev. Achi Kunat, pastor of the church, urged the government to demonstrate more commitment in tackling epileptic power supply, provision of health facilities and tackling the monstrous inflation that has succeeded in rendering the currency useless.

    The summit with the theme: “Wonder-Working Worship” would attract clergy men within and outside Lagos, including the host, Rev. Kunat.

  • Why abduction persists, by Lagos lawyers

    Some lawyers in Lagos believe the rate of unemployment, bad morals and inadequate security contribute significantly to the recurrent cases of kidnapping experienced in the country.

    The lawyers spoke in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday.

    “There is no particular region today in the country that is free from kidnapping. The economic reality today is that people are losing their jobs and a lot of people are not even employed.

    “The high level of unemployment should give the government serious concern, because if you are idle, you become the devil’s workshop,’’ Mr Monday Ubani, one of the lawyers, said.

    He said unemployed youth could easily be recruited to carry out nefarious activities that were detrimental to the development of the country.

    ”The government should ensure adequate employment is created to reduce the issue of kidnappers in the country.

    ”The government should also ensure that the country is well policed with necessary equipment,” Ubani told NAN.

    The lawyer, who gave tips on how to avoid being kidnapped, said people needed to be more security conscious of their environment.

    ”Watch the people you live with in your neighborhood and mind the kind of information you give out to people, because the information could be detrimental to your safety.

    “Also, watch how you boast. Know your relations well, because successful kidnapping cannot be complete without an insider,” he said.

    Another lawyer, Mr Kayode Ademiluyi, identified bad morals as part of the factors contributing to the rising cases of kidnapping.

    ”Apart from the economy that is not too good, when children are not brought up with good values, they tend to join bad gangs,” he said.

    Ademiluyi called on the government to increase the level of security in the country and urged individuals to be security conscious and alert.

    Also speaking on the issue, Mr Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa urged the government to engage the youth and adopt the use of technology to stem the tide of kidnapping in the country.

    Mr Kayode Akinsola, another lawyer, urged the police to be more proactive and enjoined everyone to continue to pray for the country’s economy to be back in good shape.

    He, however, commended the government for its efforts at fighting kidnapping in the country.

    Lagos, one of the latest to do so, imposes penalties that include death for offenders, where a victim dies in the hands of his abductors, and life imprisonment for kidnapping for ransom.

     

  • IFAD trains value chain staff in Ogun

    The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) has trained the Value Chain Development Programme (VCDP) staff in Ogun on knowledge management and communication strategies.

    The forum held in Abeokuta on Monday attracted the programme’sstaff from participating local governments in the state.

    Addressing the trainees, Mrs Vera Onyilo, the Knowledge Management and Communication (KMC) Advisor, said the objective of the training was to sensitise them on KMC strategies.

    She stressed the need for members of staff to imbibe the culture of documentation using Information, Communication Technology (ICT).

    Onyilo advised each component to give an account of their jobs with one another, saying this was to allow for easy access to information amongst participants.

    “When we have access to information at the right time, this is when we can say knowledge has been transferred or managed effectively,” she said.

    She enjoined all components to work to together as a team, adding that, “it’s the role of programme staff to document.’’

    Some of the components at the training included Extension Agents, local government Liaison Officers, Monitoring and Evaluation Officers as well as Marketing and Business Development and Agricultural Processors.

    The Project Coordinator of VCDP in Ogun, Mr Samuel Adeogun, told trainees that there was a need to impact on targeted beneficiaries.

    He contended that the programme, being a project of the state government, deserved clarity in reportage.

    Adeogun   advised all components to take advantage of the knowledge management training “so that everyone is clear on what to do.’’

  • Oyo community to govt: fix our road

    Oyo community to govt: fix our road

    The residents and business owners of Oniyeye, Alao-Akala Way, Okebadan Estate in Lagelu Local Government Area of Oyo State have appealed to the local and state governments to assist in fixing their road.

    They said the road was a death trap because it was full of potholes and many portions had been washed away by erosion.

    The Zonal Chairman for Oniyeye Residents Association, Adeleke Kayode, said after all efforts to call the attention of both the local and state governments did not yield any positive results, they pulled their resources together to repair the road.

    He said: “We have informed Lagelu Local Government but the chairman complained of paucity of fund to support us. He told us to go ahead with the project that he will support us when fund is available. When we were doing the stone-base, he gave us the graders and still promised to give stone-base and we are expecting.

    “To start the project, we started with six trucks of asphalts. Before now, we have laid 16 trucks of stone base and as you can see, there are graders, MC1 , bitumen and other materials are on ground. The resident engineers are on ground to make direct labour to save cost. Also, we make everything transparent as we pay directly from our director to companies’ account to purchase all materials needed for the construction. So, nobody is holding cash.”

    Adeleke added that they had requested for N10m from Lagelu Local Government for the three- kilometers road which needs N29 million to be completed.

    He said the road had gulped over N6m.

    He said: “I remember whenever former Governor Alao Akala wanted to travel to Ogbomosho, his hometown, he used to travel through this road to avoid traffic logjam.

    “Also, the government has awarded road project from Akobo to Olorunda end. This road will be busier because there will be diversion which will make people come through this road.

    “Due to this bad road in the past, we have had security issues where there were reports of hijacking of cars and that is one of the reasons we felt we should start this project earnest.”

    “We have started building police post around palace bus-stop which has almost reached completion. We are doing these to assist government because we know there are financial challenges before government of the day and we want them to complement our effort.”

    Also speaking, the Chairman working committee in the area zone, Adekola Sulaimon, said the condition of the road was terrible.

    He said: “This time we want to make a durable construction with quality materials that will make the road more durable. That is why we first applied the stone-base, adequate thickness of asphalts to make it last at least for 5 to 10 years.

    “Before now, we did put only laterite and stone base but this time, we use asphalts with high thickness to make it stronger to enhance its durability.

    “We are also putting up drainages to make the road last. Already, we have spent over N7 million and what we calculated to be our total cost on the whole road length is between N29 million and N30m due to market variables.”

  • Appoint monarch for Ikeja, group tells Ambode

    The main elite group in Ikeja, Lagos, the Gbobaniyi Royal Association of Ikejaland, has petitioned the Lagos State Governor Akinwumi Ambode over the delay in the appointment of a traditional ruler for the community.

    The group, in a letter dated February 13 and signed by its President, Chief Babatunde Alaran, and General Secretary, Mr. Samuel Soremi, lamented that despite having written no fewer than eight letters to the state government,  nothing has been heard from the government

    The group noted that the last Olu of Ikeja, Oba Rauf Amore, joined his ancestors in October 2014 and that ever since, the community has been without a monarch.

    It added, however, that the Body of Kingmakers in Ikeja, once led by the late former deputy governor of Lagos State, Chief Rafiu Jafojo, forwarded the name of Alhaji Samsondeen Adeleye to the Ikeja local council as the new Oba-elect, way back in December 2014.

    The group said stakeholders in Ikeja had become worried over the delay in the installation of a monarch, stressing that the situation had given room to various speculations.

    “Our deep concern is predicated upon the insinuations and speculations within the polity over the delay in the installation of a monarch,” the group said.

    Only recently, Adeleye, the Ikeja Oba-elect, denied a speculation that he was a member of opposition Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.

    He said: “As a private citizen, I have been in the progressive parties all my life; and currently, I am one of the All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftains in Ikeja.”