Tag: 2016

  • Ondo 2016: Ward chairmen get motorbikes for grassroots mobilisation

    Ondo 2016: Ward chairmen get motorbikes for grassroots mobilisation

    The lawmaker representing Owo/Ose Federal Constituency, Dr Bode Ayorinde has mobilised chairmen in the 203 wards of Ondo State with motorcycles ahead of the November 26 governorship election.

    Ayorinde, the founder of Achievers University, Owo, is also a governorship aspirant of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    He had earlier donated 24 Toyota Sienna cars to all APC chairmen in the 18 local government areas and other party stakeholders.

    The legal practitioner said the motorcycles and cars were meant to facilitate party assignments at the grassroots in order to ensure victory in the forthcoming governorship election.

    Ayorinde said: “These items do not belong to anybody and they are not for empowerment of anybody, but a provision to aid mobility and mobilisation of people.

    “I am providing these because I want APC to win, not because of myself or any other aspirant. As I said when we were distributing the cars, it is just to know that the party is serious. Let us not under rate the opponents; we should work very hard.”

    The varsity proprietor urged the people to solicit for votes with the motorbikes provided, urging them not to sleep or slumber until APC becomes victorious.

    Ayorinde said: “If the party picks me as its flag bearer, it will be good for us all. I will industrialise the state as it lacks industrial estates that could ginger employment for the people.

    “This is the third time I will be coming here to uplift the party. I want to lay a good example that you can become a governor without the help of thugs. This is how best politics can be practised.”

    The lawmaker appealed to all party supporters, particularly those from Ondo South and Ilaje Local Government Area to remain calm on the anomaly in the appointment at the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    He stressed that the development would be rectified, even as he advised party faithful to pray for the success of the party at the polls.

    While receiving the motorbikes, the Chairman of APC, Isaac Kekemeke, said there was no division in the party.

    He said: “You all are representatives of the party anywhere you find yourselves. The vehicles given to the ward chairmen are not for them but for the use of party members in all the wards.”

    Kekemeke said the motorbikes were in the custody of Ward Chairmen, and not their personal properties.

    The former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) commended Ayorinde for his regular assistance to the party.

    He urged other aspirants and party stakeholders to emulate the lawmaker, who was also the first contestant to pay the mandatory N2 million development levy for the party.

    Some of the Ward Chairmen who spoke with Southwest Report commended Ayorinde’s, assuring that they would make good use of the motorcyles to facilitate victory for the APC in the imminent governorship election.

  • Ondo 2016: Ward chairmen get motorbikes for grassroots mobilisation

    Ondo 2016: Ward chairmen get motorbikes for grassroots mobilisation

    The lawmaker representing Owo/Ose Federal Constituency, Dr Bode Ayorinde has mobilised chairmen in the 203 wards of Ondo State with motorcycles to ease transportation ahead of the November 26 governorship election.

    Ayorinde, the founder of Achievers University, Owo is also a governorship aspirant of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    He had earlier donated 24 Toyota Sienna cars to all APC chairmen in the 18 local government areas and other party stakeholders.

    The legal practitioner said the motorcycles and cars were meant to facilitate party assignments at the grassroots in order to ensure victory in the forthcoming governorship election.

    Ayorinde said: “These items do not belong to anybody and they are not for empowerment of anybody, but a provision to aid mobility and mobilisation of people.

    “I am providing these because I want APC to win, not because of myself or any other aspirant. As I said when we were distributing the cars, it is just to know that the party is serious. Let us not under rate the opponents; we should work very hard.”

    The varsity proprietor urged the people to solicit for votes with the motorbikes provided, urging them not to sleep or slumber until APC becomes victorious.

    Ayorinde said: “If the party picks me as its flag bearer, it will be good for us all. I will industrialise the state as it lacks industrial estates that could ginger employment for the people.

    “This is the third time I will be coming here to uplift the party. I want to lay a good example that you can become a governor without the help of thugs. This is how best politics can be practised.”

    The lawmaker appealed to all party supporters, particularly those from Ondo South and Ilaje Local Government Area to remain calm on the anomaly in the appointment at the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    He stressed that the development would be rectified, even as he advised party faithful to pray for the success of the party at the polls.

    While receiving the motorbikes, the Chairman of APC, Isaac Kekemeke, said there was no division in the party.

    He said: “You all are representatives of the party anywhere you find yourselves. The vehicles given to the ward chairmen are not for them but for the use of party members in all the wards.”

    Kekemeke said the motorbikes were in the custody of Ward Chairmen, and not their personal properties.

    The former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) commended Ayorinde for his regular assistance to the party.

    He urged other aspirants and party stakeholders to emulate the lawmaker, who was also the first contestant to pay the mandatory N2 million development levy for the party.

    Some of the Ward Chairmen who spoke with Southwest Report commended Ayorinde’s, assuring that they would make good use of the motorcyles to facilitate victory for the APC in the imminent governorship election.

  • Edo 2016: And the winner is…

    Edo 2016: And the winner is…

    The race for the Edo State Government House is won and lost already. I am not about to tell you who the winner is, but I will narrow it down enough for you to attempt some guess.

    By the records of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), there are several candidates for the September 10 election. Political parties that can hardly raise N10 million have fielded candidates. Many of these candidates the people have never heard of before. Their pedigree is unknown to anyone other than their immediate family members and close circle of friends. And may be their concubines, for those of them who play ‘away match’.

    I hear a number of them do not know their left from their right. Yet they want to govern a state that has had the benefit of being governed by the likes of the late Ambrose Alli and Dr Sam Ogbemudia. I hear some of them have no idea of where the state is coming from, not to talk of where it is going. I hear not a few of them are convinced within themselves that they are just in the race to make some noise and not some sense.

    But in the midst of the crowd swarming around the honey that the Edo Government House is, two candidates stand out and only a miracle will see a situation where the Returning Officer will announce any other person as the successor to Governor Adams Aliyu Oshiomhole.

    I believe these two candidates—Godwin Obaseki of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) — are conscious of the fact that the race is for either of them to win. A close watch of their campaigns shows clearly that they see each other as a threat to getting the keys to the Government House. The words and actions of Oshiomhole also show that he considers Ize-Iyamu some threat to his dream of handing over to his beloved Obaseki.  Forget the occasional bravado, the comrade is not just dancing and jumping on the stage from one constituency to the other for nothing. He is also not giving traders ‘grant’ for nothing.

    Obaseki has abused no other candidate except Ize-Iyamu, who also has not wasted his time trading insults with any other person than the man credited with being the egg-head behind Oshiomhole’s economic team.

    History has been thrown in the boxing ring. We have been reminded that Obaseki’s great grand-father betrayed the Oba of Benin— and by extension the Benin kingodm— when he accepted to be the sole administrator of the kingdom after the British invasion. So, Edo people are being told that someone from such lineage should not be supported to rule Edo. At a point, a film by Lancelot Oduwa-Imasuen on the history of Benin kingdom was even circulated to show to the people that the so-called act of betrayal is not the figment of anyone’s imagination.

    The exciting Edo race has also seen Africa’s richest man Alhaji Aliko Dangote being punched. Those doing this believe he is backing Obaseki. They have asked him to leave Edo alone. They say they do not want a governor who will be hopping in and out of Dangote’s private jet.

    Ize-Iyamu has told us Obaseki is a “typical green horn”, who should be rejected in the September 10 election because Oshiomhole can easily manipulate him. He has described our dear Osho baba as a Pseudo Comrade, whose candidate should be rejected for subjecting the people to untold hardship in the past seven and a half years. He has also described Obaseki as Oshiomhole’s puppet. He has challenged the outgoing governor and Obaseki to explain how they allegedly depleted the state’s treasury.

    We have been told by Edo PDP chairman Chief Dan Orbih that the governor spent N11.6 million to “buy drinks” for President Muhammadu Buhari; he wondered how Buhari, a Muslim, could be bought alcohol.

    The insults have not been one-sided. We have been told Ize-Iyamu served in the administration of Chief Lucky Igbinedion and was part of the rot of that era. We have also been told that Ize-Iyamu was a cultist in his days at the University of Benin (UNIBEN). His membership of the Pyrate Confraternity co-founded by the respected Prof Wole Soyinka, who by the way is a great friend of Oshiomhole, is now being interpreted to mean he was a member of a dreaded secret cult. Are they afraid he will suck the blood of Edo people? Or, are they just being plan mischievous like Donald Trump?

    His explanation that Pyrate or Seadogs was not (and is still not) a secret cult as it was well-known to the authorities of the universities where it operated has not stopped his traducers from continuing to repeat the allegation. To buttress their point, they refer to the fact that he was expelled from UNIBEN at some point after an acid attack on a student. He has given his explanations, but still the allegation keeps being thrown in the mix.

    Aside the cultism issue, we have also been told that Ize-Iyamu has answers to give to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) about some financial malfeasance.

    But Ize-Iyamu is selling himself as the experienced one. He has been chief of staff and secretary to the state government (SSG). For these, he believes he had piloted the engine of governance and needs no induction course to swing into action from day one.

    One fact that has also shown clearly in this race is that for Ize-Iyamu and his party, the real enemy goes beyond Obaseki. They see Oshiomhole as the one that must be cut to size. The pastor-turned-politician has told us what an ingrate he considers Oshiomhole. He has told us how he made Oshiomhole governor— a claim the comrade has gleefully denied. Both men used to be pals. There may be some exaggerations here and there but the fact that Ize-Iyamu played a key part in the emergence of the former Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President as Edo State governor is not that hidden. Whatever role he played, I also don’t believe is akin to claiming to have made him governor. Haba! But whether or not we believe him, Ize-Iamu has refused to drop this line of thought.

    He said: “Edo people should forgive me for being one of those in the forefront that brought Mr. Oshiomhole to be the governor of the state. We now know who he is. Therefore, in the coming elections, Edo people should not repeat the mistake of the past. When I remember how we brought in Oshiomhole to contest the 2007 governorship election, I weep because we brought in a bad thing.”

    Until they fell apart, I suspect, over the issue of who governs the state next, Ize-Iyamu was a member of the APC. He left when he felt he stood no chance of picking the party’s ticket to realise his ambition of calling the shots in Edo Government House. But Ize-Iyamu sees my point of view as inaccurate, as he claims his reasons for the defection have to do with the non-construction of the road leading to his community and the failure to tackle the erosion menace in the area, as promised by Oshiomhole when he left the PDP for the APC.

    My final take: The implication of the roforofo fight for the Edo Government House is that the campaigns have been less about issues but abuses and trading of insults. The people want to know what to expect from their next governor. But whatever incline they are being given into this has been over-shadowed by the attacks.

  • 2016 Rising Tide Foundation/ALOD and The Nation Essay Winners

    We are pleased to announce the results of the 2016 Rising Tide Foundation/Network for a Free Society/African Liberty Organisation for Development (ALOD) and The Nation Essay Competition.

     

    We received 634 entries from 22 countries across the Africa; 548 were qualified and sent to our judges comprising academics and professionals. They chose the best 80 entries for another round of assessment, out of which 25 entries went to the final round of assessment.

     

    The following criteria were chosen for grading the entries:

    • Evidence presented – 30 per cent
    • Analysis of the evidence – 30 per cent
    • Originality – 15 per cent
    • Grammar and style – 15 per cent
    • Structure – 10 per cent

     

    The majority of participants showed better understanding of the theme above 60 per cent level. The top five contestants scored 70 per cent to win the contest.

     

    The winners and their prizes are announced as follows:

     

    1st – George Ayittey (Platinum Prize): $1,000 and scholarship to the Liberty and Entrepreneurship Camp at St. Paul University, Limuru, Kenya from July 14-17, 2016

    (Linus Okechukwu Unah ,Mass Communication, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State, Nigeria)

     

    2nd – Anthony Fisher (Gold Prize): $700 and scholarship to the Liberty and Entrepreneurship Camp at St. Paul University, Limuru, Kenya from July 14-17, 2016

    (Hamzat Oluwasheyi Joshua, Mass Communication, University of Maiduguri, Borno State, Nigeria)

     

    3rd – Franklin Cudjoe (Silver Prize): $500 and scholarship to the Liberty and Entrepreneurship Camp at St. Paul University, Limuru, Kenya from July 14-17, 2016

    (Gift Chatina, Business Administration, The Malawi Polytechnic, Malawi)

     

    4th – The Nation CAMPUSLIFE (Media Bronze Prize): $300 and scholarship to the Liberty and Entrepreneurship Camp at St. Paul University.Limuru. Kenya from July 14-17, 2016.

    (Christopher Kilatu, Land Management and Valuation, Ardhi University, Dar Salaam, Tanzania)

     

    5th – Rejoice Ngwenya: (Media Bronze Prize): $250 and scholarship to the Liberty and Entrepreneurship Camp at St. Paul University, Limuru, Kenya from July 14-17, 2016.

    (Thabiso Mondlane, Finance with Accounting, University of Cape Town (UCT), South Africa)

     

    We also have 7 consolation prizes of $50 each.

     

    Winners should please get in touch with Adedayo Thomas at essay@alodpolicy.org or telephone number: +234 802 223 9554

  • Between 2012 and 2016

    Between 2012 and 2016

    So many activists, celebrities and politicians who protested against Jonathan’s deregulation bid in 2012 and have now gone silent in the face of the new measures, have been dismissed as hypocrites by some opposition voices.

    It is amusing watching some of them labouring to justify their new stance. Some say they now back deregulation because they trust Buhari, others say the country was awash with petrodollars and could afford to pay for subsidies.

    On the face of it the volte face appears hypocritical. But think of it this way: only a fool or egotist would not change his mind on a matter when confronted with superior arguments. Rigidity on an issue even when the cold facts are staring you in the face is not a virtue.

    Of course, there’s also the political dimension to the two episodes. Jonathan handed the opposition something to beat him over the head with and they did so with gusto – hurting his government and image.

    Now the PDP-led opposition has the opportunity to serve the now APC rulers a dose of their own medicine. But what do they do? They are whining in social media; waiting for the El-Rufais, Shehu Sanis and Femi Falanas of this world to lead the charge.

    This model of doing opposition business would only guarantee yesterday’s men a long stint far away from the corridors of power.

  • Lagos House takes up councils over 2015, 2016 budgets

    As part of its efforts to ensure good governance and accountability at the grassroots, three standing committees of Lagos State House of Assembly are currently holding talks with officials of the 57 local councils in the state on the performance of 2015 Budget and their proposals for the 2016 Budget, reports Oziegbe Okoeki

    IN its quest to ensure a proper and seamless budget process in Lagos State, three standing committees of the Lagos State House of Assembly: committees on budget and economic planning, local government administration and public account (local), led by its joint chairman, Hon. Rotimi Olowo, have been holding interface and discussion sessions on 2015 and 2016 budgets with officials of the 57 local councils in the state at the Assembly complex.

    While shedding light on the ongoing interface with local government officials over the budget performance for 2015 and 2016 budget proposals, Olowo said it became inevitable in order to engender good governance, probity and accountability.

    Speaking on the basis of the meetings, Olowo said: “There is no way you can talk about budget for 2016 without talking about 2015 performance, because 2016 is predicated on 2015 performance. We look at what they have done vis-à-vis what is coming in from the Federation Account and from tax. And we look at their performance vis-à-vis what is the ratio of capital to overhead to give us an insight on whether they have actually added value to their respective local governments.”

    Besides, he said, the peculiarities and the challenges Nigeria is facing today, has also made it very compelling for state governments to be ingenious in the way and manner they disburse funds.

    “We are trying to look at what is the real income coming from statutory allocation and what proportion of that must be spent on capital expenditure because all these while, we appreciate that more money is going to the recurrent to the detriment of capital expenditure. And more so, that they are trying to be on the same page with the state government by adopting MTBF -Medium Term Budget Framework.

    “So, what we are trying to do from our end is that, okay, ab initio, what is the total liability standing against the account of the local government, be it recurrent or capital expenditure? And what proportion of that is budgeted for, because over time, we’ve come to appreciate the fact that the outstanding debt is so huge that they don’t pay and they will embark on new projects. That will only tell you that many projects will become moribund. But if certain proportion, let’s say between 20 and 25 per cent of their revenue after they must have taken off personnel cost, is earmarked to service outstanding debt, that means in two-three years, they will be able to pay all outstanding debts and then all those projects would have been completed as against those that have been abandoned over the years. That is tantamount to waste. Jobs given in 2000-2001 and nobody is paying for it, obviously the contractor will be away and when that project is not completed, that means initial payment made becomes waste. So, those are the things we are guiding against.”

    In his assessment of the 2015 budget performance, the lawmaker said the only funding was the major constrain.

    “You know personnel cost, Lagos State has said it that we don’t want to lay off staff, and we don’t want to rationalise. The bulk of the staff in local government, many of them are redundant, doing nothing. But then when you face the reality of the moment, you know you cannot do otherwise than to accommodate them. But you know that has implication on the revenue of the local government, so by and large they’ve not been able to do great job because of paucity of funds. But what we are looking at is that we want to make overtures to state government at ensuring that whatever is due to them is paid timely, so that they can use it for capital expenditure and we are going to tie all grant to purely capital expenditure, no grant should be used to pay overhead or pay personnel.

    Explaining in details the process of monitoring execution or implementation, he said “there is a committee we call local government administration, it sees to the day-to-day oversight of the local governments, then the public account (local) will use local government Auditor-Generals’ report, if there are any queries, based on that they will be called to the House and they will use that to admonish them and if need be punish them according to the extant law.

    The lawmaker who acknowledged that Lagosians expect so much from the government and the councils, was however quick to add that the Ambode-led government is doing his bits.

    “The intervention of the state is not going to be limited to construction of roads. Maybe at intervals any money accruing to the state in support of local government he will come up with that.”

    On what the joint committee is doing on the issue of Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), Olowu said, “without revenue, budget cannot perform and IGR is an integral part of that. We have told the local governments that their IGR must be on upward swing. We told many of them to go back and give us a workable IGR projection that will make them to work; because leakages have to be blocked; there must be accountability and we must have proof and be able to track the budget for assessment and evaluation,” he said.

  • Emotions flow at AMVCA 2016

    Emotions flow at AMVCA 2016

    It was an emotional moment for Nollywood actress and filmmaker Stephanie Linus as her movie, Dry, was named Best Overall Movie at the recent Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards held at the Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island, last Saturday.

    The ceremony, which held yesterday hosted the who-is-who in the Nigerian movie industry.

    The ceremony kicked off at about 4pm with a red carpet which was graced by some of Nollywood’s finest. After all the razzmatazz of the red carpet, guests were soon settled in to witness what has come to be regarded as one of the most prestigious award ceremonies in Africa.

    From the keenly contested to the not so prominent categories, the award ceremony had a surprise for the crowd that turned out to witness it.

    But it wasn’t just about movies, the AMVCA 2016 also paraded the best of music, interspersed with comedy from artistes drawn from all over Africa. Highlife crooner, Flavour N’abania and his Nigerian counterpart, Yemi Alade were among the artistes whose performances kept the audience on their feet. Yemi Alade, together with her dancers added energy and the much needed verve necessary for an event of such nature.

    As the award categories were reeled out, it was clear the movie lovers were in for a surprise. Although, it wasn’t quite unexpected for Funke Akindele’s Jenifa’s Diary to clean out the Best Actor in a Comedy (Folarin Falana) and Best Actress in a Comedy (Funke Akindele) categories.

    What was really surprising was the relatively unknown Daniel K Daniel clinching the Best Actor in a Drama for his role in A Soldier’s Story, beating the likes of Mike Ezuruonye, Majid Michael, Van Vicker, Segun Arinze and Blossom Chukwujekwu to the game.

    Another category that left guests wondering was the Best Actress in a Drama which was won by Adesua Etomi for her role in Falling. Etomi took down big wigs in the industry; Genevieve Nnaji (Road to Yesterday), Mary Lazarus (Don’t Cry for Me), Belinda Effah (Stop), Fulu Mugovhani (Ayanda) and Nse Ikpe-Etim (The Visit) to emerge winner.

    Another very emotional moment for attendees was the moment when tribute was paid to Nollywood’s fallen heroes. Among those honoured were Peter Bunor, Mufatau Sanni, Tosin Badmus, Prioye Sokunbi, Mike Odiachi, Olumide David, Saleh AGM, Aisha Dankano, and Benson Wanjau.

    More emotions poured in when the moment came to present the 2016 AMVCA Legendary Merit Award. The award went to Bukky Ajayi and Sadiq Daba, both veterans of repute. Sadiq was not around to receive his award, but Bukky Ajayi who made it to the ceremony had to be wheeled in.

    “There are some of you that I might have offended; please forgive me. There are some people who offended me, I have forgiven you. Thank you very much. I am very happy, from the bottom of my heart. Do not mind that I am crying. I do wish to stand up, but if I stand up, I will fall down. You all standing for me? Thank you very much. I am very grateful and I feel very honoured,” a tearful Ajayi said, rounding her speech up with the peace sign to the applause of the audience.

    Among other winners at the prestigious award were Akin Omotosho (Best Director), Trail Blazer Award (Kemi ‘Lala’ Akindoju), Best Movie (West Africa) – Genevieve, Chinny Onwugbenu and Chichi Nwoko (Road to Yesterday), Best Art Director, Frank Rajah (The Refugees); Best Television Series, Ariyike Oladipo (Daddy’s Girls); Best Short Film or Online Video, Oluseyi Amuwafo (A Day With Death), Best Lighting Designer, Stanley Ohikhuare (Common Man); Best Cinematographer, Paul Michaelson (Tell Me Sweet Something);  Best Sound Editor, Jose Guillermo (Dry) and Best Picture Editor (Shirley Frimpong-Manso, Rebecca).

  • Edo PDP congresses: Youths mob three PDP leaders

    Edo PDP congresses: Youths mob three PDP leaders

    Former Chief Whip of the Nigeria Senate, Senator Roland Owie and two other leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party in Edo State were Friday mobbed and harassed by youths.

    Senator Owie was raised high up and lifted out of the venue of a stakeholders meeting of the party ahead of Saturday’s Ward congresses.

    Others harassed were Samson Esemuede and another simply identified Ijesurobo.

    It took the intervention of a governorship candidate, Matthew Iduoriyekemwen before Senator Owie was allowed entry into the meeting venue.

    Iduoriyekemwen locked the door and insisted that nobody would be allowed in if Senator Owie is refused entry.

    The meeting however commenced at about 6pm .

    Dr. Carol Ojugboh who addressed the meeting urged the Edo PDP leaders to work together if they want to defeat Governor Adams Oshiomhole.

    Ojugboh noted that Governor Oshiomhole was not somebody to be underestimated in election matters.

    He promised that the ward congresses would be free and fair and assured that election materials would be distributed early.

  • Shock as agency presents 2015 budget to Reps for 2016

    Shock as agency presents 2015 budget to Reps for 2016

    The House of Representatives’ Committee on Capital Market, led by Tajudeen Yusuf, was shocked to discover that the Investment and Securities Tribunal (IST) presented same copy of its 2015 budget in 2016.

    This discovery put on hold the budget defence session of the agency.

    Yusuf said: “We expected this yesterday to take the budget defence of the IST but we realised that the budget for IST in the 2016 budget proposal is just an exact copy of its 2015 appropriation. It is word for word, figure for figure. And Items dealt with and completed in 2015 were repeated.

    “We looked into the budget about two weeks ago and, apart from the issue of personnel that the agency treated late in 2015, the 2015 budget for IST was okay.”

    IST Chairman Ngozi Chianakwalam refused to speak with reporters on the issue.

    The Senate, House of Representatives and the Ministry of Finance are to meet to straighten the inconsistencies in the 2016 budget proposal, the chairman said.

    Also, at the same committee yesterday, the MD/CEO of Nigeria Commodities Exchange, Baba-Ari Zaheera, appealed to the committee to assist in an enabling law to make the agency more effective.

    The NCE boss said the passage of the bill on Warehouse Receipt System ( e-WRS) would make the Exchange more relevant in the country.

  • Edo 2016: Clowns in search of crown

    Edo 2016: Clowns in search of crown

    Seven plus years ago, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole became the governor of Edo State as a result of the degenerate and decadent state of affairs. His dynamic personality, the clarity of his mind, the catholicity of his ideas and his remarkable talents as an organiser and former union leader infused a new life and determination into the polity and the people’s hope to dream anew.

    It’s left to Edo people to now tell whether Governor Oshiomhole has lost his illustrious name; become a shell of his admirable former self, dispirited by raw power or has become an intrepid tribune of social reengineering, change agent or out-and-out democrat! Whatever perceptions or views one holds of the comrade governor depends largely on the political divide one finds him/herself.

    Today, Oshiomhole is one significant politician who has the same and equal popularity across the divides. Those who admire him and those who despise him do so with equal passion. The succession political battle by the two main political parties, the ruling APC and the opposition PDP will be prosecuted on Governor Oshiomhole’s failures or successes in that last seven and half years in office.

    However, Governor Oshiomhole, undeniably, has enviable development records going for him. Since he assumed office in 2008, he has tackled the dearth of functional infrastructural facilities and basic amenities that had turned the state into a living hell. He has repositioned completely a scruffy political system where graft had become a pastime, and a dejected populace in dire need of purposeful leadership. He has restored sanity to a decapitated public service staffed by a disgruntled workforce; and the stone-aged educational system that was turning out ill-equipped individuals without the required productive capacities to contribute to the development of the state.

    The Comrade Governor has resuscitated the lethargic health sector that left the sick at the mercy of charlatans, the health vendors who profit from the ignorance of help seekers. He has managed to contribute his quotas by buying hundreds of Hilux vehicles and communication gadgets for the Nigeria police to stem the tide of the mind-bending state of insecurity spurred by widespread cultism across the state. More than anything else, since 2008, Oshiomhole has striven to correct all the systemic woes that had bedeviled the state from its creation, performing feats that have confounded even his harshest critics.

    But there is a snag on Governor Oshiomhole’s political empire. “One man, one vote” (or “one person, one vote”) is a name that has been used in many parts of the world where campaigns have arisen for universal suffrage. During the 20th-century period of decolonisation and the struggles for national sovereignty, from the late 1940s onwards this phrase became widely used in less developed countries where majority populations were seeking to gain political power in proportion to their numbers.

    The phrase was used in this form in an important legal ruling in the United States related to voting rights; applying the Equal Protection Clause of the US Constitution, the Supreme Court majority opinion in Reynolds v. Sims (1964) ruled that state legislatures needed to redistrict in order to have congressional districts with roughly equal represented populations.

    In 2012, Governor Adams Oshiomhole exhaustively dramatised the phrase in his reelection bid to draw a link between democracy and freedom of choice. He made the point then that democracy is a set of ideas and principles about freedom of choice, which consists of a set of practices and procedures that have been molded through a long, often tortuous history. The point he was trying to make was that democracy is the institutionalization of freedom, which includes human rights; the right for the civil populace to freely elect their leaders in government and equality before the rules. He also meant to say that candidates in an election has his/her own Everest to climb without undue favouritism and manipulation.

    Now, a great deal of the electorate are in an irritable mood on the governor’s moves to truncate the “One man one vote” mantras with his rumoured endorsement of Mr. Godwin Obaseki. The believe is that the less well-known Obaseki did not entertain governorship notion until Governor Oshiomhole drafted him into the race, thereby trusting his candidacy down of the APC party leadership and Edo people. There is the for the governor to clear his own name.

    At the last count, nearly 30 aspirants have indicated interest to succeed the Comrade Governor from both the APC and PDP, a handful of them mere notional contenders, while many are pretenders who are there to make up the number. From the camp of the APC are the former Minister of Works, Engr. Chris Ogiemwonyi; Governor Oshiomhole’s deputy, Dr Pius Odubu, ex-Governor Osarhemhen Osunbor, PDP governorship candidate in 2012, Maj. General Charles Arhiavbere (rtd),  the former PENGASSAN and TUC President, Comrade Peter Esele, the former Principal Private Secretary to the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Mr. Odia Ofeimu, Chairman of the Edo State Economic Team, Godwin Obaseki, Commissioner for Works, Osarodion Ogie; Architect Austin Emuan, Lagos-based business man Mr. Kenneth Imasuagbon and movie producer Don Pedro Obaseki, and a host of others.

    On the side of the PDP are the immediate past Edo South Senator Ehigie Uzamere; former member of the state House of Assembly, Matthew Iduoriyekemwen; Vice Chairman (South-South) of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu and Solomon Iyobosa Edebiri. No doubt, governing Edo State is attractive given the number of aspirants, but the fact remains that majority of them are mere pretenders, who are likely to drop out of the race before their respective parties’ primaries.

    The Benin Leaders of Thought, BLT, a few days ago warned against the re-introduction of political godfatherism in Edo state, which they said Governor Adams  himself fought hard against in the past. What a turn of the tide!

    The warning came on the heels of the alleged imposition of a governorship aspirant by Governor Oshiomhole, for the 2016 gubernatorial election in the state. ?Some aspirants have kicked and expressed their displeasure over rumours that the governor has ordered his aides to ‘go and market’ the Chairman of the State Economic Team, Dr. Godwin? Obaseki, popularly referred to as Dangote man, to the people of the state.

    Chairman of the group and Enogie of Obazuwa, Prince Edun Akenzua, while addressing journalists in Benin, said though the group disbelieved the rumour of Oshiomhole’s alleged imposition of an aspirant, the issue has excited the imagination of observers of Edo politics in recent times. Quoting Governor Oshiomhole in the Vanguard of Thursday, November 12, 2009, as saying that “what makes governance difficult is that some leaders are imposed on the people. That situation creates an absence of support. And people will become cynical about you,” the Benin Leaders of Thought said it was against that background that they were taken aback by the rumour that the governor has anointed his successor in this year’s gubernatorial race.

    “The people of Edo State should be given free hands to determine their next governor. Popular participation bestows responsibility for governing one’s own conduct, develops ones character, self-reliance, intelligence and moral judgement. In a democracy, there is no substitute for popular participation. Even if a benevolent despot could govern in the public interest, he would be rejected by the classic democrat. Man can only know the truth by discovering it himself,” the Benin Leaders of Thought added.

    Mr. Godwin Obaseki’s misadventure into the Benin historical facts was a miscarriage as much as political mishap. He granted two separates interviews in two national newspapers where he chided the Benin dynasty for not taking his grandfather’s advice. In the other interview, he revealed his limited understanding of development politics.

    Mr. Obaseki said that when the British entered Benin Kingdom and attempted to do ‘business’ with Benin, his grandfather advised the then Oba of Benin, Oba Ovonramwen Nogbaisi, to sign a treaty with the foreigners. But all available evidence suggest that the British did not intend to do business with any of their eventual colonies, rather they were on a colonial mission as they did also with Jaja, Nana, Attahiru and Kosoko, among others. In another interview Mr. Obaseki was quoted to have said, “my area of specialisation is (Capitalism). I was born into Capitalist system and it is also the system of governance of Edo State people right from time immemorial and I don’t know when socialism entered the system”.

    Now, there are throw back questions to Mr. Obaseki by the Benin elite in this order: “Is Capitalism a specialist area of study in any department or in any academic institution? When and where was the Capitalist system Mr. Godwin Obaseki was born into? Is Mr. Godwin Obaseki Capitalist system an attribute of an individual, a group of persons or the society in which he was born? If Capitalism has always been a system of governance in Edo, as Head of the Economic Team of Edo State Government under the governorship of a former worker and union leader, how do you reconcile the Capitalist system of administration in Edo State with Comrade Adams Oshiomhole’s masses oriented policies of administration in Edo State? These are pertinent questions begging for answer.

    Granted that it will be almost impossible to find an ideal governor for Edo State in 2016, someone who will combine the best attributes of Engr. Chris Ogiemwonyi, Pastor Ize-Iyamu and Dr. Pius Odubu’s passion for the job. The ideal leader, just like the ideal man or woman, is perfectly academic. In the end we will have to settle for a leader, who, like the rest of us, is not perfect, but who hopefully possesses some abilities to make a difference.

    Engr. Chris Ogiemwonyi may not possess all the qualities needed in Osadebe Avenue at this historical moment, but he certainly possesses some critical and crucial ones. The most important question agitating the minds of the electorate is whether his personal qualities will facilitate his own definition of the primary task at hand, which is sustaining the development strides of the comrade governor.

    • Ikhide writes in from Benin City, the Edo State capital.