Tag: Afenifere

  • Call elders, ethnic leaders to meeting now, Afenifere chieftains tell Buhari

    The Federal Government has been advised to call an urgent meeting of elders and various ethnic leaders in the country to address the tension currently generated by the quit notice an amalgamation of Arewa youths issued to Igbo people resident in the North.

    Chieftains of Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere, gave the advice in separate telephone interviews with The Nation.

    A frontline member of the group, Chief Ayo Fasanmi, described the quit notice as an unfortunate development, wondering why people like him who operated in the first, second and third republics and are still alive should be pondering on the present development.

    His words: “When we fought the civil war, and when Gowon was the Head of State, his name was used to form Go On With One Nigeria. To come to a state where we have to tell the entire Igbo to leave the North and go back to their base is a subtle attempt to break the unity of Nigeria and make nonsense of the civil war which we fough from 1967 to 1970 when we said we were going to keep Nigeria together. Some of us who are elders, who saw all these, should come together.

    “People are talking of restructuring, and I think there is need to take a critical look at the entire structure. Let us look back at the journey. If Nigeria is broken into pieces as been advocated by those mad young people, it would be tragic for Nigeria.

    “We must ensure that the struggle of our elders past is not in vain. We must try and discuss these tendencies to keep Nigeria together. There must be justice, fairness and equity.”

    Reacting to the call by Kaduna State governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, that the northern youths who signed the controversial communiqué should be arrested, Fasanmi said: “If you arrest those boys and bring them to justice, only God knows what will happen. I still believe there is need for dialogue, particularly among the elders.

    “What legacy do we who are on our way out want to leave for Nigeria? what I see now is a dangerous trend and we must check it.

    “The leaders of this country, no matter the political parties or tribe they belong to, must come together and talk these matters over. What I see now is a dangerous trend and it is not good for the country.

    “There are two forces fighting now: the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Federal Republic of Corruption. By the grace of God, the Federal Republic of Nigeria must triumph.”

    Also calling on President Buhari to urgently convene a meeting of elders and ethnic leaders, Chief Ayo Adebanjo said: “It is an unfortunate statement. Let Buhari summon those of us who don’t want violence. All we have been saying is restructuring, restructuring, but they said no.

    “As an apostle of peace that Buhari is, let him call us together and let us agree on how we are going to dissolve the federation in peace. It takes two to tango and it is in the interest of the country that we should stay together.

    “But when the other party says he doesn’t want you, what do you do? Should we beg them that we want to stay together. I wont beg anybody to stay together in a federation.”

    He added: “I don’t believe they are talking to the Igbo alone, because there is no mark on any individual that you are Igbo or you are Yoruba. It simply means that anybody who is not an Hausa/Fulani should quit the north.

    “They are already calling for the dissolution of the federation. Those of us who don’t want violence want President Buhari to summon the leaders of this country for peaceful dissolution of the federation.

    “What they are telling us is that they don’t want anybody beside them. We have been coming together forcibly since 1914, and now the unity of the federation is not worth it.”

    On his part, Chief Femi Okunrounmu, said: “The youths are saying what is in the minds of their elders, which the elders cannot come out and say. It is part of their agenda.

    “I hope you know that even the North has prepared a map which they call the Islamic Republic of Nigeria. It has carved out some states in the North for that purpose. They want to have an Islamic Republic and they don’t want anybody who will be on their way in their midst. This is why the youths who made that statement cannot be arrested.

    “Don’t be deceived by what the elders are saying. Whatever they are saying now is for public consumption to deceive you and I. Those of us who are gullible will hail their elders and believe that they are not behind them. If you are not gullible and you are not naïve, you will not give credit to what the elders are saying.

  • Ekiti 2018: Afenifere demands credible primary in APC

    Ekiti 2018: Afenifere demands credible primary in APC

    The Ekiti State chapter of the pan-Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere, has advised the leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) to conduct free, fair and credible primary that will be acceptable to the governorship aspirants.
    Speaking while receiving one of the aspirants, its Chairman, Elder Yemi Alade, said the manipulation of the shadow election in favour of any of the over 30 aspirants would spell doom for the party.
    The Afenifere leader commended the aspirant, Dr. Wole Oluyede, saying he is a humble personality and that “Ekiti is specifically lucky to have an illustrious son like him who has devoted his life to serve humanity”.
    Alade said: “These are the kind of people we want and I pray that you will get there. In getting the best candidate, APC must be fair with its primary.”
    Oluyede assured the group that he would translate his international connections to wealth for the state, via massive industrialisation and agricultural investment, if he becomes governor.
    The aspirant who said he had cultivated 150 hectares of palm tree plantation declared that he will engage in active commercial farming as governor. He disclosed that he would also explore his international connections to ensure that Ekiti State benefits from the proposed Malaysian firm’s $18 million palm tree investment in Africa.
    He told members of the group that as part of his plans to empower the people, through industrialisation, he had invested massively in the hospitality industry in his hometown, Ikere Ekiti, to provide jobs for the youth.
    Oluyede said: “I have travelled to all the continents of the world, I want to say there is nowhere in the world where people depend on government for business. With me as your governor, I will promote business in Ekiti and diversify our economy, so that we can stop depending solely on federal allocation.”

  • Afenifere condoles with Famakinwa’s widow

    The Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) yesterday visited Mrs Ibironke Famakinwa, widow of the Director-General of DAWN Communications, Dipo Famakinwa.

    The 12-man delegation rose from an emergency meeting, which was called after Famakinwa’s death on Friday.

    The late Famakinwa, with his team, was working on Development Agenda for Western Nigeria (DAWN), an integrated plan that would enable the region’s governments to harness the resources for its development.

    ARG Chairman Olawale Oshun, who led other members on the condolence visit, said the group shared in the family’s grief and considered itself also bereaved. He prayed for the family and assured them of the group’s unwavering support.

    According to him, Famakinwa best personified ARG’s objectives as someone who signposted a better future for the Southwest region and Nigeria.

    At the emergency meeting, members paid tributes to the late Famakinwa.

    Zach Adedeji Adelabu, a former Commissioner for Finance in Oyo State, said he considered the best legacy of Famakinwa as the bringing Lagos into the Odua Investment fold.

    Ayodeji Abdulrauf said the regional integration objective, which Famakinwa lived for, had become a bride to behold across Nigeria.

    Ayo Afolabi, the group’s General Secretary, said the best way to immortalise Famakinwa was to ensure the welfare of his family and actualise the regional integration project.

    Other members of the delegation included Chief Tola Mobolurin, Dr Ade Adeagbo, Dr Damola Dada, Dr Francis Faduyile, Chief Olusegun Odegbami, Alhaji Lai Oyeduntan, Gen. Sam Odunsi and Mr Seye Oyeleye.

  • Afenifere to police:  hold Hausa suspects

    Afenifere to police: hold Hausa suspects

    •‘Ife crisis not caused by Yoruba alone’

    The Pan-Yoruba Social Cultural Group, Afenifere, yesterday urged the police to be fair, following the clash between Yoruba and Hausa in Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    The group said it would continue to disagree with the police and the Federal Government on why only Yoruba suspects were paraded in Abuja.

    Afenifere said the police must also arrest the Hausa, who are also involved in the clash, to show sign of fairness.

    This was contained in a communique after the monthly meeting held at the home of the leader, Pa Reuben Fasoranti, in Akure, the Ondo State capital.

    Afenifere  condemned the decision to transfer the suspects from Osun State to Abuja, adding that they have not committed any treasonable felony or accused of any financial crime to warrant the Federal Government taking over the case.

    The communiqué reads: “It is on record that a feud occur between the people of Ile Ife and some Hausa Fulani, which led to loss of lives on both sides.

    “Afenifere regrets the incident and expressed its condolences to the victims’ families, irrespective of their tribes or ethnic affiliations.

    “We condemn unequivocally the attempts being made by the police high command to intimidate, harass, coarse, ridicule and dehumanise Yoruba, who have been called suspects and who were arrested at Ile Ife, transported  to Abuja and paraded by the police as criminals.

    “Nigeria is still operating a federal system of government and despite the uniteriasation of the country, there is an entity called Osun State in the constitution.

    ‘The office of the Attorney General of the state is given defined constitutional roles under the constitution to initiate, commence, and discontinue criminal proceedings, he is the chief law officer of the state

    “The people paraded tried and convicted by the police at Abuja have not been arraigned before any court. Besides there is a police command in Osun State which ordinarily should have taken charge of the investigation.

    “The position of Afenifere is that the incident happened in Ile Ife in Osun State and it is only within Osun that those arrested can be detained, investigated and prosecuted if need be.

    “Afenifere is not also unaware that even if a treasonable felony had been committed in Osun State, the police cannot charge the suspects outside the state, not particularly Abuja and above all, the police as a federal institution which belongs to all Nigerians should desist from adding any tribal or ethnic coloration to the unfortunate incident.

    “This is the first time we are hearing that two communities engaged in a fight and you are parading only meme re of a community.

    ‘The police is not a sectional organisation but a national institution that dispenses justice.

    “ Afenifere declared that we will not support any criminal, if any Yoruba is found to committed a crime in Ile Ife ,he should be put on trial, but the Hausa should also be put on trial but we cannot accept that only the Yoruba are guilty in this matter or are the only suspects.

    “We are not supporting criminality, we are not subverting justice and we are not saying anybody that commits crime should not face the law and what the police have evaded in all these is that how on earth would you said two communities fought and you putting only a section on trial and the other section you have left untouched are from the area where the present leadership of the police hails from, and that’s what we are kicking against.

    “Therefore we are insisting that the police must be fair, must not be sectional, must obey the law and must work within the rule of law in terms of putting into trial those who participated the crime in Ile Ife.

    “Lastly, the Federal Government has shown insufficient will in protecting the lives and property of Nigerians as stipulated in the constitution, it should immediately and as a matter of urgency disarm all the herdsmen who are carrying arms and killing people all over the country and prosecute those who are found with guns.

    “We are saying that the time has come for those who are doing cattle rearing business to go and have ranches where they would raise their cattle.

    “They cannot continue to harass us, we are agrarians in the Southwest and many of our people cannot farm again because Fulani herdsmen have taken over their farms , this cannot continue and must stop immediately

    “To show our seriousness on this matter, we have empowered a panel to go round all the communities in the Southwest where the herdsmen have been carrying out all kind of havocs to do an on the spot assessment , and compile reports which we will not be hesitate to take to international communities if the Federal Government continues to prove that it is helpless or unwilling to tame these herdsmen”

     

  • Ife Crisis: Police unfair to Yoruba, says Afenifere

    Ife Crisis: Police unfair to Yoruba, says Afenifere

    The pan-Yoruba socio-cultural organization, Afenifere has criticised the Police over the manner they handled the recent Hausa/Fulani crisis in Ile-Ife.

    It emphasised that the Police are not fair to the Yorubas.

    At its meeting held Tuesday at the residence of its leader, Chief Reuben Fasoranti in Akure, the Ondo State, Afenifere condemned the action of the Police, especially the arrest of 20 Yoruba people.

    The group accused police of bias and sectional in the way they handled the matter.

    The Publicity Secretary of the organization, Yinka Odumakin, who read the communiqué issued at the end of the meeting said “Afenifere becomes worried with the way the Police handled the Ife crisis, especially considering the fact that the leadership of the presidency and that of the Police are from one of the sections involved in the crisis.”

    Afenifere therefore urged the Police to investigate the crisis with utmost fairness and in line with the ethics of the profession.

    It insisted that the suspects arrested in connection with the crisis must be returned to Osun State where the offence was allegedly committed, rather than being tried in Abuja.

    Afenifere advised the Police to stop further dehumanizing of the suspects, warning them against further sectional judgment.

    The group noted that the office of the state Attorney General should be given roles to play in the constitution, stressing that on Ife crisis, the office of the Attorney General of Osun State and the Ministry of Justice as a whole should be the one to advise the Police on the matter.

    On Fulani herdsmen, Afenifere said a seven-member panel has been set up to move round all the communities in the South West to ascertain the level of damage done by the Fulani herdsmen.

    Besides,it charged the Governors the northern states to build ranches within their states to avoid invasion of farm land by cattle.

  • Changing face of Afenifere

    Changing face of Afenifere

    The pan-Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere, has derailed from the philosophy and the ideals of its founding fathers, with most of its members now fraternising with strange bedfellows. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN, who has been following this development, reports. 

    The socio-cultural and political group was formed by the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo as a rallying point for the Yoruba people, Afenifere, appears to have deviated from the ideals of its founding fathers. In its heydays, it used to be a powerful pressure group that was used to advance the interests of the Yoruba within the Nigerian federation.

    The group probably reached the apogee of its popularity under the leadership of the late Chief Adekunle Ajasin and Senator Abraham Adesanya, when it waged war against the country’s military rulers. In the process, its leaders were molested, unjustly detained and exiled by the military. Yet, they stood their ground. For instance, the late Adesanya narrowly escaped assassination during the struggle.

    Today, the leadership of Afenifere seems to have derailed, because it has departed from the philosophy and ideals of its founding fathers. Unlike in the past, the present day leaders are after personal benefits. Observers believe that they are now wining and dining with elements and groups ideologically opposed to the group’s guiding philosophy.

    The period before the restoration of civil rule in 1999 is believed to be the turning point for the group. The leaders of the group found themselves at a crossroads and were locked in a protracted battle. They were confronted by two crises. On the one hand, the deputy leader of the group, the late Chief Bola Ige, parted ways with his colleagues, because they rejected him and voted for Chief Olu Falae during the Alliance for Democracy (AD) presidential primary. Ige went ahead to join the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government led by former President Olusegun Obasanjo, without consulting with members of the group. The issue left an indelible mark in the history of the socio-political organisation, because it was not resolved; Ige died while serving in Obasanjo’s cabinet.

    The second crisis was the parting of ways of the late Chief Ganiyu Dawodu and Senator Bola Tinubu. Efforts to pacify and reconcile the two AD chieftains through the proposed 60:40 formula recommended by a panel headed by the late Sir Olaniwun Ajayi failed. Dawodu was bitter. He left the AD for another political party, the Progressives Action Coalition (PAC). On the eve of the 2003 governorship election, he directed his supporters to vote for the PDP candidate, the late Funso Williams.

    Since then, there has been a clash of ego and interests in Yoruba politics. When Ige died, his camp became divided. Two disciples of Ige — Chief Bisi Akande and Senator Mojisoluwa Akinfenwa — decided to contest the AD chairmanship. Those opposed to Ige in Afenifere, such as Tinubu, Cornelius Adebayo and the late Lam Adesina endorsed Akande for the position. That was how the AD became factionalised. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was in dilemma as to which faction to recognise. The former Afenifere leader, Adesanya, could not resolve the imbroglio before his demise.

    Following the death of Adesanya, a succession crisis broke out. The organisation split into two, following the declaration by its interim leader, Chief Reuben Fasoranti that Akinfenwa and not Akande was the AD national chairman. A good number of its chieftains were not in agreement with Fasoranti’s position. They include: Akande, Olusegun Osoba, Tinubu, Senator Biyi Durojaiye, Oba Olatunji Hamzat, Prince Tajudeen Olusi, Otunba Niyi Adebayo, the late Lam Adesina and Chief Michael Koleoso.

    Fasoranti, a Second Republic Commissioner for Finance in Ondo State was later proclaimed as the leader of Afenifere by his faction. Key members of the Fasoranti’s group include: Sir Olaniwun Ajayi, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Senator Femi Okunrounmu, Bashorun Sehinde Arogbofa, Chief Korede Duyile, Dr Fredrick Fasehun, Senator Akinfenwa and Chief Olu Falae.

     

    How Afenifere derailed

    Between 2003 and now, Afenifere has been in the political wilderness. While the group supported the second term ambition of five AD governors in the Southwest, it worked against that of Tinubu. But, ironically, the five governors were defeated by the PDP in the 2003 elections. Tinubu survived. In 2007, Afenifere floated another party, the Democratic Peoples’ Alliance (DPA). The party failed woefully, because the old Afenifere warriors lacked the mobilisation prowess.

    In 2012, Afenifere struck a deal with the Ondo State Chapter of Labour Party (LP) to spite its members in the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). Despite the fact that it had become public knowledge that the LP was an extension of the PDP, the Fasoranti group endorsed the LP for that year’s governorship.

    Besides, it is also evident that the Afenifere is fraternising with elements and groups clearly opposed to its ideological orientation. For instance, apart from welcoming into its fold controversial PDP members like Chief Bode George and Senator Iyiola Omisore, the Afenifere has become the unofficial opposition to the Buhari administration.

    Many observers are yet to come to terms with the ignoble role played by the leaders of the group towards the 2015 general elections. What baffled them was how the group changed its perception of the Goodluck Jonathan administration, which it earlier described as anti-Yoruba. For instance, Falae was loud and clear in accusing Jonathan of marginalising the Yoruba in the constitution of his cabinet. He specifically alleged that Jonathan failed to appoint a Yoruba into topmost positions like the Senate Presidency, House of Representatives Speakership, Chief Justice of the Federation, Deputy Senate President, the Court of Appeal President, ministers in strategic ministries and Secretary to Government of the Federation. Falae noted that the absence of a Yoruba in power hierarchy had adversely affected the Southwest zone.

    Another Afenifere chieftain, Senator Femi Okunrounmu, was very critical of the Jonathan administration on the same ground that it marginalised the Yoruba. He said: “We (Yoruba leaders) had met with Jonathan to complain about the marginalisation of the Yoruba, but he has not done anything about it.”

    In spite of all complaints about the exclusion of the Yoruba in the Jonathan government, nothing changed. However, Okunrounmu was appointed the Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee on National Dialogue, probably to court the Afenifere and secure their approval and support for the 2014 National Conference.

    Ironically, Afenifere leaders have not recognised or acknowledged the gains of the Yoruba under the Buhari administration. Unlike the Jonathan era, the Yoruba people are holding key positions in the government. They include: the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo; Mr Babatunde Fashola, Minister of Power, Works and Housing; Mrs Kemi Adeosun (Finance); Professor Isaac Adewole (Health); Dr Kayode Fayemi (Solid Minerals) and Alhaji Adebayo Shittu (Communication).

    Rather than appreciate and commend the Buhari administration’s gesture, the Afenifere has not relented in its open confrontation against the government. At a stage, Fasoranti condemned Buhari, describing his administration as a dictatorship and a one-man show. The Afenifere leader has also castigated Buhari for making the war against corruption the only agenda of his government.

    The division within the Afenifere came to open after it endorsed Jonathan’s second term bid. Members with dissenting opinion dissociated themselves from the endorsement. They accused the leadership of taking a unilateral decision, which they said contradicted with the position taken at a previous meeting. A member who spoke in confidence said:  “That was not what we agreed at our meeting. We held a meeting and agreed that we should not mention anybody’s name among the presidential candidates. We agreed we should only talk about what each candidate stands for and direct our people to vote for anyone that has approximated our position.

    “In the communiqué, we issued, we agreed to support any candidate who has demonstrated commitment to the implementation of the National Conference Report, who will ensure devolution power and reduce the cost of governance. Did Jonathan who was endorsed by a faction of Afenifere make any attempt to meet the three conditions? No. The National Conference Report was submitted to him eight months before the end of his tenure; he failed to forward it to the National Assembly for approval and its incorporation into the Constitution. Jonathan was president for five years; he did not make any move to reduce the powers and functions of the Federal Government. Under Jonathan, the Presidency was bloated. There were many political appointees without offices and responsibilities.

    “An indication that the Afenifere has derailed was contained in the letter of resignation tendered by its leader, Chief Fasoranti, even though it was withdrawn weeks later. In the letter, Fasoranti noted that the group was formed to serve as an umbrella to be used to actualise the dream of a great nation and the Yoruba race.

    “As events have been unfolding in the past few years, the focus and goals of the founding fathers of our great organisation, the Afenifere, were gradually eroded. Several efforts were made to ensure actualisation of the Afenifere goals, but it appeared that we have not succeeded in achieving this.”

    With such revelation from Fasoranti, it is crystal clear that Afenifere has lost focus. The group has suffered many contradictions under the leadership of Fasoranti. Several of its members have left and found new voices in different organisations and political parties.

     

    Is reconciliation feasible?

    The younger elements led by Mr Wale Oshun, a Third Republic House of Representatives Chief Whip, formed the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) and tried in vain to reconcile the two factions led by Fasoranti and Fasanmi. The ARG members include Dr Kayode Fayemi, Mr Ayo Afolabi, Mr Segun Odegbami, Mrs Toke Benson and Mr Kunle Famoriyo.

    The ARG leader, Oshun, said the dispute among the Afenifere leaders manifested in the subversion of the AD. He said some Afenifere leaders declared support for Obasanjo’s second term, adding that the former president supported Akinfenwa for the AD chairmanship.

    Oshun explained efforts made by the ARG to reconcile the two factions of Afenifere thus: “Three years after the 2003 election, we young elements — myself, Ayo Afolabi, Kunle Famoriyo, Yinka Odumakin, Kayode Fayemi, Jimi Agbaje and Dr Adeniji — started meeting and came to the conclusion that we should not allow the dichotomy to continue. We organised a reconciliation meeting at the IITA, Ibadan. Both sides were fully represented. I could remember Akande, Falae, Adebanjo and Niyi Adebayo were present at the meeting. They agreed to sink their differences and work together as a group. Few weeks after, Adebanjo in a press interview lambasted the former governors over the the Afenifere crisis. Thus, the reconciliation floundered again. It was at that point that we younger elements met and decided to float the ARG in isolation of both the Afenifere leaders and the former governors.”

    Analysts say reconciliation may still be a long way off. They recalled the spirited peace moves by the late Justice Kayode Eso, Bishop Ayo Ladigbolu and Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi to reconcile the two factions also hit the rock. The analysts believe the obstacle to reconciliation now is the conflict of political interest; the reality is that despite the fact that leaders on both sides are committed to Yoruba interest, they are now adopting antagonistic approaches.

  • Afenifere leader, Olaniwun Ajayi dies at 91

    Afenifere leader, Olaniwun Ajayi dies at 91

    A leader of the Yoruba Social cultural group, Afenifere, Sir Olaniwun Ajayi is dead.

    He died in the early hours of Friday at the age of 91 according to a  statement signed by the National Publicity Secretary of the group, Mr Yinka Odumakin.

    “We received his passage with mixed feelings .We are joyful that in a country with life expectancy of 53,Papa made it to 91 aging graciously and in good health till the last 24 hours of life when he had to be hospitalised for some health complication.
    “We are however sad that his exit has robbed the group of the wealth of experience of a philosopher,prolific writer and memory bag that is irreplaceable,”Odumakin stated.

  • Afenifere seeks probe of budget padding

    Pan Yoruba socio-cultural organisation Afenifere  yesterday called for “an intensive probe”

    of allegations of budget paddling against Speaker Yakubu Dogara, his deputy Yusuff Lasun, Chief Whip Al-hassan Ado Doguwa and Minority Leader Leo Ogor.

    It declared support for the anti-corruption crusade of the government and urged the president to ensure sanity in the National Assembly.

    The allegations and counter-allegations being raised, the group said, showed that “there is corruption in the National Assembly.”

    The group made its position known after at its monthly meeting at the residence of its leader Chief Rueben Fasoranti, in Akure, the Ondo State capital.

    It urged the Federal Government to ensure that the money recovered from politicians and some public servants were spent on Nigerians’ welfare.

    The group condemned the prevailing economic hardship and urged the government to ameliorate the sufferings through effective economic policies.

    In the communique read to reporters by its Publicity Secretary Mr. Yinka Odumakin, the group insisted on the country’s restructuring.

    It advised the Federal Government to stop giving bail out to states, stating that states should instead be given enough allocation to cater for their needs.

    On the reported re-opening of investigations into the murder of former Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Chief Bola Ige, Afenifere appreciated the government’s gesture and called for the reopening of the murder cases of Chief Moshood Abiola,  his wife, Kudirat and Funsho Williams.

    But the Police have since denied getting any directive to reopen the Bola Ige murder case and others.

  • Afenifere, Mimiko reject grazing commission bill

    Afenifere, Mimiko reject grazing commission bill

    A Pan Yoruba socio-political organisation  Afenifere has rejected the Grazing Commission Bill before the National Assembly.

    Its leader, Chief Reuben Fasoranti, who spoke in Akure , the Ondo State capital, yesterday said the bill was not in the best interest of the Yoruba.

    He said the bill was meant to favour a section of the country.

    Described the bill as obnoxious and unacceptable to the Yoruba, Fasoranti urged all the traditional rulers in Yorubaland to caution the National Assembly against passing the bill into law.

    Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko said the proposed law cannot work in Ondo State.

    He said the proposed law rather than solving the problem would aggravate it in many parts of the country, especially Yorubaland.

    Fasoranti maintained that the bill seeks to turn private cattle rearing into a national affair by setting up a federal body to take care of interest of herdsmen against the interest of other occupations.

    He said the bill, if passed into law, would forcefully take land from state governments and individual owners in violation of the Land Use Act and all legal means of land holding for the purpose of grazing

    reserves.

    The Afenifere leader noted that the bill will prescribe a fine of N500,000 or five years imprisonment or both for the owners of the land if they are found on such land taken over by the commission.

    His said: “We reject any law that would rob a set of citizens of their possessions and award to another set of citizens as this offensive bill attempts to do. That is against the principle of natural justice.

    “There is also the added danger of making national the indigene settler problem that has remained intractable in the Middle Belt area and create more centres of conflict.”

    “It is against the federal principle for the government of the federation to violate the rights of other sections of the country to please a group from an ethnic unit over and above the interest of

    other over 400 ethnic groups.

    “We therefore stand with the decision of the 2014 National Conference, which recommended the scrapping of grazing routes for the establishment of ranches. The world has become too civilised and far beyond roaming animals all over the country as if we are in medieval period.”

  • Afenifere agonises

    Afenifere agonises; and from that agony comes a gratuitous counsel: President Muhammadu Buhari should not anchor run a sole anti-corruption agenda.

    But where did Afenifere get the idea that fighting corruption is the sole goal of the Buhari administration?  Did Lai Mohammed, the Information minister, say so?  Or did it slip from the president himself?

    Well, maybe Afenifere heard it from Afenifere News, the exclusive news wire of Afenifere, by Afenifere and for Afenifere, now that a pillar of  the once-peacocky body is deep in the odium of Dasukigate.

    O, Hardball gets it!  As an old woman frets at the most innocuous mention of dry bones, Afenifere now frets at the mention of sleaze!  Ah, it bluffs and blusters, to be sure. But certainly, the Julius Caesar quip that Caesar’s wife should not only be above board, it should be seen to be above board sort of registers with the Afenifere gerontocracy and their young Turks.  But too bad, their paradise  appears lost; their bragging rights as puritans in the public space appears gone — and gone forever!

    Still, waxing pedantic, Yinka Odumakin, Afenifere’s publicity secretary, who briefed the media on its deliberations, lectured on the imperative of growing the economy and chalking up development, instead of President Buhari getting fixated with crushing corruption.

    No bad advice, to be sure.  But is it not trite that sleaze wrecks the economy faster than anything; and that an economy riddled with corruption will never, ever deliver development?  So, is it not common sense to lay the right foundation by solidly burying corruption, and then go ahead to build a strong and sustainable economy?

    And, of course, the apologia: the tryst between the puritan Afenifere and the corrupt Jonathan government was triggered by “restructuring”, which made the grandees to embrace Jonathan’s National Conference (NC).  Jonathan’s NC itself was the first point of contact for the sheep of Pa Olu Falae’s Social Democratic Party (SDP) to frolic with the dogs of the ancien regime; and are therefore, by that popular Yoruba saying, condemned to eating faeces.

    So, if Afenifere must lose its puritanical bragging rights on the straight-and-narrow, it at least must be for a worthy cause: hence, Buhari must do “proper restructuring”.  Again, not a bad advice, for that might turn the eventual glue to hold Nigeria together in productive federalism, rather than the present consumptive unitary state posing as a pseudo-federation.

    The snag, however, is: which part of it is sound advice, and which part is air freshener to deodorise the stench that is Afenifere’s lot, by Chief Falae’s involvement in Dasukigate?

    This question is imperative because the corruption of thought — sophistry: that penchant to think you are too wise and your listeners are too stupid — crept into Odumakin’s thinking.  Dasukigate involved SDP.  Falae is national chairman of SDP.  So, Dasukigate has nothing to do with Afenifere!

    Great yarn. But it is doubtful if Falae himself believed that crap. But all is fair in war, particularly faced with a shameful loss in the war of integrity!

    But even as Afenifere makes peace with its present hall of shame, it should agonise in such a way that it doesn’t sink further in the bog.  Sophistry is the last thing it needs.

    It holds the Yoruba fulsome apologies from dragging in the mud a body they loved so much; and for bastardising the Omoluabi ethos the Yoruba so much cherish, all for crass politics.