Tag: Ajimobi

  • Ajimobi: Ibadan drainage, solid waste master plan underway

    Ajimobi: Ibadan drainage, solid waste master plan underway

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has said his administration will end flooding, occasioned by haphazard erection of structures in Ibadan, the state capital.

    The governor spoke when he received the final draft of 20-year Ibadan City Master Plan from representatives of Design and Architecture Bureau Consulting Engineers, led by the Project Manager, Mr Yann Leclerq.

    The city master plan, which covers the original 11 local government areas in Ibadan, assesses the state’s natural environment, history of flooding, transport, infrastructure, housing and population, among others.

    It is the first in the history of the state.

    Ajimobi said plans were underway to also develop the city’s drainage and solid waste master plans to enhance infrastructural development and future expansion of Ibadan.

    The governor said a lack of master plans contributed to the vulnerability of the city to natural disasters, such as the flooding of August 26, 2011.

    He said designated routes for intra and inter-city rail system would be incorporated into the final document to take advantage of the existing Lagos-Ibadan rail line.

    Ajimobi added: “I will also want the consultants to incorporate how we can cope with and improve on the existing structures and settlements. It will give us legitimacy to remove illegal structures on flood plains.

    “I know the implementation may pose some challenges, but let us see. We are determined to give Ibadan a facelift that will make it very friendly and attractive to investors and even residents.

    “In making recommendations on street trading, emphasis should be on enforcement. But, at the same time, you have to take into consideration our culture and peculiarities. For instance, can we have trading axis and neighbourhood markets incorporated in the master plan?”

     

     

     

  • Why I want to succeed Ajimobi, by Akintola

    Ibadan legal luminary, Chief Adeniyi Akintola (SAN), has said he wants to succeed Governor Abiola Ajimobi to sustain his legacies.

    Akintola is aspiring for governorship on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The legal icon spoke at the weekend on Impact Business Radio, an Ibadan, Oyo State-based radion station.

    He said Ajimobi has raised the bar of governance and politics to the level that failure to sustain his legacies and build on them will take Oyo State back to the dark days of violence and amala politics.

    According to him, Oyo State has witnessed great development under Ajimobi, including the enthronement of peace, entrenchment of intellectual politics and massive infrastructural development.

    Akintola noted that stamping out violence and brigandage cleared the turf for intellectuals to join the race to the Agodi Government House.

    He said: “Say what you like against Governor Ajimobi, but he has raised the bar of governance. Gone are the days when government was for illiterates, by illiterates for the enlightened in the state. That has stopped.

    “We are now running a government of the enlightened, by the enlightened and for the enlightened. Can people walk the streets freely like they are doing now some seven years ago? That Ajimobi was able to bring back peace is his biggest achievement.

  • Ajimobi: A legacy of transformation

    Ajimobi: A legacy of transformation

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi’s media aide Akin Oyedele highlights his principal’s achievements in the last six years and how he intends to sustain the tempo of performance.

    During the electioneering for the 2011 governorship election, nearly all the political parties and their candidates jostling for the coveted office in Oyo State employed the usual refrain to worm themselves into the hearts of the electorate. As they mounted the rostrum, all you hear then was ‘we will build roads; low-cost houses will be yours for the asking; it will be life in abundance for citizens and sojourners…’ In fact, some chose to revile past holders of the office or frontline opponents in the war of attrition. Like Jesus Christ, in one of his parables to the Pharisees in John, Chapter 10, some of these politicians, who could hardly win in their polling units, would say, “All who came before me were thieves and robbers…The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I have come that they (you) may have life and have it in all its fullness.” Rather than malign his predecessors or adopt vainglory approach, Senator Abiola Ajimobi chose a different path. He would always tell his teeming supporters that “if I will not make a remarkable difference as governor, may God abort this ambition. But, if my becoming governor will turn around the fortunes of this state may God assist me to surmount every obstacle towards realizing my ambition.” He did not only win in 2011, but broke the second term jinx in 2015 with the support of the appreciative citizens of the state.

    In retrospect, it is on record that the Oyo State Ajimobi inherited in 2011 was an entity in complete tumult. Murder, brigandage, rape, arson and other forms of violence qualified Oyo then as a Hobbesian state where life was short and brutish. Motor Park czars and political jobbers, who have been canonised by incorrigible local overlords with connection in high places, had virtually made the state ungovernable. At the height of the impunity, one was described at a public event as a “dried fish that cannot be bent” by the very key figure the hapless citizens looked up to for their redemption.   As the stupefied audience exchanged glances, he assailed them with the clincher, ‘you have to live with his excesses.’

    No doubt, the job of government is to protect and promote the socio-economic wellbeing of the citizenry, through the provision of an enabling environment. It was with this in mind that Ajimobi premised his administration’s policy thrust on the restoration of peace and security, as well as the restoration of the fading glory of the pacesetter state in all spheres. It was not mere happenstance that on assumption of office, the governor introduced eight pyramids of development, among which safety, peace and security were pivotal.

    Ajimobi’s pyramid of development bears semblance to the theory of human needs espoused by the American psychologist, Abraham Maslow, in his 1954 book, Motivation and Personality. In hierarchical order, Maslow had rated safety and security needs highly, next to physiological needs (air, water, food, shelter, clothing and other basic physical requirements), which are the sine qua non of human existence.

    In six years, the governor’s scorecard in peace and security suggest that he did not only dream about his desire to make the people of the state sleep with their two eyes firmly shut, he walked his talk. First, he reined in the rapacious drivers’ unions before clamping down on other bands of brigands. Next, the governor inaugurated a joint security outfit codenamed ‘operation burst’ with six zonal commands to whip into line the errant scallywags disturbing the peace of the land. To give the outfit the needed bite, the governor procured armoured personnel carriers, a fleet of patrol vehicles and state-of-the-art communication equipment for its operation. To enlist the support of stakeholders and forestall encumbrances in its running, the governor went a step further by floating a security trust fund to raise funds for its operations. The result of these efforts is a drastic reduction in crime rate and civil unrest manifesting in no major crime or robbery in the last six years.

    Today, nightlife that was hitherto at zero level is now witnessing a new hustle and bustle, with night clubs and drinking joints dotting the landscape. Residents can now freely pass through the once dreaded Iwo Road interchange, formerly the den of armed robbers, drug addicts and rapists, who hid under the cover of darkness to bare their fangs.

    For the furtherance of his agenda on safety and security, the forward-looking governor had recently embraced the safe city project.    The project will proffer cutting edge solutions that will nip crime and criminality in the bud, especially in Ibadan, the state capital. To this end, Ajimobi recently declared that plans were afoot to install closed circuit television (CCTV) in black spots and business districts in the city to monitor the activities of criminals. Although, the recent onslaught of the self-styled one million boys in Ibadan would suggest that it is not yet Uhuru, the rapid force with which they were crushed confirms that law enforcement agencies are equal to the task of tackling and ultimately ridding Oyo State of undesirable elements. The incident, however, points to the fact that no society, not even the developed ones, is insulated from crime. Eternal vigilance among citizens and cooperation with law enforcement agencies by blowing whistles on criminals will, no doubt, complement the efforts of the government in this regard.

    Before the advent of the Ajimobi-led administration, Ibadan was touted as one of the dirtiest cities in the country because of the mountain of refuse indiscriminately dumped in open places. The city had no clear cut solid waste management policy, while it constantly suffered environmental hazard and degradation.  But, Ajimobi took up the gauntlet and cleaned up the city in a well thought out urban renewal and physical infrastructure development programmes. Similarly, residents of Ibadan can attest to the poor network of roads in existence before the governor mounted the saddle. Not that his predecessors did not construct roads, but the quality of these roads left much to be desired.

    That the pristine state capital had now become the next investors’ destination will not be an overstatement judging by the number of blue chip companies that have berthed in Ibadan since Ajimobi cleaned up the city. For starters, investors don’t take their money to an environment where the safety and security of their workers and investment would be jeopardised; where there is poor network of roads or where the environment is filthy and uncongenial for business

    At the last count, 36 new companies have been attracted to the state in the last six years, with close to 4000 direct employees, according to figures obtained from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria. Further proof of this upsurge in industrialisation is the rating of Oyo as the fifth most investment friendly state by the National Bureau of Statistics, which also credited the governor as having attracted more than $61m (N22.4bn) foreign direct investment to the state so far.

    The governor recently opened a new vista of industrial development with the acquisition of large expanse of land on both sides of the Lagos-Ibadan expressway to accommodate the Polaris-Pacesetter Free Trade Zone and an Industrial Park. The free trade zone is one of the dividends of Ajimobi’s many shuttles to China, where Oyo State is now very popular, because of the governor’s relentlessness and spirited efforts to attract investors into the state.  Exuding confidence at a recent event, the governor enthused that seven of the more than 157 companies expected to populate the free trade zone would be inaugurated by the end of this year.

    Within the first six years of his administration, Ajimobi constructed the Mokola flyover, which was the first by any civilian governor in the state. Although it may sound exaggerated, some travellers coming into Ibadan through the Challenge/Orita axis for the first time in six years have been said to miss their ways due to the transformation brought to the area with the new network of six-lane roads. Apart from Challenge, the once decrepit Alesinloye, Dugbe-Magazine-Eleyele Roads have been expanded to six lanes, complete with modern furniture and built to last.

    The governor’s road revolution was extended to the other five major zones of the state. Thus, Oyo, Ogbomoso, Ibarapa, as well as Oke-Ogun I (Iseyin axis) and Oke-Ogun II (Saki axis) now boast of six-lane roads, for the first time in their histories. The administration also constructed 183 roads and seven bridges, totalling 590km. Similarly, to improve the condition of the road network across the state a total of 850km roads were rehabilitated and maintained in the last six years.

    In his determination to bequeath a lasting road legacy on the state, the governor had in the past few weeks flagged off the Eleyele-Ologuneru-Eruwa; Idi-Ape-Basorun-Akobo-Odogbo Barracks junction; Gate-Old Ife Road-Alakia, as well as Oke Adu-Iwo Roads for construction into standard and six-lane roads. In Ajimobi’s avowed determination to enlist Ibadan among the elite state capitals and mega cities, the governor had also revived the Ibadan Circular Road, which had remained a dream in the past 15 years under successive administrations. To the delight of citizens, the governor had during the flag off ceremony explained that the project was awarded to the ENL Consortium Limited at the cost of N70bn, under a build, operate and transfer arrangement.

    He emphasised that it would be entirely financed by the contractor through a facility sourced from the China Exim Bank. When completed, the road is poised to decongest the city and enhance its aesthetics, apart from its unquantifiable commercial value. To demonstrate the importance attached to these projects, the governor had told the contractors that they must be completed before he leaves office.

    Again, in order to restore sanity to the state, the governor recently inaugurated the first of its kind master plan for Ibadan, the state capital, in conjunction with the World Bank, while he also established the Bureau of Physical Planning and Development control. All these are tailored towards ending the regime of indiscriminate and haphazard constructions in Ibadan.  But for the Ajimobi-inspired World Bank-assisted Ibadan Urban Flood Management initiative, the perennial flooding that had consumed lives and property in Ibadan prior to his regime would have again wreaked havoc this year. In the last six years, extensive dredging and channelization efforts had taken place in the Ogunpa and other rivers in Ibadan, while drainages are being desilted for free flow of water.

    As the Yoruba will say, ‘Oro po ninu iwe kobo’ (there are far too many words to encounter in a penny-worth newspaper!). There is so much to reel out about the Ajimobi success story…it will amount to a disservice to the governor, popularly called the game changer, to attempt to lump all his achievements in this single piece. Thus Ajimobi’s indelible footprints in education, agriculture, health, housing, social infrastructure, transportation, governance and service matters will have to be told another day soon. What is for sure and unarguable is that Ajimobi has already etched his name in the sands of time and would most certainly be remembered as the builder of the modern Oyo State by generations to come. Undoubtedly, Ajimobi’s regime was ordained by God.

    • Oyedele is Senior Special Assistant (Media) to the governor.
  • Ajimobi sacks commissioner

    Ajimobi sacks commissioner

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi yesterday sacked the Commissioner for Special Duties, Mr. Mudathir Abdulganiyu, sparking fears of a shake-up in the State Executive Council (Exco).

    A source told The Nation that the commissioner got his sack letter after resuming for the day’s business.

    He quickly packed his belongings and left the office.

    Announcing the sack on his Facebook page, Abdulganiyu thanked his friends for their prayers and support during his short stint as commissioner.

    The post reads: “Alhamdulilah! Alhamdulilah!! Alhamdulilah Rabil-Alameen. Dear friends, I wish to let you know that I have finished my tour of duty as Oyo State Commissioner for Special Duties. I thank you all for your prayers and support while it lasted. God bless you all!”

    Abdulganiyu was appointed in June, last year.

    A source close to the ministry, who pleaded anonymity, said the former editor with Nigerian Tribune did not disclose the reason for his sack to anyone before leaving the ministry.

    Contacted on phone for comment, the Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, Mr. Toye Arulogun, told The Nation he was not aware of the development.

    As at press time, the government had not made an official statement on the commissioner’s sack.

    Another source said Abdulganiyu was sacked for alleged lack of performance in Ajimobi’s estimation.

    Following the commemoration of the sixth anniversary of the Ajimobi administration, fear had gripped many commissioners and other aides over possible Exco shake-up.

     

  • Ajimobi appeases Alaafin

    Ajimobi appeases Alaafin

    After many years of neglect by former Oyo State governors, Senator Abiola Ajimobi, the executive Governor of Oyo State, finally put a smile on the face of the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi. As a powerful monarch who loves his people deeply and is always anxious about their welfare, the monarch has piled pressure on the state government to revisit some abandoned projects in Oyo town for some time. Now his efforts have started bearing fruits.

    Seeing the miserable and wretched state of some of the roads his people had to ply daily as they went about their businesses, the Alaafin felt he had to do something to lessen the sufferings of the people. Together with some prominent individuals from Oyo town, they reminded the government of the need to complete work on the roads which had been abandoned for years, while other roads in other parts of the state were completed and commissioned.

    Their efforts have finally paid off as the state government a few days ago mobilised the contractor, Still Earth Construction and Realties, to site for the dualisation of the Owode-Afin and Owode-Iseyin roads. Elated by this development, the people have already started showering praises on Governor Ajimobi and Oba Adeyemi for their efforts.

  • Oyo govt to install CCTV cameras in Ibadan

    Oyo govt to install CCTV cameras in Ibadan

    THE Oyo State government will install close circuit television (CCTV) cameras in strategic locations across the state, Governor Abiola Ajimobi said yesterday.

    The move, the governor said, would place Oyo among the league of states and communities under the “safe city project”.

    Ajimobi spoke in Ibadan, the state capital, when he hosted the United States (U.S) Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Stuart Symington.

    Addressing the ambassador and his entourage, Ajimobi said the state, hitherto known for violence and brigandage, changed its course when his administration came in in 2011.

    He pledged to sustain the peace.

    According to him, CCTV cameras will be installed at strategic locations known to be red spots or crisis-prone for close monitoring of the state.

    Security operatives, Ajimobi said, would have direct link to the control base of the cameras.

    The governor said his administration’s efforts at investing in the security and safety of the state was based on its understanding that they aid development.

    On flooding, he said the intervention and assistance Oyo State got from the World Bank on 2011 flood helped the government in installing early flood warning signals which have helped prevent a recurrence.

    He said: “We came in 2011 and the state was regarded as an unsafe place. This made us come up with our hierarchy of development, drawing from man’s hierarchy of needs.

    “We identified that the job of a government is, firstly, security and safety. The approach we adopted has yielded results and transformed Oyo to be known as one of the safest states in the country.

    “Oyo has joined the comity of states in the Safe City Project where technology is deployed to combat crime and ensure safety and security.

    “We shall install CCTV cameras in red spot and crisis-prone areas across the state to alert security operatives at the central control unit for prompt response. This measure will help our state more secure and peaceful.”

    Symington said: “My visit to Oyo State is not just a courtesy call but a call for vision and wisdom. My goal is to look at Nigeria from every and a different point.

    “The reason for Nigeria’s greatness is because of its togetherness. It is a very great nation. We will like to see how the people of this great nation and the people of America can work together to build a better future for the Pacesetter State.”

     

     

  • Abiola’s ideals yet to be realised, says Ajimobi

    Abiola’s ideals yet to be realised, says Ajimobi

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has described the annulled June 12, 1993 presidential election as a turning-point in the annals of the country, saying that the supreme price paid by the acclaimed winner of the election, late Chief M. K. O. Abiola, can never be forgotten.

    He stated this in a statement issued yesterday by his Special Adviser on Communication and Strategy, Mr. Yomi Layinka, in Ibadan.

    The governor expressed the regret that 24 years after the election adjudged to be the freest and fairest in the history of the country, the ideals for which Abiola stood were yet to be realised.

    Describing the late politician and business mogul as a symbol of democracy, he hailed him for his strong conviction that ordinary Nigerians must be freed from the shackles of oppression and penury.

    Ajimobi said: “It was this conviction that Nigerian masses should be freed from their oppressors and that the destiny of the whole nation should not be held to ransom by a cabal that propelled him to stand by his mandate and to defend it to the last.

    “The democracy that we all are enjoying now was made possible by the likes of Chief Abiola, Chief Abraham Adesanya, Chief Anthony Enahoro, Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, Chief GaniFawehinmi, Chief Frank Kokori, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and others too numerous to mention.

    “This is why we must not allow any circumstance to wipe out the memory of June 12; the day that Nigerians, irrespective of their ethnic or religious affiliations, decided to take their destinies in their own hands by voting overwhelmingly for a man after their heart.’’

     

     

     

     

  • Photo: Guess why Osinbajo, Saraki, Ajimobi, Akande are laughing?

    Photo: Guess why Osinbajo, Saraki, Ajimobi, Akande are laughing?

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki, Oyo Governor, Ajimobi, APC former Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande at Akande’s daughter’s wedding in Ibadan, Oyo State, June 10 Photos: NOVO ISIORO.
  • Ajimobi, Emefiele, others for TechU building’s inauguration tomorrow

    Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Godwin Emefiele; a Fellow and former President of the Academy of Science, Prof Ayo Ibidapo Obe; Former Head of Service of the Federation (HoSF), Prof Oladapo Afolabi and the Olubadan in Council are among the dignitaries expected at the inauguration of CBN intervention project for The Technical University, Ibadan (TechU).

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi will inaugurate the centre tomorrow.

    Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, Mr. Toye Arulogun, spoke at the weekend while featuring on a live radio programme in Ibadan, the state capital.

    He said the inauguration will take place at Tech U’s permanent site at Kilometre 15 on Ibadan-Lagos Expressway. The commissioner said the governing board of the institution will also be inaugurated same day.

    According to him, the board is headed by a former Vice Chancellor of the University of Lagos (UNILAG), Prof. Ayo Ibidapo Obe.

  • How Adebayo inspired my governorship dream, by Ajimobi

    How Adebayo inspired my governorship dream, by Ajimobi

    Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State moved his audience to an emotional applause last week when he revealed how a 1967 contact with the late Military Governor of Western State, Gen. Adeyinka Adebayo, inspired the dream of becoming a governor in him.

    Ajimobi also recalled in the history, how he ended up marrying the then young girl that presented a flower bouquet to the governor, who is today Mrs Florence Ajimobi.

    He was giving tributes on behalf of the governors of the six Southwest states at the ‘day of tributes’ ceremony which was one of the week-long activities for the final burial of the late military governor.

    At the event which was held at the House of Chiefs, Parliament Building, State Secretariat, Agodi, Ibadan were Senate President, Bukola Saraki, state governors, senators, traditional rulers, top military and para-military officers and other eminent Nigerians.

    Ajimobi recalled that Adebayo, while serving as military governor at the time, visited Bodija International School, Ibadan where he was given a state welcome.

    He recalled that the special honour accorded the visitor so much inspired him to dream of attaining the same position so he could be so honoured in the society.

    According to him, he immediately prayed God to make him governor some day, using Adebayo as a point of contact.

    The governor recalled with nostalgia, how Adebayo conducted himself and lived his life with utmost dignity which he said was impressive enough to inspire people to aim high in life.

    Expressing gratitude to God for answering his prayers, Ajimobi said God crowned the answer to his prayer by giving him  the then young girl that presented the welcome flower bouquet to Adebayo in the 1967 event as  wife. She is Mrs Florence Ajimobi.

    The audience was moved to an emotional applause on hearing the story.

    The governor urged the audience to embrace the habit of using successful people as a point of contact in their prayers if the wish to succeed like them.

    He emphasized that the dignity and effectiveness that marked out the late Iyin-Ekiti-born hero made it difficult for him to survive in partisan politics when he joined the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN) after his retirement from the Nigerian Army.