Tag: APC

  • Niger: APC statement callous

    Niger: APC statement callous

    The Niger State government has condemned the All Progressives Congress’ (APC’s) criticism of its recent executive council reshuffle.

    It described the allegations by the opposition as false, baseless and callous.

    APC’s Publicity Secretary Jonathan Vatsa accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led government of insensitivity and described the action as self serving.

    Commissioner for Information Danladi Ndayebo described the party’s statement as careless, provocative and contemptuous.

    Ndayebo wondered why the APC would cast aspersions on the integrity of the government over a reshuffle that was carried out to reposition the executive council for optimal performance.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, the decision to re-jig the composition of the executive council was based on the need to re-position the council for efficiency and effectiveness anchored on the state’s vision to become one of the top three most developed state economies in the country,” the commissioner said.

  • APC to Presidency: stop harassment  of our members in Bayelsa

    APC to Presidency: stop harassment of our members in Bayelsa

    THE All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday raised the alarm over what it called the arrest and persistent harassment of its members in Bayelsa State by the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP)-led Federal Government.

    The partyaccused the government of using the police as its arrowhead, in an attempt to clear the state of all the vestige of opposition ahead of next year’s general elections.

    In a statement in Lagos by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said the plan being allegedly pursued by the presidency is aimed at ensuring that the opposition, especially the APC, does not gain a foothold in the home state of the President.

    It said under the evil plan, leaders of the APC in Bayelsa, who have been strenuously building the party in the state, would be decimated through arrests, persistent harassment and ceaseless intimidation in order to scare away all the progressive forces that are keen and eager to align with the APC in the state.

    ‘’For those who may say this plan is far fetched, Mr. Samuel Ogbuku, the former Chief of Staff to Ex-Bayelsa Governor Timipre Sylva, who is a key APC leader in the state, has been arrested in connection with a murder that took place in 2010. Curiously, Mr. Ogbuku, who has been resident in the state and who has no immunity from arrest, is just now being picked up by the police over a murder that took place over three years ago.

    ‘’Realising that the suspect whom the police claimed mentioned Mr. Ogbuku’s name in connection with the murder has recanted, hence the murder charge can no longer be sustained, the police quickly dragged him to court on a charge related to cultism. The plan by the police, who arrested Mr. Ogbuku in commando style while returning from a funeral, had been to take him into custody along with Mr Sylva and one Israel Sunny-Goli, but the other two did not attend the funeral.

    “A democratically-elected President cannot and must not shut the democratic space against the opposition, whether in his home state where he is expected to show leadership by example or anywhere else across the federation. We are therefore calling on the Presidency to stop the harassment and intimidation of our members in Bayelsa State,’’ APC said.

    The party said the police in particular must not allow itself to be used to stifle democracy and deny Bayelsa citizens of their constitutional rights to associate freely, warning that any further harassment, intimidation and threat to the lives of its members in Bayelsa would  not be tolerated.

    It called on all lovers of democracy and freedom to prevail on the presidency not to constrict the democratic space in Bayelsa State under any guise, especially in the run up to 2015 when the threats to APC members, especially the party’s leadership, are expected to be stepped up to send a strong signals to everyone to steer clear of the party.

  • APC wins Kano council polls

    APC wins Kano council polls

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has won last Saturday’s local government election in Kano State.

    Announcing the result yesterday, the Chairman of the State Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Sanni Lawal, said the APC won all the 44 local government chairmanship and the 484 councillorship posts, which were officially declared by the returning officers.

    He said the polls were successful and peaceful.

    Lawal said the commission was thankful for the support it received from the government, security agencies, leaders of the 19 participating parties, the media, youth organisations, women organisations, traditional rulers, religious leaders as well as propagandists and political strategists.

    The chairman said the success of the local government poll was a collective success of the people.

  • Lagos strategises ahead of 2015 elections

    Lagos strategises ahead of 2015 elections

    At a parley in Lagos, members of the Lagos State Executive Council and legislators have resolved to chart a new way forward for the Centre of Excellenece, ahead of the next general elections. Miriam Ekene-Okoro reports.

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola will bow out of office next year. He has promised to sustain the tempo of achievements till the last day. How to guarantee more dividends of democracy to Lagosians was the focus of the recent Executive/Legislative parley in Lagos.

    The theme of the parley was: “Public sector management re-engineering: the continuing Story of Lagos”. It was organisd by the Political and Legislative Power Bureau.

    The forum brought the commissioners, special advisers, House of Assembly members and federal legislators under one roof.

    They converged with one accord on the Golden Tulip Hotel, Festac, as members of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). At the forum were Fashola, his deputy, Mrs.   Joke Orelope-Adefulire, House of Assembly Speaker Hon. Yemi Ikuforiji, top government officials and APC leaders.

    The parley offered an opportunity to them to share experiences, review policies and brainstorm on the way forward for Lagos State.

    One of the issues on the front burner is the proposed general elections. To the forum, the poll is a collective enterprise involving the active participation of stakeholders.

    For ensure free and fair elections, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) should be impartial. Apart from urging the INEC boss, Prof. Attahiru Jega, to be above board, the forum also called for the reversal of the order of the 2015 elections by the National Assembly.

    In a 15-point communiqué, the forum articulated the need to fast-track post-election litigations. Urging the INEC to remove the time limit  on the conclusion of electoral petitions after the general elections, the forum said: “The National Assembly should review and reverse the order of the 2015 general elections, starting from the local to the national”.

    The forum reflected on the Boko Haram insurgency. It called for increased intelligence and counter-terrorism actions, adding that multinational military cooperation and foreign assistance, based on agreed parametres of engagement that will not compromisesovereignty, will be helpful.

    But, Lagos, the commercial  hub,  also needs security. The participants urged the government to strengthen the Security Trust Fund, with a view to making the security arrangement more productive. They also brainsormed on the maintenance of law and order, judicious allocation of resources to meet specific demands, the provision of infrastructure, promotion of human rights and sustenance of the effective revenue collection.

    According to the forum, “the laws designed to protect fundamental human rights must enjoy a measure of immunity from legislative review and amendment and credible bodies must be vested with the power to blow the whistle when the parameters of the constitutional covenant are transgressed”.

    Noting that Public Private Partnership (PPP) is effective, participants advocated the training of public officers about its workings so that “the  arms of government can support them to strengthen private investment in the development of public infrastructure for job creation”.

    Government, the forum said, “must work with people to organise economic institutions in such a way that there is no oppression, based on class, social status, ethnic group or state.” In addition, the participants stressed that “a distributive equity is an important cornerstone in the act of national objectives for the government’s programme on reconstruction and social reform”.

    The forum also called for an urgent global action “to halt the alarming pace of climate change and environmental degradation, which pose unprecedented threats to humanity.”  It explained that that urgent action has become expedient to save humanity from extermination.

    The participants urged the government to focus on the realisation of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to ensure. It added:“There is no time to lie at ease or be complacent, despite the progress made so far, and hence, we must set new goals and reach for greater heights”.

    Fashola charged the National Assembly to make laws that will strengthen security.

    He said the security challenges underscored the need to review the country’s laws to conform with modern trends.

    Fashola stressed: I will not leave this event without a word or two  about what I think our national legislators can do and be looking at, in view of the challenges we are facing . I believe that the most urgent and compelling issues our nation faces now is law and order. That is the bedrock of good governance and foundation for economic growth .

    “ I think the time has come for our legislators to dig deep. No nation that has the kind of challenges that we have must refuse or continue to refuse to be imaginative about law enforcement. Whatever the argument and fears  about state police may be, we have nothing to fear than the fear itself .

    “We must find the courage now to do something urgent and different to bring collaborative capacity to policing and law enforcement.”

    The governor argued that the constitution has never prohibited multi-level policing. He said:  “Since that has not been forbidden, many legislators who are imaginative can come up with laws that will allow the establishment of multi-level policing”.

    Fashola said that the laws that tend to pitch the state against the federal authority should be reviewed in the interest of cooperative federalism.

    He alluded to the National Inland Waterway Act, which limits the power of states to freely use inland waters creeks and canals. He said, if this act is reviewed, it would boost the capacity of the state to  explore the waterways.

    The Special Adviser on Political and Legislative Matters, Hon. Musiliu Folami, said the theme of the conference has provided an opportunity for political office holders to interact and brainstorm on ways of moving the state forward.

    He said: “The parley also affords members of the state executive council a strategic opportunity to rub minds with our legislators at the state and national levels as well as our party chieftains in the state.”

     

     

  • Fayose accuses Ekiti govt of  booking hotels with N100m

    Fayose accuses Ekiti govt of booking hotels with N100m

    •APC: another case of frivolous allegation

    Ahead of next month’s governorship election in Ekiti State, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate  Ayodele Fayose, has accused the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led administration of Governor Kayode Fayemi of wasting over N100 million public fund to book all hotels in the state.

    Making the allegation in a statement yesterday, the Director-General of Ayo Fayose Campaign Organisation (AFCO), Chief Dipo Anisulowo, quoted the PDP governorship candidate as claiming that the state government was owing hoteliers in the state over N200 million since last year, which it refused to pay.

    But, the APC in a reaction made by its spokesperson, Segun Dipe, described the allegation as “frivolous,; inane and undeserving of any attention”.

    Dipe maintained that the PDP has time for frivolous comments because it lacked the focus and seriousness it takes to win an election, adding “How could a whole party make such an allegation. There are many members of the party who owns hotels in Ado Ekiti and elsewhere in.the state.

    AFCO, which described the government’s action as admittance of fear, said it was wicked for the state government that refused to pay its hotel bills for over six months to have suddenly realised that it needed to pay over N100 million to book hotels just because of election.

    The governorship candidate, who said all attempts to circumvent the will of Ekiti people by the APC government will fail, added that “if they like, let them pay for all hotel rooms in Ekiti, let them pay for all farmlands and even vacant residential accommodations in Ekiti, they won’t survive defeat on June 21.”

    While calling on hoteliers in the state to demand for the payment of over N200 million being owed them by the state government, Fayose said: “Let all outstanding debts being owed our hotel owners by the APC evil government be paid first.

    “And if Governor Kayode Fayemi and those that are using the June 21 election to siphon Ekiti funds like, let them go beyond the booking of all hotel rooms in Ekiti. Let them also book all roads in the state so that no one can be able to use the roads between now and June 21.

    “They can also go a step further in the demonstration of their wickedness and desperation by booking the air that we breathe so that no one will be able to breathe because of the June 21 election.

     

  • Four APC lawmakers join Edo PDP

    Four APC lawmakers join Edo PDP

    •We are intact, says Edo APC

    Our lawmakers in the Edo State House of Assembly elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday joined the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    With the defection, the PDP has eight members in the Assembly and the APC 16.

    Those who defected are Patrick Osayimwen, Jude Ise-Idehen, Abdulrasaq Momoh and Friday Ogieriakhi.

    Momoh said he left the APC because the party disowned him last year. He said his ‘spirit’ has since left the party.

    The lawmakers defected at a meeting in Benin City where Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu and his supporters supported a motion that they joined the PDP.

    Pioneer Chairman of defunct ACN, Prince Tony Omoaghe said the APC has been hijacked by a cabal who do not believe in free democratic participation.

    Ize-Iyamu said more lawmakers will soon join the PDP and boasted that the PDP would return to power in 2015.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Edo State has said that it was not disturbed by the defection of Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu and his loyalists.

    It said the defectors were heading to the “lion’s den”.

    Interim State Publicity Secretary Godwin Erhahon described the defectors as “seasonal birds” that would come back in the next season.

    Erhahon congratulated Governor Adams Oshiomhole for the major relief and assure the people that they stand to benefit from Ize-Iyamu’s exit.

    A former State chairman of defunct ACN, Thomas Okosun, urged the defectors to retrace their steps, if their actions were not for personal interest.

    Okosun said Ize-Iyamu should not be deceived that the PDP would win any election in the state.

    His words: “We have a responsibility to begin to rebuild our party for the next elections, and not just for elections but begin to work more for the people of Edo state because power is meant to be used for the benefit of the people.

    “If they believe that they are in politics in the interest of the public and not their personal interest, then it is not too late for them to come back.

    “God’s glory has departed from PDP. Yes that we won election 18 over 18 is not the singular effort of a single individual but mostly because of the achievement of this government in terms of providing infrastructural facilities for the people.

     

  • APC demands Ondo’s  financial accounts

    APC demands Ondo’s financial accounts

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State has urged the state government to account for its spending since it assumed office.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Prince Abayomi Adesanya, APC said: “It is inevitable and sacrosanct to ask the Governor Olusegun Mimiko administration why it has not told the people how much has accrued to the state’s purse and how it was spent since inception of the administration.”

    It said past administrations gave monthly financial account to guarantee transparency.

    The APC urged Minister for Finance Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN); the Revenue and Remuneration Fiscal Commission and other authorities in charge of revenue allocation to states, local governments and the Oil Derivation Funds to make public the amount that has accrued to Ondo State from the Federation account since February, 2009, till date.

    It lamented that since the Mimiko administration assumed office over five years ago, it has not rendered any financial account.

    The APC said: “How much accrued to the state’s purse from the Federation Account from February, 2009, to May, 2014? How much was paid to the 18 local government areas from the Federation Account from February, 2009, to May, 2014?

    “Ondo State is an oil producing state. How much has it received as 13 per cent oil derivation funds from February, 2009, to May, 2014?

    “Is the 13 per cent derivation paid directly into the state’s coffers or into the account of the Ondo State Oil Producing Area Development Commission (OSOPADEC)?”

    The party urged the government to answers these questions and keep the people abreast of the state’s financial situation.

  • APC inaugurates office in Bwari

    APC inaugurates office in Bwari

    The All Progressives  Congress (APC) has inaugurated a campaign office in the Bwari, Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The  General Secretary of Alliance for Credible Election (ACE), Emma Ezeazu, who donated the office, said  that Nigerians have been suffering from the misrule of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Ezeazu, who is now a chieftain of the APC, called on the FCT opposition leaders to build the party.

    He said the battle to take over from the PDP will not be easy, adding that it can only be achieved through commitment to change.

    Ezeazu added: “ The APC will take over from the PDP. Our people have suffered the misrule of the PDP. I call on APC leaders to join hands in building the party and also ensure that we prepare our followers for the election that is coming.”

    The FCT APC Chairman, Abdulmalik Usman, said that it will not be business as usual, urging Bwari residents to register and obtain their voters cards, ahead of the election.

    He urged members shun activities that could distabilise the party.

    Senator Sidi Ali charged the APC women and youths to work for the party so that it can have an edge over the other parties. He also  charged them to win more members for the party.

    A party chieftain, Musa Diko, assured that the APC will resolve the security problems, if voted into power.

     

     

  • ‘My husband will  defeat Fayose, Bamidele’

    ‘My husband will defeat Fayose, Bamidele’

    Wife of the Ekiti State Governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, has expressed confidence that her husband and candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Kayode Fayemi, would defeat the opposition candidates in the June 21 governorship election.

    Addressing a crowd of supporters in Iye-Ekiti in Ilejemeje Local

    Government Area of Ekiti State yesterday, Mrs. Fayemi clarified that her husband had a record of achievements to depend on for his re-election campaigns.

    The governor’s wife alongside a horde of women party supporters defied heavy downpour yesterday, as she campaigned across communities in the state.

    Other towns her campaign train also visited yesterday included Ire and Oye in Oye Local Government, Iludun, Iye in Ilejemeje and Otun Ekiti in Moba Local Council Area.

    According to her, while other candidates could only promise the electorate, using expressions like ‘I shall’ and ‘I will’, only the APC candidate could say “I have.”

    She pledged that the Fayemi’s administration “will do it again as we have done it before”.

    Erelu Fayemi said: “I am 100 per cent sure that my husband will defeat other candidates in this election. He will win hands down because he is running on solid track records.

    “Our consistent canvass for votes is not that we are jittery, but to ensure that no voter is left behind. We have to sensitise our people and increase the advocacy for voters’ education to prevent apathy.

    “We have gone round all the farmsteads and this is for us to be familiar with the challenges being faced in those communities. This will form part of the strategies  to tackle  social and economic problems at the grassroots during the second term of this administration”.

    She urged the women to prepare well for the day of election, noting that “All you are doing now are preparations for that final day”. She also urged the women to start a house-to–house campaign to doubly assure success on the election day.

    Said she: “On 21st, prepare food for your husbands and get to polling centres on time. Those of you who can follow the votes down to counting centres should do that. On that day, there will be no freedom to wear high heeled shoes or chewing chewing gum. You should also be in trousers on the day and not Iro and Buba.

    “Members of opposition are threatening that they will bombard the state with soldiers, police and other security agencies to scare the people from voting. This is a blatant lie and you have to discountenance such.

    “The Fayemi-led administration will provide adequate security for you to vote that day…”

     

     

  • Character  will define  this election  –Fayemi

    Character will define this election –Fayemi

    In the build-up to the 2014 Ekiti State Governorship Election on June 21, the state governor who is seeking reelection for another four-year term, Kayode Fayemi of the All Progressives Congress ( APC), fielded questions from Steve Osuji and Femi Macaulay, The Nation Editorial Board members, on poll-related issues, at his country house in Isan-Ekiti.

    ON a general note, what are the critical lessons you have learnt since you took up this job?

    There are lots of lessons. Firstly, I have discovered that every politician comes to terms with the obvious realisation that political timetable does not always synergise with government timetable; and what I mean by that is that you have a great vision and have programmes that stem out from that vision and implementation of the vision could spill beyond a particular term of office, so you cannot necessarily restrict yourself to a political timetable when you are initiating a project.

    Secondly, one the lessons that comes with politics is clearly performance, which is an extremely important factor in assessing politicians; but performance,  however dignifying in itself, is not enough to measure success in politics.

    Another thing is if you have focus, sincerity of purpose, determination and a clear vision, lack of resources is not necessarily an impediment to achieving your overall objective. If somebody asks me that you are number 35 (out of 36 states) on the revenue ladder of Nigeria, how have you been able to do things in spite of the fact that resources available would not normally qualify you for any tangible development stride? And the basis of comparison is that your average income is N3bn monthly and you have 2.5 million people. Bayelsa has N24bn and there are 1.2 million people. For me, I do not see finance as an impediment if you have a clearly designed plan and sincerity of purpose, and focus on changing the lives of your people, you will still get a great deal of stride to your credit.  Leadership is about patience, perseverance, restraint; and these are not necessarily political lessons, but lessons of leadership in any sphere not just in politics. You cannot lead people if you don’t have a great deal of patience, restraint and the capacity to accommodate both the sublime and the ridiculous.

    Any surprises so far?

    I cannot honestly say I haven’t had any experience that shocked me since I assumed office. But I do have an advantage as I always say to people. Don’t forget, I stem from having an agenda and coming to the race with a wide spectrum of people. I had three and a half years of fine-tuning that agenda and discussing with people and ensuring that I respond to things coming from the other side. For example, the three and a half years that I was in court, every time the government in Ekiti State at that time produced a budget, most times in November- December, we always had an alternative budget based on our eight-point agenda. We used to produce a budget but because the House of Assembly as at then was a hung parliament, we had enough members to incorporate some of the issues we had in our programme into the state agenda. We were 13 and the other side was 13; we were able to insist on either delay of the passage of appropriation or getting in some of our views. When I came into office, I had a 100-day plan and a one-year plan. We were the first state to raise revenue from the capital market. We have a distinct advantage of tapping into my own old network in the development world and I was able to bring back major development players into the state that had left the state when the government in Ekiti State was nothing to write home about.

    World Bank and European Union have been very active in the state and we got major funds that were able to cushion our desire for development of the people.  We give funds for the elderly, a form of social security, and laptop per child programme, how are we able to do these?  It was the product of prudence, focus, which has helped us in managing the affairs of the state.

    With the benefit of hindsight, are there things you would have done differently?

    The things I do are out of my passion to make a difference, and probably in terms of timing some people might think they can be handled when have stabilised government or get into second term as it happens in other places. I did education reforms, for example, and merged schools, secondary and university; there are two universities in this state that we merged into one. And, of course, the various tests for teachers and principals, so we do quite a number of things. These are things that are not exactly the most attractive for politicians to do in a place where you have those that are not easily well disposed to what I might consider to be tough nut to crack. Not that I regret taking those steps because it’s paying off for us now; if we had not done some of the things we did in the education sector, we would not have gotten the kind of support we got. We have $15m from the World Bank, not many states can talk about that but we needed to take certain steps. We did not take it for that money, but when we took those steps, World Bank noticed and then said thank goodness, if you have a state that has managed unprompted to do these things, maybe we should look in this direction.

    Politically speaking, we know how it is as politicians do not want to run into problems with civil servants, most especially in a basically civil service state, but interestingly, the effect of that is that they now become the beneficiary. When we pay teachers’ allowances that are not paid in any state, it is because we decided to take steps that could give us support to accomplish that. We pay core-subject allowance to teachers in Mathematics, English and Science.

    We have seven teachers leaving this state shortly for the United States. This has never happened to them before. We pay salary, I mean standard salary. Teachers in this state earn almost double their normal salary. If you are a teacher in the rural area, you get 20% allowance of your annual standard salary for teaching in the rural area, for instance in my village, if you are a teacher, you earn 20% in addition to your normal salary.

    Something like inconvenience allowance?

    Yes, this is because we have discovered that people do not want to teach in rural areas and they want to remain in the city centre like Ado Ekiti; thus, we had to do something in order to ensure that our children out there are not disadvantaged. The bulk of this state is rural, invariably, more than half of our teachers earn rural teachers allowances. If you teach core subjects,  Mathematics, Computer Sciences, English and other science subjects, you earn another 20% and what that then means is that you have almost half of your salary as allowance in addition to your salary, and also have field capacity training programme that you benefit from. There is no state you can point to giving these benefits to the average teachers.

    Your administration seems to place a high premium on education.

    I value education and I believe that it is the antidote to poverty; and so if you have a grand vision to make poverty history in a state, one of the ways is to increase the literacy level of your population, to increase the access of your people to opportunities, and you cannot have access to opportunities if you don’t have basic education. Don’t also forget that this is Ekiti, it has a reputation in terms of education.  The other thing is that I am a product of this environment. My school is Christ School and when I was in school it was one of the best schools; that is the reputation.  When in 2012, only 9% of the students who wrote WAEC Exam had passes in Maths and English, I was very upset because when I was in Christ School there were  50 Grade One  in my set.

    Including you?

    Yes, I made Grade One. But that is not the point. But the fact is that you could imagine how scandalised I was when I saw the results. I was very upset, agitated and the step we took was to organise a unified promotion examination in SS2, and if you don’t pass that exam we will not present you for WAEC. In 2013, the results vastly improved.  Those who saw the move as unpopular then are now happy with the steps we took.

    What is the next level? What are you looking at?

    For us here the challenge we are still dealing with is that we have lots of people who are educated, but we have a lot of people who do not have enough skills for employment generation. There must be connection between academic knowledge and skill.  Creating and sustaining a knowledge economy is key for us; we have a hub of knowledge economy in this state now. Basically the knowledge zone is like an industrial zone but knowledge creation and economy is imperative. One of the things we are doing, (and no other state is doing) like the cable network scheme, for instance. We don’t have the kind of opportunities you have in River, Bayelsa and Lagos which is a commercial centre, but we feel that there are things that we can do to make Ekiti State an investment destination for investors and we are playing on our education advantage and agricultural production.

    If you know you run an internet based company, and it is easy to run because labour is cheap; we have a lot of graduates and you empower them for six months; we train them and get them into this business; it will be cheaper. The main idea is information management structure that will now propel the state. We will commission the first phase of the broadband initiative in Ado Ekiti,  right here in Ekiti State. We are also looking at CCTV in the state, particularly in the capital not in other areas. A lot of things are connected to the cable network being installed across the state. For me, continuity is key. What is critical is how do we get out of this crap and create an economy that is sustainable; and to find a way to create new value to traditional value. Even our children, when they read they find their way out of Ekiti, and we must find a way to make them stay by providing a profession.

    Are you likely to review your eight-point agenda?

    There are some things that we have established over time. Our commitment to education is not negotiable. We are focused on technical education and knowledge economy. We are more linked to a wider investment strategy.  It is not what it used to be. If it continues in this way, it is clearly going to diversify into things that could generate alternative sources of income.

    When I lost my deputy, one of the things we committed to doing was to establish a cancer prevention centre which was equipped to treat people and establish a culture which we are doing not just by our own self but through Public-Private Partnership.  We will continue to focus on primary health care for pregnant women and the children, elderly and the physically challenged.  We do not discriminate in our healthcare services. The service here is free and it goes round and whether you are 40 or 70, you can come and you will be attended to. If you have that going, in order to sustain our effort in the health care sector over a long time, we now have health insurance in the state. We just started health insurance in the state, it is kind of integrated but I can state clearly that we can already see the impact on  maternal and child mortality, life expectancy;  we have lower HIV prevalence in the entire country and life expectancy has improved. It is something we do in the primary healthcare that is making us to achieve this feat. Elderly people who would have been dying from neglect benefit from our monthly N5, 000 stipends which have prolonged their lives.

    Poverty eradication is a major focal point of your administration. How well have you succeeded in your defined mission to banish poverty from Ekiti State?

    We are not very good at statistics in Nigeria, and I will not be brandishing numbers around. If you look at the ideological framework of what we do in Ekiti State, you will see clearly a social democratic agenda that is focusing on the weak and the vulnerable in virtually everything we do. People who ordinarily would not go to school are now going to school through our free education programme. People deliver babies free, who probably would have gone to some traditional birth attendant because they could not afford money to go to the hospital. My wife and I run a multiple birth trust fund because we have a high level of twins and triplets birth here; automatically the real objective is to reduce the risk involved in child birth for both the parents and the children. Everything we do is informed largely by that framework. People are better off. You can also see the economic incentive, when we provide infrastructure like water, road, they also increase level of access unlike what used to be the case.  We have rural development, in every part of the state there is hardly any community I go in all the 132 communities where the community will not roll out 4 to 5 things we have done for them.  Some of these things, we give them the money to do and we work with the town union and they deliver the project on cost and on time much better than what government would have done if we had done it ourselves. I get to these communities and they will tell how grateful they are for the power, roads, schools, healthcare centres.  What we are trying to do now is to lay the framework, get the infrastructure so that the investors can come. In the space of three and a half years in this government, we have had about 10 standard firms come to Ekiti. When we put light in Ado Ekiti, we used to sleep 7:00pm.  At 7: 00pm, you will not see anybody before I became governor. Today, we have people walking on the streets at 9:00pm. We have people selling recharge card at 12: 00am. A new economy has emerged around the street lights installed in major towns. Infrastructure is not just the few good things; it has a very important role to play in investment creation. What we are doing also is to establish linkages with facilities managers, new hotel consortiums to take over where we have reached in places like Ikogosi so that they can now establish a new Ikogosi, put a new hotel and run the place well. It is not the job of the government to be running hotels. We have done what we could and others can now take it up from there.

    You made an interesting distinction between success in governance and success in politics. How well have you been able to strike a balance between politics and governance?

    The people were very much involved in my campaign to become Governor, very much they felt I was cheated and there was a lot of tension in the air. There was also an exaggerated expectation and some people felt that I would just come and turn around everything in this place. I had that challenge when I became Governor. People just believe that he has come, our problem has to stop. In my first year, I had challenges in the sense that we had worked out all the plans and sorted out all our issues but the funds were not immediately there to execute all our plans and you know human beings are very short in their orientation. Then they said that the guy is not as we thought and when the work started happening the tune changed, but then I had called some bluff and I had acquired new enemies from those who should have been commissioners who are not, those who think they should be on board and are not there. Even internally, they think I am a professor and I’m not like Fayose. I don’t dance on campaign train, I don’t blow horn (eat corn) on the street like him. But I have done a lot of things in three and a half years. I concentrate on my work. If you see me on the street, I am concentrating on my work, monitoring ongoing projects.

    Shortly after your inauguration as Governor, you said publicly that there are always debts to be paid in politics. How well have you paid such debts?

    Interesting question, there will always be debts to pay. There will be some realigning sooner than later and these things will not be done on a platter of gold as they will be negotiated. An enemy yesterday could be an ally today and they may be instrumental to the realignment.

    I will never pay them back in their own coin. All I would say is that I will not do anything that is against my conscience.  I believe I came into politics with heavy dose of integrity and for me character is imperative. Whatever I go into, I owe it to myself to explain it to an ordinary person as to why I have done what I have done.  I think we will have a two-horse race in the coming election.

    Three

    No, I don’t think it will be three. The two-horse race will be very sharp that you will have to make up your mind about the place you want to be.  Do you want to go with PDP or APC? The party will pale into some level of insignificance and the candidate will become the issue and the way the candidates are seen. The only way the party may be an issue is the structure on ground to project their candidate. Let’s say that the election is about good governance and what Ekiti wants for their future. It is much easier to determine election but there are externalities that we must factor into it ultimately. Character will define this election.