Tag: APC

  • Four Kwara PDP members held for ‘possession of firearms’

    Four Kwara PDP members held for ‘possession of firearms’

    •APC condemns PDP over violence

    The police in Kwara State have arrested four suspects, believed to be members of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), for alleged possession of illegal firearms.

    Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) Zanna Ibrahim said the suspects were arrested yesterday morning at the home of the PDP State Chairman, Solomon Edoja.

    It was also gathered that a PDP member in the House of Assembly was invited and interrogated by the police in connection with the allegation.

    Ibrahim said: “Four suspects were arrested in Oyun area at the house of the PDP chairman yesterday. One of the suspects, Olorunfemi Sola, was caught with a locally made gun and one live cartridge.”

    The DCP, who said investigation was still going on, added that further investigations would reveal the identity of other suspects.

    Edoja said that the embattled lawmaker was invited by the police to explain what he knew about the matter.

    He said: “Some hoodlums were sighted outside the premises of my lodge this morning and we discovered that about 90 per cent of them were not PDP members. They were there to foment trouble.

    “When police arrested one of them and searched him thoroughly, he was caught with life ammunition and you will agree with me that it is typical of hoodlums to mention names of prominent person when arrested.”

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara State has condemned the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for what it described as “current spate of wanton destruction of lives and property” as a result of desperation and greed for political relevance.

    The party’s Interim spokesman, Sulyman Buhari, said it was disturbing that PDP has extended its gangsterism to blood-letting and senseless killings in a state known for peace and harmony.

    Buhari said the fracas, which took place at the PDP secretariat in Sango – Ilorin, between supporters of a former senator and the chairman of a federal commission at Ajikobi central ward in Ilorin, has once again brought to the fore the kind of greed and selfishness of PDP members.

    “Ordinarily, the APC would not have bothered itself with happenings in the PDP, but because of our concern for innocent people, who might be affected by the fracas.

    “The APC calls on the police to probe the senseless killings and punish the perpetrators.”

     

  • Teaching them how to fish

    Teaching them how to fish

    Senate Minority Whip Ganiyu Olanrewaju Solomon has empowered some youths to enable them set up their own businesses. The Senator’s gesture, says Lagos State All Progressives Congress (APC) Interim Chairman Chief Henry Ajomale, is a sad reminder of the nation’s empowerment crisis. Assistant Editor DADA ALADELOKUN reports.

    The event started on a convivial note. But suddenly, there was silence. The speaker’s voice quaked, as listeners nodded their heads. Chief Henry Ajomale, Interim Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, held the microphone, analysing what remains a pain in the hearts of many Nigerians.

    He struggled to contain his emotions as he bemoaned the fate of the 19 job seekers who died last month during the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS).

    The Blue-Roof, popular events rendezvous at the sprawling LTV premises in Alausa, Ikeja, was filled. It was a moment for “the lucky ones” – numbering about 800 – who were being empowered with multi-million-naira equipment. The posture was a follow-up to their two-week training in diverse vocations, which was aimed at teaching them “how to fish.”

    The programme was sponsored by Senator Ganiyu Olanrewaju Solomon the Minority Whip of the Upper Chamber of the National Assembly, representing the Lagos West District. He did it in conjunction with the Federal Ministry of Youths and Sports.

    Exuding excitement, the youths donned branded T-shirts. With hearty praise-songs for their benefactor, they filled the roomy hall to capacity as early as 9 am, looking into the future with an air of assurance. At some locations in the hall was a spectacle: Loads of the expensive equipment that were later donated to them with take-off grants.

    Before Ajomale spoke, Solomon had told the gathering why he took the bold step to rescue the beneficiaries from the brink of despondency with the training that ended on February 25. “With the various skills acquired by the youth, they need not continue to worry their heads over the white-collar jobs that are not there. Besides the equipment, we are also giving them some stipends in bank drafts to help them start off without ado,” Solomon said, urging them to evince seriousness in their vocations.

    Sobriety gripped the gathering when he lamented the terrorism of joblessness in the country – especially among able-bodied youths. An unpleasant noise swept through the crowd in response to Solomon’s outburst over the ill-fated “NIS 19.” Thunderous sighs of agony and frustration shook the gathering. After a one-minute silence demanded by the senator for the repose of the late job seekers’ souls, he sought more commitment from both the government and other stakeholders in the fight against unemployment, which he warned, was becoming a major threat to lives and property in the land.

    Everyone rose in earth-shaking ovation for the lawmaker. APC chieftain Cardinal James Odunmbaku (Baba Eto); Mr Wale Raji, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Commerce and Industry, who represented Governor Babatunde Fashola; Mrs Risikat Akiyode, who stood in for Fashola’s deputy, Mrs Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire; another APC leader, Bashorun Tajudeen Jaiyesimi; officials of the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports, among other dignitaries, were not left out.

    Ajomale was effusive in Solomon’s praise for his thoughtful generosity, especially towards the beneficiaries. Urging them to make good use of the gesture, the politician said: “If you teach a person how to fish rather than giving him fish, you are eradicating poverty in his life. This is what our senator is doing and the Federal Government must imbibe it.”

    Fashola had kind words for the senator, saying of the empowerment: “This is a timely intervention in view of the rate of unemployment in the country today.” Orelope-Adefulire also lauded Solomon’s passion for the development of youths and women, adding: “This is a gesture that will complement government’s poverty-reduction efforts and socio-economic rebirth. This will certainly reduce crime rate.”

    The Coordinator, New Renewal Group (NRG), an influential political body in APC, Mr Abiodun Musa, stormed the LTV premises with one of his group’s branded vehicles – loaded with various souvenirs. “This man (Solomon) is not only an asset to his district; he has proved a treasure to our party by exemplifying what it stands for – compassion for the less-privileged. Giving is his life; it is one virtue that all of us, including you, must imbibe,” he told a group of some beneficiaries.

    Pleasant surprise was bold on the faces of the youth when Solomon and the dignitaries stepped out to present the equipment, certificates and the grants to them. On their lips was the tacit exclamation: “So, this can be true!”

    Mojeed Afiz who learned barbing got kits to start off; Abayomi Agbelega and Olamide Faniran smiled home with Bench Grinders; Jude Okoro, dish installation equipment, Halimat Adeleke, shoe-making machine, among others.

    A graduate of Sociology from the Lagos State University (LASU), Ibrahim Adisa, could not contain his joy. He was trained in barbing after his futile effort at securing a white-collar job. “I’m from Alimosho. Youths are the leaders of tomorrow but our government has not proved it to us. I believe posterity will remember the senator for this gesture. I know that soon, I will become an employer of labour,” he said.

    Rashidat Adigun, a graduate of the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH), was trained in Make-up and Gele. She was happy that the senator fed them throughout the training while giving each of them N1,000 daily for transport. Heaping prayers on the lawmaker, she said: “I had looked for an opportunity to learn the vocation in many places, but they kept demanding about N100,000 form me, which I couldn’t afford. I thank God that GOS has done it for free.”

    Indeed, it was an outing that was generally adjudged a model in the concerted efforts to bail the nation out of the woods by building the economic base of the citizenry.

  • 110,000 for APC  congress in Abia

    110,000 for APC congress in Abia

    Over 110,000 members of the All Progressives Congress Party (APC) will participate in the ward congress in Abia State today.

    State APC Chairman Donatus Nwankpa, in a telephone interview, said the the election was part of the party’s step to reposition ahead of the 2015 election.

    He said the election would be peaceful and the results credible and fair.

    Nwankpa said: “Whatever will be the outcome today, it will be a way of giving life to the party, a new mentality, a new approach and springboard towards our desire to make a change in 2015.

    We are optimistic that the new executive to be elected will enthrone the new government in Abia State.”

    He advised members to comport themselves and shun acts capable of jeopardising a peaceful conduct, saying he hoped the Sunday Akere-led committee would perform.

    “Our party members should be disciplined, law abiding, and give people a level-playing field to test their popularity. I hope that the five-man congress committee will do its job without fear or favour.”

     

  • I have no desire to shed blood, says Omisore

    I have no desire to shed blood, says Omisore

    The governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun State, Senator Iyiola Omisore, has said his desire to serve the people is not at the expense of the blood of any citizen.

    In a statement by his Media Director, Prince Diran Odeyemi, Omisire said his governorship ambition was about the people.

    He said: “It is from the people that I draw my inspiration and determination to serve them.”

    Omisore said the August 9 governorship election would be a step forward from the “overwhelming support that brought him in as the generally acceptable candidate of Osun PDP”.

    He alleged that the All Progressives Congress (APC) raised a false alarm that last Saturday’s PDP primary would be marred by violence, urging the police to investigate the source of the party’s claim.

     

  • ‘Anambra APC has no factions’

    ‘Anambra APC has no factions’

    A head of the All Progressives Congress’ (APC’) state, local government and ward congresses in Anambra State, the congress committee Chairman Mr. Ezeanya Ogbuehi, has dismissed claims that there are factions in the party.

    He spoke with reporters in Awka shortly after the stakeholders meeting of the party yesterday.

    The chairman said factions and crisis do not exist in the party, adding that the party was set for a hitch-free election.

    Ogbuehi said: “The spirit of APC is alive here and I am impressed with the turn out and what happened at the meeting.”

    “In APC, we do not have any faction. We are one family. What you will probably see are people with different shades of opinion and different views and not factions. This is one of the ingredients of democracy. Our party is a sticker to the democratic process.”

    He dismissed claims that the party had decided the state chairman.

    “I wish to state that we have nobody in mind as party chairman and the idea of imposition does not exist in our party.”

    Former Anambra State Governor Sen. Chris Ngige warned that factions would spell doom for the party.

    Ngige said: “We should not allow this to ruin our party, the APC is well positioned to take power in 2015.”

    Also speaking, former National secretary of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and Director-General of Ngige Campaign Organisation, Chief George Muoghalu, urged members to see themselves as one family.

     

     

  • Voter card is weapon against retrogression, says Fayemi

    Voter card is weapon against retrogression, says Fayemi

    •’Ekiti won’t accept inconclusive poll’

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi has warned the electorate not to misuse their voter cards, describing the cards as their weapons of fighting backwardness.

    Fayemi spoke in Ekiti East Local Government Area yesterday while campaigning for the June 21 governorship election.

    He said: “Your voter card is very important. Keep it very well. It is your weapon to saying no to retrogression.”

    The governor said the electorate must stand firm and resist the urge to be bought by “unscrupulous politicians”, adding: “The future of the state would be better assured if you insist on truth and vote for the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the sustenance of the peace and progress in the state.”

    He thanked the people for coming out en masse to the campaign venues, noting: “The struggle for the safety of Ekiti State from the band of locusts is a collective one. I have said it time and again that eternal vigilance is the price for freedom.”

    Addressing a crowd at Ilasa-Ekiti, Fayemi expressed concern about the “disturbing trend” of inconclusive elections across the country, citing examples of a House of Assembly election in Imo State, the Anambra State governorship election and last Saturday’s House of Representatives by-election in Ondo State.

    He said Ekiti would not accept an inconclusive election, adding: “Let us vote massively and protect our votes. Men, women, youths, everybody must be vigilant. Ekiti will never go back; we are moving forward.”

    Fayemi said Ekiti had witnessed peace in the last three-and-a-half years of his administration and he would never encourage any act that could truncate the peace.

    He urged APC members and supporters to always embrace peace and show this at the election.

    The campaign train also touched Ikun-Oba, Araromi-Ugbeshi and Kota.

    Araromi-Oke, the community’s Youth Leader, Aremu Jimoh, who led many PDP members to defect to the APC, said they joined APC “because of the light the Fayemi administration has shown in the state through its many life-enhancing programmes”.

    He described the APC as “light” and the PDP “darkness”.

    At Omuo-Oke, which recently became autonomous, residents applauded Fayemi as he stepped into the campaign venue.

    At Ekiti East Local Government, beneficiaries of the Social Security Scheme for the Elderly extolled the governor and prayed for his success at the poll.

    At Araromi-Oke, Mrs. Rachel Olorunfemi, who spoke on behalf of other beneficiaries, said the governor had through the monthly stipend made hunger a thing of the past in the lives of many elderly persons in the state.

    An indigene of the town, Mr. Oluwasegun Otetubi, donated a bus to the governor’s campaign, saying: “Fayemi is a governor who cares for all. I attended Omuo-Oke Grammar School, which was built over 30 years ago. Dr. Fayemi has renovated the school. He has granted us autonomy as well. We assure him that we will vote massively for him.”

    Youths wearing Tee-shirts branded in Fayemi’s name thanked the governor for the Volunteer Aids Corps, the YCAD initiative, the Ekiti Peace Corps, the State Traffic Management Agency and the Skill Acquisition Initiative.

     

  • Why Amaechi fell out of favour with Jonathan, by Sylva

    Why Amaechi fell out of favour with Jonathan, by Sylva

    Former Bayelsa State Governor Timipre Sylva has said one of the reasons Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi fell out of favour with President Goodluck Jonathan was his comments on the slow pace of the East-West Road.

    Sylva, who is the leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Bayelsa State, assured Amaechi that Bayelsa APC will work with him to flush out the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led Federal Government next year.

    He said the Jonathan administration had brought misery to the Niger Delta, stressing that corruption and ineptitude will be swept away by the APC.

    The ex-governor spoke yesterday at the Government House, Port Harcourt, when he led party executive and supporters to visit Amaechi.

    Sylva said: “I know that one of the things that brought problems between you and the Federal Government was because you were able to point out that the East-West Road had been neglected by this government.

    “Instead of the officials of the Federal Government to come to you to learn, it decided to fight you and everyone knows (about this), very unfortunately.

    “I must say Mr. Governor that I was so impressed when I came into the state. I missed my way several times today in Port Harcourt, because a lot of things have changed for the better.

    “Port Harcourt is wearing a new look. Even the air in Port Harcourt is different and sometimes I wish that this change and development we see in Rivers State is replicated nationwide.

    “We have our brother as President today; unfortunately, we cannot say the same thing is happening nationally.”

    The former governor said most Bayelsans were frustrated with the Jonathan administration.

    He said: “We of the APC in Bayelsa State decided to come to you (Amaechi) to solidarise with you. To tell you that not everybody in Bayelsa State is against progress.

    “Not everybody in Bayelsa State is an enemy of progress. That you also have a family in Bayelsa State that identifies with you all the way and we will stand by you all the way.

    “When the time comes for us to sweep away the government of the day at the national level, Bayelsans will stand by you and be in the vanguard of sweeping away this government that has brought only misery to the Niger Delta.

    “The APC is the platform for progress. You (Amaechi) are an epitome of progress, not only in the Niger Delta, but in Nigeria. Everyone who comes to Rivers State will bear witness to what you have done, to your commitment.”

    Amaechi said: “It is important we realise that character is an essential element to good governance.

    “You cannot see a man who has betrayed his friends and you make him governor or deputy.

    “What have you done? You have empowered him to betray more people, including the money you left behind in the coffers. So, character should be an essential element in selecting our leaders.

    “I pray a lot; because that is the only way I can survive in this country, where everybody is a potential prey and a potential predator.

    “Rivers and Bayelsa states are one and therefore APC in Rivers State and APC in Bayelsa are also one.

    “We want to be allowed to make our choice. We want to be allowed to express our views.

    “We want to be allowed to express our interest and having expressed your interest and your views, the best you can do is to remain convinced in what you stand for.”

     

  • Common man, common woes, ticking bomb

    Common man, common woes, ticking bomb

    Why opponents of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, a national leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), often shirk from engagement on ideas, could be gleaned from the March 29 colloquium in Lagos, meant to mark his 62nd birthday.

    It was tagged The Summit of the Common Man.

    On parade were some truly common, and not so common folks. But all were afflicted by the everyday problem in the Nigerian state that incorrigibly boasts the too common plague of shirking responsibility.

    It was the summit equivalent of Lagbaja, the musical persona. Lagbaja, the music man, is masked; the telling anonymity of the street folk that feels the pinch. At the Summit of the Common Man, the common man came well and truly unmasked!

    The roll call: Nasir Bala, Ron Mgbatogu, Bathsaida Home for the Blind — a struggling charity for the disadvantaged and rejected: the quintessential common man — Eric Dooh, Elizabeth Unah, Musa Ali, Adamu Baba, Yusuf Audu, and the unemployed chemical engineering graduate of Niger Delta University, Bayelsa, Sopriye Victor.

    This was a summit of telling symbolisms — how Nigeria has got it wrong; and more importantly, how Nigeria could get it right. It is like a well crafted novel or play: no overt preaching. But the message comes clear from its nuanced plot and rich imagery.

    Justice Isola Olorunnimbe said the opening prayers. He lunched off the Christian way, but with his cap on, after a hilarious joke about the imperative for brevity of prayers on such occasions. But in a jiffy, he made a seamless transition into Islamic prayers!

    That is a South West gift to Nigeria: why should adherents make enemies of themselves, when they pray to the same Almighty God, father of all humanity?

    Then Anglican Cleric, the Most Reverend Ephraim Ademowo, chaired the occasion. Yet, Tinubu is an APC chieftain, the party, by the propaganda of Olisa Metuh, spokesperson for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), is an “Islamic” party. A Christian priest schmoozing with rabid Islamists? A quiet answer to the hare-brained Islamist charge!

    Ironically, that same day, President Goodluck Jonathan was holding a PDP North East zonal rally in Bauchi. Now, the North East has borne the bestiality of Boko Haram and its blood-thirsty insurrection.

    In the neighbouring Buni Yadi, Yobe State, the crazed Islamists brutally slaughtered innocents in a Federal Government College. The president never visited: to commiserate with the slain; or in solidarity with the troops, as commander-in-chief.

    Yet, there was the president in Bauchi, passing the buck, trading blames with North East governors and boasting his party would sweep the North East in 2015!

    Now, was this the normal real-politik issuing from political braggadocio or absolute contempt for the local voters? Still, contrast the Bauchi show with the Lagos summit, and how the APC used the occasion to sell its road map, and it is clear the hustings for 2015 are here.

    The federal ruling party brags, despite its parlous performance. The foremost opposition reasons, despite a discernible pattern of brilliance by its governors. It promises, indeed, a campaign of contrasts!

    But back from political hubris to the common man, the ultimate victim of that hubris. It is also back to the Lagbaja (Yoruba for “somebody”) metaphor.

    All on parade at the summit were just somebody — mere statistics: united in impotence, from tragedies and discomfort, as a result of the omission or commission by the Nigerian state.

    One was a communication royal, even passing through the great portals of Lintas-Lagos, an advertising aristocracy, if ever there was one. But in his grey years, after giving his professional all to his country, the retiree has nothing to fall back on but the hospitality of a church. A country that neither cares for its youth nor its elders is criminal-minded to expect any iota of patriotism.

    Then another, an uncommon common man: a university graduate, a former banker turned farmer. Now, this citizen is no robber, either of the pen or bullet hue. He is irrevocably committed to clean business. But alas! His country trembles at the sight of fertilizer rings. Though he works hard making losses, the fertilizer ring reaps while lazing away — and he is impotent, doing anything about it.

    Yet another fisherman, in the Niger Delta creeks, must lose his means of livelihood because of the almighty crude that spills all over. Now, no thanks to those spills, he is unemployed and perhaps unemployable. Now that his goose is cooked, his country has moved on to more urgent matters, than the plaintive cry of a local fisherman with poisoned ponds.

    The next four are caught in the Boko Haram tragedy in Nigeria’s North East. One lost his uncle, aside from wife that bore him six children. He lectures at the University of Maiduguri and the Islamists wanted him, the very symbol of Boko Haram — Western education is sin — but killed his wife in his stead.

    Another is a teacher in a secondary school, who on two occasions lost his students to the murderous Islamists. The two times his school was attacked, the security forces of his country were caught napping. Though he escaped with his own kids, the trauma of the slain youngsters, under the school’s charge, would live with him for the rest of his days.

    The next two would just not fold their arms, while Boko Haram made a devilish feast of the cream of the local manpower. So, they banded together with others to form the famed Civilian JTF — JTF after the military Joint Task Force. This cadre of braves somewhat succeeded in running Boko Haram out of Maiduguri, into the adjourning rural areas and bushes.

    As confirmed by the victim university and secondary school teachers, Boko Haram’s audacious assassinations have greatly reduced in Maiduguri metropolis, thanks to the Civilian JTF. These braves appear to have heeded the John Kennedy injunction: ask what you can do for your country — and done it. But pray, what has their country done for them?

    The unemployed graduate is the all too grotesque face of the Nigerian youth — hurting, angry, scorned and rejected. But after, even against all odds, she managed to found a beauty salon, came the 2012 “floods of Noah” that sacked everything.

    Now, she is back to where she belongs: the ranks of the unemployed — or, as they of the comfort zone love to snap and leer: the ranks of the university unemployables!

    Still, the Bathsaida Home for the Blind emerged perhaps the most profound image from the summit: a struggling charity that rehabilitated a youth that lost his sight because of inability to pay for a glaucoma surgery that cost N200, 000! The proud beneficiary and no less proud proprietor spoke at the summit. But where was the government and the big charities at the youth’s crunch time?

    The Summit of the Common Man showcased the common man, with common woes, feeding a ticking bomb. The government must do the needful to defuse that bomb.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • 2015: More governors on their  way to APC, says Wamakko

    2015: More governors on their way to APC, says Wamakko

    More governors elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are on the verge of joining the All Progressives Congress (APC), Governor Aliyu Wamakko of Sokoto State said yesterday.

    Wamakko who, along with Governors Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers, Rabiu Kwankwaso of Kano, Murtala Nyako of Adamawa and Abdulfatah Ahmed of Kwara, recently dumped the PDP for the APC said: “ More governors will soon join APC.”

    He spoke at his Gidan Kara Ward in Wamakko yesterday shortly after the conduct of the party’s ward congress.

    He did not mention who those likely defectors are.

    The governor said yesterday’s ward congress was to ratify consensus decisions taken across the 23 local government areas of the state.

    He said:” The decision to use the consensus system is not forced on any of the members of the party in the state.

    “It is in the best interest of the party and to foster unity as a formidable platform.”

    He described the smooth and successful conduct of the congress as a good omen for the APC which, according to him, is out to protect the interest of all Nigerians.

    He was optimistic about the chances of the party in next year’s polls.

  • Students, teachers, market women, elders back Fayemi

    Students, teachers, market women, elders back Fayemi

    Teachers, students, market men and women as well as elderly citizens at the weekend trooped out in large number to back the reelection bid of the Ekiti State governor, Kayode Fayemi in Efon.

    Declaring their support for Fayemi’s second term, they pledged to vote for the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the 21 June election.

    Locals all shouted the slogan of the APC as the train moved across the town until the governor arrived the campaign ground.

    Other residents who could not make it to the campaign ground climbed tall buildings to get a better view of the event.

    The popular Efon town square was filled with singing and dancing, as the indigenes expressed support for the governor.

    Just before storming the town square, the governor had called on the monarch of the town, Oba Emmanuel Aladejare, who said all the achievements recorded in the last three and half years would speak for Fayemi at the election.

    According to him, the governor would triumph in the election because his achievements were “clear, convincing and great”.

    Aladejare added: “As I have said it before, I would say it again: Fayemi will triumph in this coming election”.

    “In three and a half years of your administration, you proved it was possible to rule and govern with the electorate not govern for them”.

    The teachers in Efon who were led to the rally by Mr. Olusegun Ojo Israel said they are supporting Fayemi for his love for teachers and for giving them various incentives contrary to the opposition’s claim that the governor hates teachers.

    “We are supporting our governor because he is a good leader and has performed well in office”.

    The governor also stated that the support declared for him by teachers in Efon showed that he has nothing against them as being peddled by the opposition maintaining that teachers had enjoyed salary increment three times since he came to office.

    He added that teachers teaching core subjects and those teaching in rural areas receive special allowance beside their normal salaries, saying “All these were meant to make teaching attractive to teachers and make them proud of their profession.”

    Fayemi warned the electorate not to allow politicians who misused power, promoted violence, brigandage, looting, impunity and maltreatment of traditional rulers and elders to come back to power.

    Fayemi said: “Our party loves the masses but the other party don’t value old men, they don’t value old people, they don’t take care of the aged and they don’t respect the youth.

    “Our government will not misbehave if you vote us in and we are different from the party that steals votes to get to power and will never respect anybody.”

     

     

     

     

    The president of Federation of Efon Students Union (FESU), Odunayo Olowoyeye, described Fayemi as ” fulfiller of promises” who has turned around the fortunes of the state.

     

    He praised the governor for his commitment to the education sector which has boosted the image of Ekiti within and outside the state.

     

    Other towns visited by Fayemi include the contiguous communities of Itawure, Ita Ido and Iwaji, where he (Fayemi) urged the people to vote for the ‘progressive party’ which the APC represented.

     

    On the train with him was his wife, Bisi; former Governor Adeniyi Adebayo; Speaker of the House of Assembly, Dr. Wale Omirin; state APC Chairman, Chief Olajide Awe; commissioners, other government officials and party leaders.