Tag: AREGBESOLA

  • #ReopenLAUTECH

    #ReopenLAUTECH

    Almost six months after the institution was initially closed over strike by staff protesting non-payment of outstanding salaries, the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH), Ogbomosho,  has remained shut with the students denied the opportunity of learning.

    The crisis in the university has reportedly further degenerated over lack of necessary funding by the two state governments of Oyo and Osun. While Oyo in whose territory the institution is located is said to be paying part of its dues, Osun has allegedly not been living up to expectations.

    It is really sad that the authorities and owners of the university have not been able to resolve the crisis up till now. While students in other institutions, both public and private, have had their academic calendar uninterrupted, LAUTECH students have been left in the lurch, uncertain of their future.

    Those who should have graduated and joined their colleagues in the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) are stuck, while irreparable damage must have been done to the lives of some of the students during the forced holidays.

    The agony that students and staff of the institution have been forced to endure due to no fault of theirs is just unimaginable and one can only hope that reasons will prevail soon as promised by the Oyo State Governor for the university to be re-opened before the end of the year.

    The committee, the governor said, has been sent to the institution to assess the situation and come up with recommendation on what can be done, should urgently do a thorough job that can ensure lasting peace in the university.

    Ordinarily, one would have expected cooperation between the two state governments headed by governors from the same party on this issue, but what is playing out at LAUTECH is a clear case of lack of concern for the plight of the students and lecturers.

    As long as the law establishing the university remains unamended, the two state governments concerned must discharge their responsibilities and not allow the kind of present situation that suggests that they don’t care about education as much as they claim to do.

    If for any reason, any of the state governments is no longer interested in owning the university and cannot afford to pay the required bill, it should declare its position and not give room for unnecessary speculations. Having been set up at a time when the two states were one, there will be nothing wrong to reconsider the continued joint ownership of the institution now that the states have been split and now have other commitments.

    What is playing out in LAUTECH presently amounts to playing unnecessary divisive politics with the future of the students, and all the stakeholders involved must resolve to settle the matter amicably immediately.

    Owning a university is not a joke. It is either state governments, who have the penchants for establishing universities for political reasons, have the capacity to fund them or not. Having established one like LAUTECH, the concerned state governments cannot afford to abandon their responsibilities.

    Education at all levels is a fundamental right which governments at all levels cannot deny its citizens. The time to #ReopenLAUTECH is now.

  • Aregbesola inaugurates school

    Aregbesola inaugurates school

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has inaugurated A.U.D Government Elementary School in the state capital, Osogbo.

    The governor, dressed in the school uniform, said the inauguration of schools and other infrastructures are in fulfillment of his administration’s promise to provide functional basic education for pupils.

    The A.U.D Government Elementary School in Sabo Osogbo has 22 classrooms capable of accommodating 50 pupils.

    It has a multipurpose function hall, a sick bay, computer room, a principal’s office and the secretary’s office.

    There is a recreation centre, including a small playing field.

    The conveniences, include six blocks of toilets for pupils and staff, each having three squat pans and water closets, bringing the total to 24.

    The seventh block is designated for staff with four cubicles of water closet.

    The principal’s office also has a private toilet.

    Aregbesola asked for a minute silence for the repose of the soul of former Cuban President Fidel Castro.

    He praised him for ensuring that almost all Cubans can read and write, saying his welfarist programme shall live after him.

    The governor said the A.U.D school is one of the 100 elementary schools his administration is building, of which 20 are completed.

    Aregbesola added that government is also building 50 middle schools from which it has completed 22.

    He held that his administration has renovated 40 other schools, bringing the total to 1,694 standard classrooms in the existing elementary, middle and high schools, providing accommodation for nearly 90,000 pupils.

    “We have provided more than 100,000 desks and chairs, toilets and boreholes and made schools decent places to be.

    “We have provided 50,000 eLearning tablets (Opon Imo) for Grade 12 final year high school pupils,” the governor said.

  • Aregbesola’s 6th year: To make the sun shine on our land

    Aregbesola’s 6th year: To make the sun shine on our land

    “I have travelled the world and traversed the length and breath of Nigeria, first as a businessman and then as a politician. Endowed with that exposure, I have studied the state of our state and have seen the roots of our problem.

    “I have seriously tried to identify the ills that have stood between us and our progress all these while. I have identified the dark shadows preventing the sun to shine fully on Osun State and these I will offer to you…”

    In 2011, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, Governor of Osun penned the lines above in a 133-paged book titled Rauf Aregbesola and the Future of Osun: Inspiring the Youths for a Better Tomorrow.

    On Sunday 27th, 2016, it would be six years exactly into the two term administration and second years of his second term.

    About the time he wrote those words some six years ago, it was at the beginning of, in reality, confronting the multi-dimensional, hydra-headed problems which could only have necessitated the need for a Messiah in Osun in the first place?

    In education, this was the time he contemplated shutting down the entire school system for a total reconstruction because of the parlous state of the schools. This was the time the threatening population of the Osun youths who had nothing whatsoever to do stare him in the face and threatened the peace of the society. This was the time when, despite being completely an agrarian state, food security had yielded to hunger owing to no clear cut policy on agriculture. It was the time criminals assumed there was a haven for them in Osun. It was the time what Osun boasted as cities, even at the state capital, no more than rickety human settlements hallmarked by failing and falling walls and scattered roofing. It was a time that yearned urgently for urban renewal.

    It was not only that Osun lacked the resources to bring it back to life. It was also a victim of lack of courage to embark on risky ventures out of which the fortune of the state could have been altered for good. A state with N300million monthly internally generated revenue would need some other ‘miracles’ to witness development. Nothing ventured, they say, nothing gained!

    The six years of venturing have gained for the state, a phenomenal development template that clearly gives an insight into what the future holds, especially for the younger generation in Osun. Though the state recently marked its 25 years of creation, the totality of the growth witnessed in six years makes those of the first 19 years pale into total insignificance going by all indices.

    Buoyed by an ideological bend which places people at the centre of every development initiative, the Aregbesola years have instituted a new governance culture never known in the history of the state but which has ignited a new passion for inclusion. There is a huge sense of participation by the people, seeing that there is something in everything for everyone. With a carefully woven six-point action plan serving as the guidelines for every policy, there is an astounding correlation which makes one dovetails into another in the growth agenda.

    Aregbesola combines the ideologies of legends who had gone down in history as proponents who not only brought developments to their people but liberated them from manacles of mental and material poverties.

    In order words, it is not only that this six-year old administration is building mega-schools to permanently change schools orientations; putting in place physical infrastructure to last for decades to come; creating a new generation of citizenry alive to their duties to the society, the administration comes across as one with a mission to free the minds of the people and set them on a path to personal fulfilment and realizations.

     More than five decades ago, the late political icon, Chief Obafemi Awolowo wrote in his autobiography that “the duty we owe to the present generation of young people would have been amply discharged if we were able to provide for them school buildings which would last 50 years.” The massive educational infrastructure the Aregbesola administration is reputed for today in Osun reminds those who care to note of the ideals and the good of the people which the late sage preached. The Awolowo recipe for good governance appears in all the sectors that the administration touches.

    With education reforms that include new learning environments, technology-driven teaching especially at the High School level, restructured curricula and re-orientated personnel, there is a renewed hope for emergence of a new generation of Osun citizens growing up equipped with the means to be relevant in any knowledge-driven society.

    Since Aregbesola had written in his book earlier mentioned that “Osun is blessed with younger people with the power to astonish the world with greatness,” it then follows that his programs in all sectors are tailored towards motivating these younger people who have been endowed with the power to stun the world.

    From restoring hopes to the despondent, to opening new windows, youths have found in the Aregbesola era a new vista of opportunities in technology, agri-business, volunteer services and functional education with which they can face the future. Gradually therefore, the Osun youth has come to the realization that rather than wait for the government, he only needs to tap the opportunities provided to be an active participant in the emerging egalitarian society.

    In these past six years, the six-point action plan -banishing hunger, unemployment, poverty, functional education, healthy living, promotion of communal peace- have combined to achieve one thing which is George Washington’s “aggregate happiness of the society which is best promoted by the practice of a virtuous policy.” That, Washington had said, “ought to be the end of all governments.”

    • Okanlawon is Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Office of the Governor, Osun State.
  • Aregbesola, six years on

    By tommorow November 26, we will commence the seventh year of  Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola’s epic contributions as governor of the State of Osun. Hardly any governor in the history of Nigeria has attracted controversy  as this personality known popularly as Ogbeni.

    At least not in the last 17 years that democracy resurfaced in Nigeria has any governor’s actions and perhaps even speeches been prone to such testy public discussions.

    And rightly so, because he, Aregbesola, did unique (or as he himself styled it, unusual) things that nobody dared to do before him, to the extent that not a few of his critics didn’t quite appreciate. Although most people who are beneficiaries of his programmes kept faith in what Aregbesola did and is capable of doing.

    Before he was sworn-in as governor on November 26, 2010, lawlessness and insecurity of life and property were existential concerns in Osun.

    It was in this atmosphere of near anarchy that he introduced his unusual programmes and rebranding of the state. All hell broke loose, and the opposition also ‘rebranded’ him – so-to-speak – as an anarchist!

    However, the ‘confusion’ that people, (especially his PDP opponents) who he defeated in the 2007 election accused him of introducing into governance, has become the catalyst for unprecedented transformation in the state of Osun today.

    What Osun is now, in contrast to what it had been all of 19 years before the advent of Aregbesola’s administration, is the difference that Aregbesola himself engineered.  And what the future will become based on what the present is, shall in effect be the historical perspective from which Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola would be holistically assessed.

    History will not only justify Aregbesola’s ideas and programmes,  it will vilify his critics. His mistakes will be acknowledged, but that will not diminish the quality and effect of his actions and service delivery.

    That is the context in which Ogbeni Aregbesola will be presented in the future that will tell the story of today. It would not matter that TRUTH flew out the window of today’s reality. We are currently living in a post TRUTH world – in a time of collapse before the new spiritual era.

    So, people like Ogbeni Aregbesola may not place rationally in the warped reality that untruth has created. That is the world in which PDP critics of Aregbesola,  and those who back them operate and exist.

    The simple way to recognise them is to listen to those critics in Osun who think that Aregbesola is the worst thing that ever happened to the state. They are the scoffers.

    The discussion however, is not about these traducers,  it is about the relevance and significance  of the Ogbeni Aregbesola’s appearance in the state of Osun’s history.

    As a journalist (a ‘historian in a hurry’), and a lawyer, I owe my profession a duty to be on the side of truth. And if the truth be told, Rauf Aregbesola is the best thing, politically, socially, economically, and in terms of security, that Osun has ever known in its 25 years as a state in Nigeria.

    You, dear readers, don’t have to believe me. To authenticate this assertion, you have to spend some time to investigate by coming to Osun to see things practically yourself and talk to people. That’s only when you will access the truth.

    Mankind is moving away from TRUTH. Lies or deceit or disinformation is the major news, because the negatively disposed make the headline news. That is why the enticing news you can read or hear or  watch about Aregbesola in Osun is negative, salacious and horribly untruthful ones about the man. It is the nature of our collapsing world.

    However, there are certain questions that should be answered; and we demand the right answers for them.

    If Aregbesola’s ideas and programmes were as horrible as the opposition would suggest, why would the British Parliament ask him to come explain how he was managing the school feeding programme?

    Why would the federal statistical record place primary school enrolment in Osun as the highest in Nigeria, if Aregbesola’s education policies were wrong?

    Why would the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics have confirmed that Osun is the best governed state in the country as it relates to human capital development index, poverty index, unemployment index and environmental cleanliness?

    Why would the Director, Central Bank of Nigeria, Osun defy protocol to give credit to Aregbesola’s policies that re-ignited economic activities in Osun like it had not been seen before?

    Why did acknowledgement come from a Police Chief that Osun is the best secured state in the country?

    These are just few questions that will lead you to a whole host of investigations that will produce results different from what Aregbesola’s critics had been propagating.

    What history will record of Aregbesola’s tenure will be totally different from the lies that make news headlines today.

    Aregbesola has significantly convinced the people of Osun the his revolutionary agenda for change is producing not just prosperity but a new Osun that can compete and excel in economic, social and human capital development that stand a modern state out of the crowd.

    We will be a part of that history when we give an account of APC Aregbesola-led government in 2018.

    The story is still unfolding…

     

    • Oyatomi is the  Director of Publicity, Research and Strategy of APC, State of Osun
  • Peace key to tourism growth, says Aregbesola 

    Peace key to tourism growth, says Aregbesola 

    Governor Rauf Aregbesola has described the peace in Osun State as a stimulant to the development of its tourism.
    He reiterated his administration’s determination to continue to provide the enabling environment for investments to thrive, urging the people to pay their taxes to enable the government to perform its obligations.
    The governor, represented by the Secretary to State Government (SSG), Alhaji Moshood Olalekan Adeoti, spoke at the opening of Aenon Suites in Osogbo, the Osun State capital, at the weekend.
    He described the multi-million naira hotel as a blessing to the state, noting that the hotel management must adopt effective marketing strategies to grow the business because of the competitors in the sector.
    “You must also let the world know your services by using effective media in and outside the state,” he said.
    Former Osun State governor, Senator Isiaka Adetunji Adeleke, said the reality was that the era of over-dependence on oil was fading and that all hands should be on deck to create other avenues of improving the nation’s economic growth. According to him, one of such diversification efforts is the opening of Aenon Suites, an investment worthy of emulation.
    “This singular effort by the promoters of Aenon Suites will go a long way to improve the socio-economic fortunes of its immediate catchment area and by extension the overall progress of Osun State, through provision of employment opportunities for tens of our young graduates.
    ‘’Osun State is blessed with tourism potential in various forms. What is absent is the full exploitation of these potential to attract the much- needed foreign exchange for our state. The Olumirin Waterfalls, Erin Ijesha, the Osun Grove, Ife Museum, among others, should be given adequate attention by both the state and Federal Government,” he said.
    Senator Adeleke, who was represented by Olumide Lawal, said if Dubai, Brazil and Singapore could survive only on tourism, Nigeria has no excuse not to make the best of its tourism industry.
    “Nigerians are tourism-inclined and fun-seekers, who also love their environment. The government should, therefore, continue to provide the conducive enabling environment, inclusive of tax holidays to attract investors to the sector. Hospitality industry much against the concept in some quarters is not entirely an elitist affair. Hotels are meant to be homes away from homes, depending on the financial capability of individuals,” he added.
    He however identified maintenance culture as one aspect that the management of Aenon Suites should look critically into and provide innovative solutions.
    Oba Abdurasheed Akanbi, the Oluwo of Iwo, described the new facility as the first among equals in the state capable of being among the best in the country. He said he was proud of the proprietor’s effort at siting the hotel in the state but would have loved it in Iwo.
    Also, Mrs Bola Akintounde described the hotel as second to none in the state, which can beat most hotels in the world.
    Aenon Suites Chairman Ademola Adedapo, an engineer, recalled that the facility started as a dream some years ago when he could not get an ideal hotel to lodge during visit to Osogbo. “I don’t know how many believe in a dream. Definitely, I do. If you believe in a dream and God on your side, it is realisable. What we are celebrating is a function of a dream, because years ago, getting an ideal hotel to lodge is like a rocket science. Having experienced that, and as my state, I decided to put up this facility for everyone from any part of the world to enjoy,” he added.
    The 41-room facility provides everything to make the customer comfortable, including door camera, room safe, hand drier for ladies, electronic scale, seminar hall, gym, tennis and basket ball court, sauna and functional laundry, among others.
    Among the guests at the event were Speaker of Osun House of Assembly, Nojeem Folasayo Iwaloye, Pastor Soji Malomo, Alhaji Fatai Akinade, Prof Oguntola Alamu, Lere Oriolowo, Sefiu Adewunmi, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, Mrs Chinelo Amazu and Supo Olagesin.

  • We have lost a great Lagosian, say Ambode, Aregbesola 

    We have lost a great Lagosian, say Ambode, Aregbesola 

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola have expressed shock over the passage of foremost industrialist and economist, Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi.

    Gbadamosi, who was a Co-chairman of the Lagos @ 50 Committee, died on Wednesday at the age of 72.

    Ambode, in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Habib Aruna, said he was truly saddened by the demise of the former Minister for National Planning.

    The statement described the late Gbadamosi as a true Lagosian, who was passionate and always willing to serve his state and fatherland.

    “As a foundation member of the first Lagos State Executive Council after the state’s creation in 1967, he contributed immensely towards laying a solid foundation for what is today the foremost state in the country and the nation’s Centre of Excellence.

    “He also distinguished himself as a Federal Minister and the Chairman, Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA).

    “Chief Gbadamosi was a sound economist, one of the best in his generation. His passion to serve his fatherland was never in doubt,’’ it said.

    “He was the youngest commissioner in Lagos State at 27, an industrialist and a very consistent financial expert.

    “He was a proud son of Lagos State, who had paid his dues over the decade.

    “A financial guru and a public administrator per excellence, who would never shy away from letting people know that he was a thoroughbred Lagos boy born in Ikorodu,’’ the governor said.

    Aregbesola described the late Gbadamosi as a leading industrialist, humanist, art  and culture promoter and writer.

     In a condolence message signed by the Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Office of the Governor, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, Aregbesola described the death of the industrialist as the “passage of a good man.”

    The governor, who prayed for the repose of Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi’s soul and extended his condolences to the immediate family, members of the business community, the people of Lagos State, where he hailed from and Nigeria at large.

    Aregbesola urged Lagos State Governor Akinwumi Ambode, people of the business and art communities to take with equanimity the death of Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi, describing it as an inevitable end for all.

    “On behalf of the good people of Osun, it is our fervent prayer that Allah will grant him Aljanah Firdaus and give the people of Lagos State the fortitude to bear the loss.”

  • Ekiti poll: Group absolves Aregbesola

    Ekiti poll: Group absolves Aregbesola

    An Ondo State group has debunked reports that Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola was one of the financial backers of Governor Ayodele Fayose during the June 21, 2014 governorship election in Ekiti State.

    Ondo Collectives for Change advised the proponents of the misinformation, not to link Aregbesola to the defeat of the former governor, Kayode Fayemi, who is now the Minister of Sold Minerals Development.

    In a statement yesterday by its coordinator, Tunde Ademujimi, the group claimed that Fayemi was defeated in due to his political naivety and crass display of arrogance towards party leaders in Ekiti and in the Southwest.

    Ademujimi added that Aregbesola as a loyal party man could not have been responsible for the sponsorship of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) candidate, Olusola Oke.

  • Ambode, Amosun, Aregbesola, Fasanmi, others pay tributes

    Ambode, Amosun, Aregbesola, Fasanmi, others pay tributes

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, his counterparts in Ogun and Osun states, Ibikunle Amosun and Rauf Aregbesola and other eminent Nigerians yesterday paid tributes to the deceased Afenifere leader, Pa Olaniwun Ajayi.

    A statement signed by Ambode’s Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Habib Aruna, described the late Ajayi as a frontline politician who was passionate about the progress of the Yoruba nation and Nigeria at large.

    Ambode’s statement reads in part: “Papa was one of the few surviving close associates of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo. After Chief Awolowo’s death, he was a consistent advocate for the struggle to see Nigeria achieve the dreams of her founding fathers.

    “He was very passionate about the progress of Nigeria. He was an intellectual genius who had enthusiasm for the development of his immediate community and the country at large.

    “I recall my last meeting with him just about three months ago at the residence of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. It was like a premonition.

    “He had admonished all of us to give him a long lasting legacy and ensure that the Yoruba hegemony is not trampled upon and tarnished.

    “This wish of his, as a great Nigerian statesman, and true son of Yoruba land, we are committed to uphold and to cherish.”

    Governor Ambode recalled that the late Pa Ajayi’s law firm, which was established in 1962, grew from being a sole practitionership to one of the largest and open partnerships in Sub-Saharan Africa, and in its five decades of existence, held briefs for various corporate organisations and the government at both the federal and state levels.

    “There was virtually no sector in Nigeria that Pa Ajayi’s law firm was not prominent. His law firm in no time became one of the most sought after full-service legal practices in Africa,” the governor said.

    He also prayed that Almighty God would grant the soul of the departed peaceful repose and for the family, the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss.

    “I wish to convey my deepest condolences to the family of the deceased on behalf of the people of Lagos State.

    “Pa Ajayi will be sorely missed.”

    Expressing mixed feelings over the demise of Pa Ajayi, Governor Amosun said although the nonagenarian would be missed, it is also a thing to grateful to God for that he lived an impactful life.

    “Although he will be sorely missed, we cannot but thank the Almighty

    for the eventful and highly impactful life that the late Sir Olaniwun

    Ajayi lived,” Governor Amosun said.

    Amosun described the late Ajayi, an associate of the late sage, Chief

    Obafemi Awolowo, as one of the icons of Ogun State and architect of modern day Nigeria.

    According to him, the late elder statesman lived a long, fulfilled life in good health and made it to the gracious old age of 91, which is something to be grateful to God for.

    While commiserating with the Ajayi family, the good people of Ogun State and the entire nation, over the loss of the elder statesman, the governor said his words of wisdom would be missed at this critical stage of the nation’s development.

    Good man, forthright leader gone, says Fayemi

    The Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Dr Kayode Fayemi, also saluted the the late Afenifere leader, describing him as a forthright leader with a very rare generous spirit.

    Fayemi said the death of Chief Ajayi came to him as a surprise, saying that the late Afenifere leader was full of life during their recent meeting, in spite of his old age.

    The minister, in a condolence message signed by his Special Assistant on Media, Mr Yinka Oyebode, described the late Chief Ajayi as a distinguished leader, nationalist, foremost Awoist and a thoroughbred professional who brought a unique touch of excellence to whatever he did.

    Recalling his relationship with the late leader, whom he described as a man of wisdom and leader with a huge sense of history, Fayemi said every encounter with the late Chief Ajayi revealed his good nature as well as passion for the unity of the Yoruba in particular and Nigeria’s greatness in general.

    “Papa was a man of distinction, a compassionate and courageous leader, who contributed immensely to the enthronement of democracy, by working assiduously with other patriots in Afenifere, the pan-oruba socio-political organisation, and the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO).”

    The Minister urged the children of the late elder statesman to be consoled by the good name and legacy of service he left behind.

    “His was a life well spent,” he added.

    “There is no doubt, Papa Ajayi’s death has robbed the Yoruba race, indeed Nigeria, of a distinguished citizen, patriot and leader.

    “We shall surely miss his wise counsel and generous spirit at this critical stage of our national life.”

    The Senator representing Lagos West Senatorial District, Senator

    Solomon Adeola, said Pa Ajayi’s death marked the end of a great and

    principled man.

    In a statement by Adeola’s media adviser, Kayode Odunaro. The senator said Pa Ajayi’s contribution to the progressive politics in Nigeria over the years remains unparalleled, stressing that the man would be greatly missed.

    He said: “Pa Ajayi was a foremost progressive and anti-military rule fighter.

    “Yorubaland and indeed Nigeria will miss a man noted for his consistency in fighting for the mancipation of the people through advocacy of good governance and a progressive politics.

    “His loyalty and consistent adherence to the philosophy of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, spanning over six decades, is a good example for politicians of today and future generation of politicians.

    “And his wise counsels backed by historical experiences would be sorely missed by Yorubaland and indeed Nigeria at this critical stage of our history.”

    The senator prayed for the peaceful repose of his soul and the fortitude for the family to bear the irreparable loss.

    Nigeria will miss him, say Fasanmi, Ogundokun

    Second Republic senator, Chief Ayo Fasanmi, and former National Publicity Secretary of the defunct National Party of Nigeria, Chief Abiola Ogundokun, described the death of the Afenifere leader as shocking.

    In different telephone interviews with our correspondent over Ajayi’s death, they said Nigeria had lost a national asset.

    They commiserated with Nigeria and Ajayi’ s family, saying he would be greatly missed.

    Chief Fasanmi, who described Ajayi as his best friend outside politics, said his death was a challenge for the Yoruba to come together and forster a common front in the interest of the race.

    According to him, he and the deceased worked together under the leadership of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, adding that he had so much respect for him.

    Fasanmi also said he never allowed politics to affect his admiration and respect for Ajayi, noting that he, Ayo Adebanjo, Rueben Fasoranti and the deceased worked together for national interest.

    Ogundokun, on his part, described late Ajayi as a man of peace, who he said made a great sacrifice for the nation’s unity.

    Ogundokun said his kind of politics had endeared him to national leaders across Nigeria and outside the shores of the nation.

    He said the nation had lost a gem whose experience, he said, was particularly needed at “this trying time of our history.”

    Former Ogun State governor, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, described the late Pa Ajayi as a democrat of repute and an elder statesman who dedicated his life to the service of his people and the country.

    Ajayi, he said, was “a very strong force in Nigerian polity and well respected in the political landscape over the years as he improved on the democratic ideals of the founding fathers and played his roles in the service to the nation in various capacities.”

    “He was a courageous personality noted for his frank disposition to issues and policies.

    “He remained principled when it mattered most and never compromised his stance even in the midst of challenges.

    “His invaluable contributions to national development will be greatly missed.”

    The Olugbo of Ugbo Kingdom, Ondo State, Oba Frederick Obateru Akinruntan, said the death of Sir Olaniwun Ajayi was a great loss to Nigeria and the Yoruba.

    According to the Chairman of Yoruba Obas Conflict Resolution Committee,  Ajayi died at a critical time his wise counsel would be needed most.

    Oba Akinruntan recalled the role played by Pa Ajayi in lending support to the resolution of misunderstandings among Yoruba monarchs.

    He said: “It is painful to lose him at this critical time.

    “He was an intelligent Yoruba man. He worked assiduously for the unity and

    upliftment of Yoruba race to take its rightful place in Nigeria.

    “He was a selfless leader and I will always remember his contributions to resolving crisis among Yoruba Obas.

    “I know history will be kind to him.”

    Ajayi was born on April 8, 1925 at Isara Remo, Ogun State.

    He trained as a lawyer.

    He was chairman of Great Nigeria Insurance Company owned by the Oodua Group of Companies, during the Second Republic.

  • How to reboot  the economy,  by Aregbesola

    How to reboot the economy, by Aregbesola

    In his speech titled: “Breaking the cycle of dependence” at the public presentation of The Point and the newspaper’s first annual independence lecture on the economy, organised by Right Dev Limited in Lagos, Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola traces the prevailing economic crisis to the early 80s. He prescribes the pills for remedial treatment temporary and enduring cure. 

    OUR subject of discussion is actually a question – “What is the economics of change?” This is a play on word that indirectly puts to task the campaign mantra of our party – the All Progressives Congress (APC) – that promised Nigerians a change for the better during last year’s election campaign. It is being subtly challenged in light of the declaration by the minders of the Nigerian economy that it has lapsed into recession.

    This is on the heels of steep inflation and rising cost of all items; the continued fall in the value of the naira against other currencies; retrenchment of workers in the private sector and the challenges faced by 27 states of the federation in paying workers’ salaries.

    There has also been an unusual interest of the media to report pathetic human angle stories of domestic violence, divorce, suicide and petty theft, all blamed on the economic situation in the country. A man that battered his wife to death; a civil servant that reportedly stole his neighbour’s pot of soup; a woman that chopped off her husband’s manhood; and depressed individuals that took their own lives, are regular and prominent daily news items, all blamed directly on the recession.

    So, the question is rhetorical because it is cast in a self-evident form with the answer so obvious and tellingly screaming “No, this is not change, or, at least, not the change we asked for”.

     

    Genesis of economic woes

     

    But quite honestly, while we may not deny the obvious, these developments do not actually reflect the whole truth. The freefall of the Nigerian economy had begun long before the coming to power of the APC. It has come to the nadir now and we can only be thankful that it is not worse than it actually is, because, indeed, it could have been worse.

    The fundamental problem is that we can no longer fund our imports because our foreign earnings have progressively declined while our taste for, and dependence on foreign goods have continued to increase. This is what puts pressure on the naira, makes imported goods to become very expensive and the economy in a tailspin.

    Let me add at this point that this recession is not new. It is a cycle that we have experienced several times in the past. We had one in the post crude oil dependency era, circa 1981-82, when Chief Obafemi Awolowo warned that the ship of state was headed for the rocks. He was dubbed then as ‘prophet of doom’ by the ruling National Party of Nigeria (NPN). His prognosis was simple. At the time, just like now, the price of oil fell.  By 1983, we could hardly finance our imports and many states were distressed. The reaction then, as it is now, was to blame it on the profligacy of state governors, forgetting that revenue is recurrent – you only spend what you have and profligacy will no longer be possible when the tap runs dry since you cannot spend what you don’t have.

     

    Oil price fall a recurring decimal

     

    Again, oil price fell under the Gen. Sani Abacha regime, bringing economic downturns and stress to the states. We had this again during the brief spell of Gen Abdulsalam Abubakar.  The difference then was that salaries and emoluments of workers were a reasonable fraction of expenditure and the military government of the time was not under any obligation of development. The military was more like an occupation force whose primary responsibility was to maintain law and order and keep the peace.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration also had the same problem twice while his successor, Umaru Yar’Adua, also had a depression on account of falling oil price.

    The difference with these previous situations was that they never lasted. However, this is the first time that there will be a decline in oil price which has been sustained for more than two years running. Sooner or later, it is bound to knock the bottom off any economy. Hence, the need for urgent action for recovery.

    Don’t let us kid ourselves; we are dependent on imports, for everything. We import food, automobiles, petroleum products, drugs, clothing, building materials, machineries, electronics, cosmetics and household products.

    You are aware that up to the middle of 2013, crude oil was selling well above $120. The federation account disbursed in excess of N1 trillion every month and our foreign reserves was rising. At a point in 2008, it stood at $62 billion. We were not saving, or better put, we were not using these huge earnings to develop our economy. According to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Federal Government funded the operations of Bureau de Change (BDC) for 11 years with $66 billion before it was stopped in January this year. During this period, Nigerians were encouraged to obtain credit or debit card with which to shop abroad or buy goods online.

    Our foreign earnings have since dropped because of the fall in oil price. Late last year, and early this year, oil sold for as low as $22 before hovering now around $50. But we have double whammy in that not only has the price dropped; our daily production has fallen as well. From all accounts, we are losing not less than one million barrels of crude oil per day, out of our 2.3 million official allocation, due to sabotage by militants in the Niger Delta.

    In the absence of other serious foreign exchange earners, we are bound to have problems financing our imports, which are huge and humongous. Just take a sample:

    At official level, according to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), we spend $20 million daily or $1.8 billion quarterly which translates to $7.2 billion annually to import fuel. We also spend $20 billion every year to import food. This will include $700 million on fish. There are conflicting figures but the highest, from a former minister of commerce and industry, Charles Ugwu, an engineer, claims that we spend $2.6 billion annually to import rice while the CBN claims that our rice import bill for three years cost $2.4 billion. It will also include wheat, biscuits, noodles, dairy products, pastas, wines and other food items.

    By importing, we are simply developing the economies of the nations that we buy from, through job creation, value chain maintenance, capacity for product development and other spinoff effects of production.

     

    Local manufacturing as elixir

     

    You can imagine that there are seven million vehicles on our roads and we do not produce a single tyre for them. If the average lifespan of a tyre is three years, then every three years, we need 28 million tyres, working on the assumption that an average car has four wheels. We must then find a way to import 28 million new or used tyres. We can imagine what effect it would have on our economy if we produce just half of these tyres at home.

    Then of course, we import textiles and clothing items, including handkerchiefs, underwear and footwear to the tune of $4 billion in a year. Apart from traditional wears, virtually all formal wears are now imported. For a very long time now, I have stopped wearing non-traditional dresses. If half of the country had been like me, it means that at least 80 million people will engage our local tailors and retain that whole transaction within our economy.

    This problem did not begin last year. It has been the orientation of our economy since the oil boom of the 1970s. It must therefore be sensitive to the shocks of oil price crash.

     

    Remidial treatment

     

    What we can do in the short-term is to find alternative sources of funding for our balance of trade deficit through borrowing, restriction on the importation of non-essential goods for which we can readily find local alternatives and disposing off idle and non-performing assets. We should also, by whatever means, end the conflict in the Niger Delta to be able to ramp up oil production. Adding one million barrels to our production will take us out of the woods. Therefore, plugging leakages and recovering loot, as the government is doing, is a right step to stop the hemorrhaging of the economy and maximising the current situation.

    Another short-term solution is to, in the Keynesian mode, engage in direct employment of youths. In spite of neoliberal opposition, this policy has never failed in addressing depression in the past. This is one of the innovations we brought to governance. Our administration has carried out the engagement of two tranches of 20,000 youths in public works in quick succession. The OYES cadets were not given permanent employment but engaged as volunteers and given monthly allowance. They were eventually given soft landing in the various empowerment schemes of the government in agriculture, teaching and Information and Communication Technology (ICT). In less than two years of taking the youths off the streets, crime rate in Osun dropped to rock bottom. It also reflated the local economy since the N200 million monthly allowances given to them percolated into the grassroots. It is public fund well spent. The programme has since been adopted by the World Bank and introduced nationally in a modified form as YESSO.

     

    Permanent solution

     

    The long-term solution is to get off the addiction to imported goods and start producing what we consume. We have no business importing fuel, for instance. We should be producing refined fuel, not just for local consumption, but for export as well. There should be a national policy centred on local refining of our crude. It will not only reduce the price of fuel, it will create jobs, wealth, foster a value-chain and bring development.

     

    Back to farm

     

    We should also cut the importation of food to less than 25 per cent of the current volume. This is to enable us develop agriculture. It has been the policy of our administration since day one to promote food production in order to be able to feed our people. It is really shameful that in spite of our endowments in natural resources, we are still dependent on imported food items as a nation.

    We should return to farming, not just at the subsistent level, but as big business. We should strive to increase agriculture productivity and yield. While Nigeria is the leading producer of cassava for instance, the traditional yield per hectare has been around 10 tonnes, while global average in 2010 put at 12.5 tonnes.

    However, India’s average yield in 2010 was 34.8 tonnes per hectares and Thailand’s yield is reported to be a whopping 120 tonnes per hectare.

    If we can double our food output from cultivating the same land size as we currently do, it is possible to eliminate hunger from the country. But this will require innovation in crop science, agriculture mechanisation, extension services, improved inputs and agriculture entrepreneurship. The agriculture knowledge base has to be widened and scientific findings have to be brought to (and applied by) the farmers.

    There must also be a transition from producer of primary goods to value adding. Adding values create a value chain that increases the momentum of development. For instance, the value of one kilogramme of cocoa beans that we export is multiplied 5,000 times by the time we import it as chocolate. If we can make the same quality of chocolate, we could have earned 5,000 times the value we derive from cocoa beans in a value chain that includes revenue generation, wealth creation, job creation and spiralling effect of developing ancillary industries around this product.

     

    Functional education

    not negotiable

     

    The primary engine of development is education. This is where innovation is most needed. A functional system of education that develops and put to use the creativity of Nigerians is urgently needed.

    I conceive of education as the preparation and development of worthy citizens for the immediate society and the world at large. Education is that infrastructure of the mind that develops our youths to become models of good character, innovation and competence. This is what we call Omoluabi in Yoruba.

    Omoluabi is the epitome of virtue. An Omoluabi personae is honest, courageous and rational; one who excels in character, innovation and competence. The educated person is well connected to his or her culture and heritage. Everything he/she does with others, the society, family and friends is driven by the desire to live and demonstrate good deeds. It is only when we interrogate this definition that we can know if we are meeting the objectives of education.

    Making graduates employable

    Education has not been an engine of development. Rather, it is a system of social stratification where bland certificates are issued in order to separate the political and economic elites from the others. This is one of the factors responsible for poor productivity. Those who have certificates without the requisite skills cannot drive enterprise or provide leadership. They only see their certification as entitlement to privileges.

    It is always embarrassing to hear employers say our graduates are not employable. The bright ones among them have to be trained and retrained to be found suitable for the jobs on hand.

    Education therefore has received the greatest attention and resources from our administration. One of our first tasks was to convene an education summit, headed by the Nobel Laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka. That summit produced the blueprint of our education reforms. In a state of roughly four million people, we embarked on an ambitious programme of building from the scratch 100 elementary schools, 50 middle schools and 20 high schools. Each of these schools has capacity for 1000 pupils, with the high school being a three in one, each designed and equipped to sustain 3000 pupils. These new public schools soon began to displace private schools.

    We provided a stand-alone e-learning tablet, which we named ‘Opon Imo’ (tablet of knowledge), for final year students in public schools, in share display of creativity. This tablet contains all the recommended 56 textbooks by the three examination bodies for senior school certificate examinations in Nigeria. It contains also past questions of these bodies, a virtual classroom, extracurricular zone and the themes of Yoruba traditional religion. This tablet was the saving grace in a year when teachers went on strike for eight months and did not prepare the final year students for their examinations.

    We also pioneered in a sense, the home grown school feeding programme (O’MEALS), in which sumptuous meals are provided for 252,000 elementary school pupils on every school day. We say ‘in a sense’ because the programme had existed in an attenuated form prior to our coming, but our administration gave it a new identity and prominence.

     

     

     

    Because of its success in Osun, it has now been nationally adopted by the Federal Government. Very recently, our state organised a national induction for other states understudying the programme, preparatory to implementing it in their own states. I have also been invited twice to the British Parliament to share our experience with the world.

    The interesting aspect of this programme, as it relates with innovation, is that it is integrated with our agriculture policy and local empowerment. Under it, 3000 community-based caterers were employed, trained and assisted financially to set up their business of community catering.

    Also, to be able to feed these pupils, 15,000 whole chickens, 254,000 eggs, 35 heads of cattle and 40 tonnes of catfish are purchased weekly from farmers and food vendors. This has kept the farmers in profitable business and even attracted other youths to farming.

    In keeping with the original objective of making the programme home grown, the O’MEALS has an input supply chain that is linked to our various agricultural development projects. Consequently, our Osun Fisheries Out-growers Production Scheme (OFOPS) provides the catfish used for the school feeding programme while Osun Broilers Out-growers Programme (OBOPS) provides part of the chickens.

    We also need a national policy on entrepreneurship development. The most successful and leading enterprises in the country are owned largely by foreigners, with our people being minority shareholders. A system where it is easier to prosper and succeed in business through buying and selling is inherently anti-development. Entrepreneurship training should be part of education at all levels.

    In all, we should change the direction of our economy from dependency to self-sufficiency. It will take sacrifice, hard work, determination and unrelenting pursuit.

    If we fail to do this, we should be preparing for another recession when next there is a fall in oil price.

    Once again, I thank Right Dev Limited for the invitation to be here and I wish your new born baby a successful entrance into the media world.

     

  • Iwo indigenes want Aregbesola to approve journalism institute

    Prominent indigenes of Iwo in Osun State, have called on Governor Rauf Aregbesola to approve the planned conversion of the Reality Television building in the town, to a journalism institute. Elites from the town, including thirty professors and other eminent personalities, recently resolved to appeal to the governor to affiliate the proposed institute to Osun State University when approved.

    The spokesperson of the groups, Prof. Alagbe Gbolagade, explained that part of the suggested programmes for the planned institute include, Bachelor of Arts in Music, Bachelor of Arts in Performing Arts, Bachelor of Arts in Theatre Arts, Bachelor of Arts in Advertising, Bachelor of Arts in Film Production and Bachelor of Arts in Photo Journalism.

    “We are aware of the current financial situation of the state. In order not to put financial pressures on the government of the State of Osun, the community, through groups likes Iwo Board of Trustees, Iwo Action Council, Iwo Progressive Union and some individuals, have agreed to take up the financial responsibilities for the take-off grants.

    “All we want from the government is an approval for take-off. Iwo Local Government is one of the biggest in Osun State and it is not good that Iwo has no government owned higher institution. Sincerely speaking, one higher institution in a place is better than ten industries.