Tag: AREGBESOLA

  • Aregbesola, Osun lawmakers, others to hold parley on financial crisis

    Aregbesola, Osun lawmakers, others to hold parley on financial crisis

    OSUN State Governor Rauf Aregbesola, the state and National Assembly lawmakers are set to meet “to proffer an enduring solution to the financial challenges facing the state”.

    A lawmaker representing Ayedade/Isokan/Irewole Federal Constituency, Mrs. Ayo Omidiran, said this at a news conference at the weekend in Osogbo, the Osun State capital.

    She added that the meeting, entitled: “Osun Stakeholders’ Conference”, is scheduled to hold today.

    Mrs. Omidiran, who spoke in company of other lawmakers, including Ajibola Famurewa, representing Ile East/West and Atakumosa East/West Federal Constituency, Mojeed Alabi, repenting Iwo/Ola-Oluwa/Ejigbo Federal Constituency, and Bosun Oyintiloye, representing Obokun State  Constituency, said no fewer than 1,000 stakeholders from the state will attend the conference.

    The lawmakers added that technocrats, the state’s former governors and their deputies, formers speakers of both the national and state House of Assemblies, traditional rulers, labour unions, non-governmental organisations, religious leaders, elder-statesmen, leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), market women and others have been invited to the conference.

    She noted that the National Assembly lawmakers, under the aegis of Osun Legislators Forum, initiated the meeting.

    Mrs. Omidiran said the conference was necessary following the financial crisis facing the state, the incessant industrial actions over non-payment of salaries as well as abandonment of critical projects that the governor had embarked on to actualise the state’s “mega city vision”.

    She said: “We realised that the times are very hard for our people. Whatever we are doing in Abuja, if our people are not happy, we too cannot be happy. It then means that the laws we are making won’t make sense. We want  to let our people know that we are committed to their wellbeing.

    “The conference will present an opportunity for all stakeholders to hear from the horse’s mouth on how we got to this stage. Governor Aregbesola will explain in clear terms during his submission the what, when, why and how. He will answer all our questions and lay all his cards on the table.

    “Stakeholders are expected to contribute intellectually through submissions based on facts and experiences, so that at the end of the summit, we shall together and by the grace of God, proffer lasting solutions to the myriads of problems confronting our dear state.”

    Omidiran noted that the recommendations from the summit would be submitted to the government, which has the prerogative for implementation.

    But the candidate of the Osun State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the last governorship election, Senator Iyiola Omisore, has denied receiving an invitation to attend the meeting.

    He said if he had received the letter, he would attend, since the agenda was to deliberate on how to move the state forward.

    The former deputy governor, who spoke with our correspondent on phone from Washington DC, said he was attending a World Bank’s meeting in the United States (U.S.).

    He noted that the invitation must have been dropped in the wrong hands because he understand all the state’s stakeholders were invited.

    His words: “I wasn’t invited by the lawmakers. I also read about it on newspapers. Presently, I am attending a World Bank’s meeting in Washington DC. Maybe they sent the invitation through wrong persons because I heard all the stakeholders were invited to brainstorm on how to take Osun State forward and proffer solution to challenges facing the state.

    “I left Ife for Lagos on Friday and from Lagos to Abuja before I flew out to United States, where I will be attending the meeting slated for Monday 10 to August 11.

    “I could have attended the meeting, if I receive it because I can teach basic rules of economics on how to manage resources.”

  • Aregbesola: My last conversation with Ooni

    Aregbesola: My last conversation with Ooni

    • Monarch’s body moved to Ile Ase

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola yesterday spoke on his last conversation with the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade.

    It was the first time the governor was making a public statement on the paramount ruler.

    Aregbesola said he received a touching short text message from the Ooni shortly before the monarch left for London.

    The governor however did not reveal the content of the message.

    He simply said: “When the time is ripe I will let you (the public) know  the content of the letter.”

    The governor, who spoke at a special sitting at the Osun State House of Assembly to mark the 50th birthday of the Speaker of Osun Assembly, Hon. Najeem Salaam, explained that he discussed the message with the palace chiefs during their visit last week at the Government House, Osogbo about situations in Ife.

    Aregbesola also prayed for the Speaker, who turned 50 yesterday, saying he deserved the prayers of the people for his contribution to the state.

    He said: “The effective leadership we have provided in this state with the massive delivery of people oriented programmes could not have been without the appropriate cooperation of the House under the Speaker.

    “It is therefore pertinent to note that the Speaker has been a major factor in the delivery of good governance and this we are optimistic will continue.”

    It was learnt at the weekend that the body of Sijuwade has been moved from Ile’gbo to Obatala House otherwise known as Ile Ase, literally meaning the House of Authority.

    Oba Sijuwade’s body, which has been laid in Ile’gbo since mid last week, was said to have been embalmed locally by traditionalists.

    The Ile Ase is believed to be where the late paramount ruler got the spiritual decree to assert authority during his lifetime.

    Investigation also revealed that traditionalists will carry out a new round of rites on the Ooni’s body at the Ile Ase after the conclusion of the ritual at Ile’gbo.

    Ooni’s body is expected to spend few days at Ile Ase before it is moved to the Inner Sacrificial House within the palace.

    According a palace source, the Inner Sacrificial House is symbolic because of its power to claim from the Ooni’s body all the authorities he had acquired from the gods.

    It is from there, it was learnt that the body will be finally laid to rest.

  • I never spent a kobo without approval of the House—Aregbesola

    The Osun State governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola has disclosed that his government has never spent a dime without the approval of the State House of Assembly since he assumed office.

    Aregbesola made the disclosure while addressing a gathering during the Special Parliamentary Session organized by members of the House of Assembly in honour of the  Speaker, Hon. Najeem Salam, who turned 50.

    Aregbesola stated that his government has been conscious of the legislative roles in the running of the constitutionally designated duties of the government, stressing that the impact of the legislature can never be over emphasized towards the achievement of a sustainable democracy.

    Aregbesola who reacted to the recent petition allegedly written and forwarded to the House for investigation  by a sitting Judge of the State High Court, Justice Folahanmi Olamide Oloyede, where he was accused to have collected and mismanaged over N538billion  between 2010 to 2014, described it as unfortunate fabrication and baseless.

    While denying the allegation, he stated  that even if the state is earning five billion (N5billion) every month, it could not still accrue to such outrageous amount within the years in question.

    The governor noted that despite his high level of transparency and openness,  he could not believe that such hate statement could emanate from other arm of government who is part of the system and who by the virtue of her office is highly respected.

    He vowed that he would not be distracted or forced to deviate from the right path of fulfillment in spite of the current economic challenges ravaging the state and the country at large.

    According to him, the role of the legislative arm in a democratically elected government can never be over emphasized as most of the executive roles are hinged on the collective ratification and approval of the legislature, adding that in the eye of the law, nothing can be done without the approval of the members of the House of Assembly.

    He  explained that the roles of the legislature was not only limited to the approval of the appropriation bill from the executive but also has a prominent oversight functions and roles in ensuring that executive performs his statutory duties as expected in line with the constitution.

    Aregbesola said it is also the duty of the State House of Assembly having approved the implementation of a proposed appropriation bill or the proposed projects to be executed by the executive, to equally monitor it and ascertain that the approved fund is used for the said projects which his government has been successfully managed with the previous and current legislators.

    The governor said if anyone now feels that he or she at the comfort of his house can just petition the Governor without the requisite knowledge on the fact that it is not possible for the executive be it Governor, Commissioner, and other government parastatals and agencies, to implement any project whatsoever without the consent and approval of the House, he or she is just wasting his or her time and such petition will always amount to mere emotional disposition that can never be enforced by law.

    Governor Aregbesola lauded the resilience and doggedness of the state legislators for being forthright and unwavering in carrying out their constitutional duties since its inauguration, stressing that the House has been very cooperative, supportive and collaborative with his government.

    He  assured that the current economic crisis in the state would soon become a thing of the past as his government is working round the clock to make life more prosperous, meaningful, fulfilling, peaceful and abundant for the entire citizenry.

    Governor Aregbesola stated that the  parliamentary system of the government remained the best for Nigeria and other developing countries of the world, noting that it is the only system of government that concentrates all governmental powers in the hands of the legislature and as such, helping the financial management of the government because all the financial resources are concentrated on legislature for distribution and disbursement and whoever fails, either member of the parliament or the executive will definitely face the sanction of the parliament.

    He, however, described Speaker Najeem Salam as an epitome of humility, patience, tolerance, perseverance and God fearing.

    He therefore wished him more prosperous life on earth as he celebrates his golden jubilee, urging him not to deviate from good deeds, good work and as well be more committed and dedicated welfare of the people as part of his traits.

  • Osun Assembly’s panel dismisses judge’s petition against Aregbesola

    Osun Assembly’s panel dismisses judge’s petition against Aregbesola

    •Speaker says Oloyede betrayed judicial conduct

    The Osun State House of Assembly has, on the recommendations of a seven-man committee headed by Mr. Akintunde Adegboye, dismissed the petition filed by Justice Folahanmi Oloyede against Governor Rauf Aregbesola.

    It also recommended the petitioner for sanction through the state Judicial Service Commission.

    The House, in a motion of 25 against one, as moved by its Majority Leader, Mr. Timothy Owoeye, and seconded by Mr. Abdulahi Ibrahim, representing Iwo State Constituency, adopted the committee’s recommendations.

    Among the adopted recommendations, the embattled judge was found wanting of abandoning the petition for non-appearance, lack of evidence as well as premising her petition on rumours and hearsay.

    The Assembly’s Speaker, Najeem Salaam, at the plenary, said the embattled Justice Oloyede had betrayed the oath of her office.

    He added that the judge lost her worth to be a judge in the temple of justice.

    The Speaker said the violation of processes and procedure as spelt out by the constitution and judicial code of conduct, through the judge’s partisan and emotional disposition on the allegations raised “against the government she is serving, has shown her as unfit for the bench”.

    Salaam, while explaining why he allowed the petition to sail through, noted that the state parliament under his watch elected to look into the petition not to gag Oloyede’s freedom of expression in accordance with sections 128 and 129 of the Constitution, which empowered the legislature to investigate any public petition forwarded to the House.

    The Speaker noted that the issue of impeachment raised in the petition was a mere opinion of the petitioner, not the position of the law.

    He noted that the parliament was conscious of the letter and the spirit of Section 188 raised by some lawyers, but added that a petition raised by the judicial officer could not have been substituted for the position of the one-third of the Assembly members capable of intimating impeachment article.

    He said: “We appreciate the views of the two legal luminaries who ventilated their opinions on the conduct of Justice Oloyede and the move of the parliament to tolerate the petition at all.

    “But having found no precedence for the action of the judge, the Parliament under me chose to set up the committee to investigate the content of the petition.

    “But we are surprised that the judge lost the courage to come forward to defend the allegations leveled against the duo of the governor and his deputy; suggesting that she is not worth her onion. It shows that if an individual sues the government to her court, the ruling could be preempt.”

    The Speaker said he would soon hold talk with the board of the state’s Civil Service Commission, the Chams consultancy in charge of workers’ documents, Head of Service and labour leaders on the issue of ghost workers and regime of wage payment with a view to debriefing them.

    He said the parliament would be guided on its intervention on the issue of delayed salaries, government/workers’ dispute and the sustainability of the wage regime and other related issues.

    Salaam hailed labour leaders for coming to the negotiation table, adding that the culture of negotiating on strike at every occasion should be reviewed for collective good.

  • How to stop building collapse, by Ajimobi, Aregbesola

    How to stop building collapse, by Ajimobi, Aregbesola

    Skills development for construction workers and entrepreneurship in the industry should be given priority to stop buildings from collapse, Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi and his Osun counterpart Rauf Aregbesola said yesterday.

    They spoke at the 45th Conference and Annual General Meeting of the Nigerian Institute of Building at the International Conference Centre, University of Ibadan (UI), Ibadan.

    Ajimobi said: “Developing the skills of artisans will also put a check to the incidents of collapsed buildings that are now a common feature in the construction industry.

    “It is imperative for your institute and other professional bodies in the construction industry to come together to create a common platform and partner  with governments at all levels and tertiary institutions to develop a more robust master plan for skills acquisition and development for the country.”

    He decried cases of collapsed building in Nigeria, stressing that it was unimaginable that a country blessed with great potentials in its construction industry could experience such a problem.

    The governor noted the death of 67 South African nationals in the building collapse at Synagogue Church of All Nations, which, he noted, has put the integrity and expertise of Nigerian builders to test.

    He said the state government would continue to provide an enabling environment for the institute and other stake holders in the task of producing structurally stable and risk free buildings.

    Aregbesola called for strict compliance to building rules and regulation to ensure a safe and beautiful environment.

    Aregbesola vowed that his administration would not relent in its efforts at changing the face of the state through urbanisation.

    The built environment, the governor said, is the crowning glory of all civilisation.

    He noted that urbanisation was “very germane to his government economy rediscovery”.

    In a statement by his Director, Bureau of Communication & Strategy, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon Aregbesola, the governor hailed the institute for identifying with the successes of his administration in Osun despite what he called targeted and sustained attacks and criticisms from opposition of his government over inability to pay salaries promptly.

    Those, who also witnessed the event, included the President, Nigerian Institute of Building, Tunde Lasabi; former Head of Service of the Federation Prof. Oladapo Afolabi, Vice Chancellor of University of Ibadan Prof. Isaac Adewole and others.

    The governor hailed the institute for its efforts at improving the environment and for imposing standard on building construction.

    “An accompanying problem of regulation failure is building collapse, which has become a scourge of the cities. Buildings, even those still under construction, have been in freefall, sometimes killing people and causing grievous bodily harm.

    “I have no doubt that these are of serious concerns to your body and you are seriously addressing it,” he said.

    Aregbesola stressed that his administration has returned sanity to the built environment with the need to make  buildings in Osun safe and create a beautiful environment at the same time.

    He added that the urgent task before his administration was to renew the urban centres, upgrade the slums and build future cities. Through the renewal programme, we are transforming the urban centres into modern ones.

    He noted that nine cities  – Osogbo, Ilesa, Ile-Ife, Ikire, Ejigbo, Ede, Iwo, Ikirun and Ila-Orangun – are under the renewal exercise covering a kilometre radius from the Oba’s palace, regarded as the centre of town in each city.

    Aregbesola pointed out that his administration has renewed negotiation with the UN-Habitat by  paying counterpart fund of N100 million. Other cities, besides the initial nine, will receive similar attention in due course.

    Ajimobi  and Aregbesola were awarded with Honorary Fellowship award of the institute. Otunba Fatai Oshikoya was honoured with distinguished professional lifetime award.

     

  • ‘Aregbesola’s transforming Osun economy’

    ‘Aregbesola’s transforming Osun economy’

    Prince Dotun Babayemi is a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State. In this interview with SINA FADARE, he says, despite the challenges the state is facing, it is a model for future generation of good governance.

    As a politician and entrepreneur, what are you doing to boost the economy of Osun State?

    We have started the process and it is going to be a continuous exercise. What drew me to politics was the style of governance l saw in Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola in the first two years that he became the governor of Osun State. He came as a crusader who has the knack to serve, the type that we witnessed in the early 60s. Not looking at the state as it is but as it can be in the future. When the late Obafemi Awolowo in the 60s introduced free education, a lot of critics thought the policy cannot work, but look at the benefits today and where it has put the former Western Region.

    That was what attracted me home that something unique is happening here and wanted to be part of it. Apart from interfacing with organization within Nigeria, we are working with the government to see how we can bring investors to the state to open her economic potentials which are all over. One of the core policies of the state is to make it the food basket of the country. We have the green land and all what it takes to make this a reality.

    Action has been taken to that effect about 80 per cent of the rural areas have been  linked up with the state capital through  road net work where food has been transported from Oshogbo to Lagos and other states. What we are seeing is the gradual civil servant economy to that of agro-based economy. Since the Federal Government has said that the country is now ready to exploit the country’s natural resources, Our state has a lot of gold that can be exploited. We are going to collaborate with the Federal government to aggressively pursue those natural resources.  In terms of employment our outfit has engaged significantly the people of the state. We queued into the programme of the state by providing employment for the youths.

    Are you comfortable with what is going on in the National Assembly? What is the way out?

    No, The APC members in the House should look back and be conscious of where they are coming from. They did not get to the House in a vacuum; the constitution provided that you must run under a party therefore the supremacy of the party should be sacrosanct. Therefore since you are representing the party in the house you must follow the rules and guidelines of the party. The decision of the party is supreme and should be adherent to and should be respected. Our members should realize that service to humanity is one of the cardinal goals of APC; therefore they should be guided on this so that the nation can be moved forward.

    What we have seen in the National Assembly in the recent time is that some members have allowed personal ambition to override the goals and objective of the party on whose back they all rode to the National Assembly. Though all that happened was still in the purview of the law, but morally it may not, as a representative of the people, they should lead by example. They should let the past belong to the past and sit down to put in place laws that will alleviate poverty in the country and let the people see in them that they are actual  representative of the people.

    It is also important that the party that gave the platform of their existence in the Assembly should be respected in the future, this is critical so that they will remain focus and promises they made to the people would be actualized. When member strained out of line, the consequences of such action if un attended to, can cause anarchy. It is better that member should not stray out of the rule of the agreed norms; otherwise it is the beginning of the end for such a union.

    What do you think should be the priority of the APC members in the National Assembly?

    The first step they should take is that they should retrace their step back to the party and conform to its wishes. When a child falls, he look  at the front but when an elders falls, he looks back, the elders that looks back wanted to know what brought him down. They should do likewise. It is necessary that we should not forget where we are coming from. For 16 years that the PDP are in the saddle of power, the APC has been toiling all over to provide a credible alternative to the miss-governance of the past. That we have the alternative programme that can restore the lost hope of Nigerians and take care of their basic needs. That the university students would no longer stay at home unnecessarily due to lack of job to do after graduation. Now that we have the reality coming up, we should not buddle the opportunity. Some people toiled night and day to get us to where we are, therefore we should not derail from our known norms and value as a political party with progressive inclination.

    Your critics said you are very slow in action which is not expected of a progressive, what is your take on this?

    What we have seen in the last 16 years was a nick-jack reaction to situation, no strategy no cohesion and any form of articulation. Everything done was looked from their selfish and personal pocket interest therefore that was why a lot of rot was inherited by APC. A case in point is the recent happening when Ni.2 b was withdrawn from the nation’s purse with impunity. The government at the centre now is completely different from what it used to be, it is no longer business as usual.

    Since our campaign days, we have put in place a strategic policy that will fall in place as we execute our programme. We are starting on security and corruption; we have to look at what is happening in the space of five weeks compared with what happened in the last five year.  In case of corruption, you can see how EFCC has been active in the last few weeks, unlike in the past. As we speak three governors have been charged to court, we did not see any of this those years ago.

    For many years there was different kind of impunity, but now there is a wakeup call that the music has changed, likewise the dancing step. Accountability is now the watch word, there is always a tomorrow unlike in the past. For the first time on the issue of security, there is a concerted effort with collaborations with other likes mind in the sub- Africa to curb the insurgence of Boko Haram.  The money that suppose to go to the army as a driving forces in the past goes to private purse, but today things have changed. In terms of economy, we voted for a president that is focused, has integrity and know what to do.

    The recent bail out to some states when they could not pay their workers salaries is a testimony that the president was not comfortable to see Nigerians workers in agony over accumulated un- paid salaries arrears. This has never happened in the last 16 years. Aside this we are now looking at viable economic impetus that can drive the industry. The President has announced that he is looking at textile, mining and steel industries to create employment opportunity. These industries are viable if you go back a bit into our history before the tenure of PDP. The best textile was made in Nigeria with good value chain that created a lot of opportunities. This government will take the country to this level once again.

    When member strained out of line, the consequences of such action if un attended to, can cause anarchy. It is better that member should not stray out of the rule of the agreed norms; otherwise it is the beginning of the end for such a union.

     

  • Aregbesola and Osun’s financial realities

    Aregbesola and Osun’s financial realities

    It is generally agreed that a worker is truly deserving of his wage. This is functioned on the singular fact that it is the worker’s efforts and contributions in the production process that creates the wealth which the socio-economy depends on for survival. A worker’s wage is therefore not charity but truly just a fraction of his total creation and contributions to the Gross National Product (GNP). It is his share of his contribution to the bottom-line of any organisation; be it public or private, which is often infinitesimal compared to the quantum of his total contribution to the national effort.

    When it is realised that workers depend on their salaries for sustenance and for taking care of their extended families and discharging their obligations to the larger society, one begins to understand the crisis which the withholding of these from the worker portends not only directly for the worker and his immediate dependants but for the society at large. A worker’s salary is his lifeline. As a lifeline, it ought not to be treated with carelessness or any form of irresponsibility as that would amount to either suspending the lives of some people or actually destroying them outright.

    I hold the opinion that when a worker is denied his salary, he becomes stripped of his humanity as he becomes castrated of the capacity to discharge his social obligations and carry out responsible and dignified activities within the society. This is traumatic and humans ought not to be allowed to go through this experience in a modern society especially in a democracy.

    We hold therefore that any organisation or employer for that matter, which includes various governments at different levels, that intentionally withholds salaries from her workers stands condemnable for subjecting fellow human beings to sub-normal conditions. The persons or group involved ought to be held in contempt of all civilised societies and ostracised from public discourses and conversations. It is truly criminal. The Holy Books say so, our Laws and conventions reject it and our social morals seriously frown at it.

    However, in reaching these conclusions, it becomes imperative that we make further inquiries as to why a sane employer could subject her employees to such harrowing conditions. Is it out of sheer wickedness; out of inexplicable carelessness and irresponsibility; out of a degradation of our moral values; out of a loss of focus for the central place the worker occupies in our production chain; out of greed and avarice or perhaps are their objective conditions such as the unavailability of funds or paucity of capacity to meet the salary demands?

    This plank forms the basis for our intervention in this recent national conversation around the huge and accumulating salary arrears which is almost turning into an outrage amongst the citizenry and the various interest groups. Truly, most of these cases in some of the states of the federation cannot be excused under any circumstances especially when we look at the cheeky manner some of the state governors are going about trying to explain this comeuppance against Nigerian workers and Nigeria. And, when we factor in the financial buoyancy of such state governments at the backdrop of the small comparative recurrent expenditure we cannot but question the nature of the conscience of such leaders.

    The case of Osun State under the leadership of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola immediately comes to mind and seems to stand at a cursory look in contrast with the very well-known and publicly stated beliefs of the governor who has always maintained that the welfare of the workers in the state remains top most priority. When you however peel the veneer, one will objectively observe why the salary of workers in the state became unfortunately delayed over these past months.

    His was truly not one of those borne out of irresponsibility, greed and utter neglect of the welfare of others based on the feeling that they are not part of the people in leadership in the state. It was not because public funds were criminally diverted or misapplied for other selfish purposes. It was purely borne out of conditions that are extraneous to his sphere of control and thus the econometrics will call it the intrusion of the X variables or the stochastic variables which as we know cannot be easily handled no matter how clever we are in our planning effort.

    State Osun at creation had peculiar circumstances and we would therefore attribute part of the present salary overhang to a historically generated phenomenon which was unavoidably thrust unto the state at birth. Can we then call it a genealogical defect? No! But one that truly poses a deep challenge and has continued posing challenges to those who have had the opportunity of leading the state and are presently leading it.

    When Osun State was created, a very large percentage of the workforce of the old Oyo State moved with the new State Osun to Osogbo. We would therefore say that while Osun inherited heavy recurrent expenses from the Old Oyo state, it however came away being a new state with smaller portion of the internal capacity for wealth generation. In essence, it had a heavy recurrent expenditure confronting it right at birth with inverse capacity for wealth generation needed to satisfy the inherent expenditure profile. This put the state at birth to a negative balance in its financial standings. This it has struggled with since then and which receipts from the Federation Account has helped in meeting all these while.

    It was the realisation of this financial gap that propelled the present leadership into making a case for accelerated development of the state and to build internal capacities within in order to create multiple streams of revenue for the state and wean it from dependence on the Federation Account for survival. That explains the myriads of projects that dot the major cities of the state which are all geared towards solving this natal challenge.

    These have however created two major challenges. While the financial imbalance makes it imperative that it has to look for externals to augment its position to fund its activities, the drop in its receipts from the Federation Account, of which the state is one of the lowest in Nigeria as a result of the huge drop in international oil prices, further exacerbated the situation and made its finances very precarious, thus unable to meet the expectations of its major stakeholders, especially the workforce.

    His quest to make the state independent of the Federation Account was the second challenge. It meant that huge funds were quickly allocated to capital projects and most of these projects have not been realised when suddenly the national financial crunch struck. While the expenses persisted, the source of augmentation has dried up and the projects that was hoped would catapult the state into a commercially viable destination have not come on stream yet to contribute to the state’s effort; this seems to be the present quagmire which the state seem to have found itself.

    The unpaid salaries was not therefore a creation of the state government but a product of unexpected national financial crisis as a result of not just international price adjustments in crude oil but also deep and systemic corruption that pervaded governance at the federal level under the PDP-led administration of Nigeria for the past 16 years. Osun State’s case must therefore be seen for what it is; a historical and structural problem. It was not internal but externally induced.

    Another example of this debacle is the presence in the state of two state Polytechnics and two Colleges of Education including the State University each making humongous demands on the treasury of the state. I still do not know of how many States in Nigeria with such number of state educational institutions. I also do not think that outside Lagos state in the whole of the South West of Nigeria, there is any other state with the size of workforce which Osun state has. The import of this is dizzying within the context of the revenue capacity of all these states comparatively.

    There is however, a good side to all these for despite these disadvantages, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola has been able to empower the people reducing absolute poverty in the process to the minimum and making the state one of the best states in terms of poverty index in Nigeria. The recent report of the study of all the states in Nigeria as compiled under the MPI shows that while Lagos State has the lowest poverty rate, Osun stands next in rank while Anambra State follows. This is commendable and shows that it is always better to invest in the people as the governor has been able to do in Osun. His good works in the state are beginning to show in diverse areas especially in the psyche of the average Osun citizen. This is truly commendable.

    –Honourable Jimoh, who represents Apapa Constituency II, is the Deputy Majority Leader of the Lagos State House of Assembly.

  • Aregbesola’s battles  with opposition in Osun

    Aregbesola’s battles with opposition in Osun

    WAHEED Lawal, a comrade and known activist in Osun has over two decades of pro-democracy activism in the South-West state. He could go on and on to reel out the nitty-gritty of the various pro-democracy and human rights struggles in the recent history of Nigeria, especially as they were organised in the state.

    “We know when to organise our people to defend their rights and protect democracy and demand for good governance,” says Lawal in a chat with our correspondent during a recent visit to his office on Station Road, Osogbo, Osun State.

    “But in spite of your claim to being a frontline member of the pro-democracy groups in the state, the CSCEO (Coalition of Civil Society for the Emancipation of Osun) appears to have taken the shine off you,” the reporter queried.

    The reporter’s observation seemingly drew Lawal’s anger. Looking straight into the reporter’s eyes, he queried: “Who are the people behind the group you just mentioned? They are nothing but a hired group of misguided youths sponsored to blackmail the government of the day.

    “You media people in Lagos, Ibadan or Abuja or those reading the newspapers may take the noise they make seriously, but the few people that call themselves the coalition have no relevance here because they have never been known to lead any good cause for our people here.

    “Their sudden emergence is attributable to the determination of the opposition elements against the government of the day to ensure the government achieves nothing.”

    The conversation between Lawal and our correspondent took place against the background of incessant allegations against the government of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. At the begining of July this year, the CSCEO began to send press releases to media houses detailing various allegations against the governor.

    Apart from accusing the governor of embarking on too many projects which, in its own conclusion, have led the state into many months of unpaid salaries, the coalition has accused the governor and his party of intolerance, alleging that some of the opponents of the governor have come under attacks in recent times.

    “But that is part of the blackmail. Call a dog a bad name in order to hang it,” said Semiu Okanlawon, spokesman of the Aregbesola government.

    “They make outlandish and outrageous claims and allegations. Why not just ask for one proof of these allegations? For instance, how do you accuse a governor whose works already delivered far outweighs the resources available to him within the same period? How do you see a governor whose initiatives in the areas of employment, security, education infrastructure, poverty reduction and others keep earning him local and international recognitions? Those are the achievements those few bellyaching individuals seek to divert attention away from. But they cannot succeed in that.”

    The group had claimed responsibility for the July 6 protests in Osogbo, the state capital, purportedly in support of a judge in the state, Justice Folahanmi Oloyede, who wrote a petition against the governor and also in solidarity with the unpaid workers of Osun. But the government says the wage crisis in the state, like in many other sates of the federation, has only been turned into an opportunity by the opposition to pillory the Aregbesola government, having failed in all the legally acceptable means to get the mandate of the people of the state.

    The government described the coalition as “a gang of misguided and disgruntled individuals who are just being sponsored by many of those who lost in the August 9, 2014 election in the state.

    “They are no more than errand boys of Iyiola Omisore of PDP, Niyi Owolade of Accord Party and Segun Akinwusi of Social Democratic Party. It is an emergency group put together to give voice to the opposition’s joint battle against this government.

    “All they do is to send out false information in press releases everyday to confuse people and misinform the general public. The last of its release was that there was danger to the life of the petitioner judge, Folahanmi Oloyede,” Okanlawon said.

    In a release signed by its media coordinator, Seun Adeoye, on July 4, the CSCEO, which though was less than one week old, had claimed responsibility for the protests in Osogbo.

    A part of the release had stated: “For your information, CSCEO is just a week old today. We have no allegiance to any political party in opposition to Osun State Government or financiers as being wrongly insinuated by the ruling APC regime. Rather, we are together as men and women previously slumbering but have all been woken up by the realization of the doldrums in which we now find ourselves as a result of the recklessness, cluelessness and wanton disregard for time-tested principles of public management and international best practices of those who we have trusted with our collective destiny in the last four years.”

    But Amitilu Shittu, Executive Director of the Committee for the Defence and Rights of the People, a popular human rights and pro-democracy organisation in Osun, says the group has chosen very wrong reasons to sell itself to the people.

    Shittu said: “If you say you are in opposition here, the people will ask you what you are really out to oppose. This is because opposition must have its logical reason. Do you oppose a government that has provided the kind of infrastructure that Aregbesola has provided in the first four years?

    “Do you oppose a government that has provided infrastructure far higher than the resources of the state can afford? Do you just oppose a government when it keeps getting local and international recognitions for its initiatives?”

    CSCEO’s allegations against the government are legion. Its Chairman, Sulaiman Adeniyi Alimi, said in one of the many press releases sent out by Adeoye that “all the characteristics of a failed state have been manifesting in this state: hunger; poverty; closed hospitals, schools, government offices and courts; internal displacement of persons and failed and abandoned projects from roads to buildings. Jungle justice in the absence of the judiciary, collapse of public utility, insecurity as burglary and petty stealing pervades the land arising from excruciating hunger and lack.

    “This is not about unpaid salaries alone; it is about paucity of managerial skills and high level corruption as exhibited by Aregbesola’s government.”

    Comrade Wale Adebisi of the Ola Oni Centre for Good Governance, directly links the activities of the group to the political opponents of Aregbesola.

    Adebisi said: “It must interest you that this so-called group emerged after Iyiola Omisore, PDP’s defeated governorship candidate, reached his final bus stop over his election petition at the Supreme Court.

    “Before then, there was no group like that. But immediately after the ruling of the Supreme Court which put a final nail on the Coffin of his governorship ambition, they resorted to these illegal means to continue to keep their few followers together as well as attempt to discredit the government.

    “It is a project in the hands of the PDP and other allies to bring down the government, and that forms the basis of all these daily accusations against the governor.”

    Adebisi says the CSCEO has been sending out wrong information about the state to give it a wrong image. “But they can only do that for a while before the whole world sees through their lies,” he said.

    Ademola Yaya, a former Student Union leader and now researcher, who lives in Osogbo, the state capital, in his analysis of the group’s activities, explained that it is merely catching in on the opportunities that media platforms offer to gain attention.

    “Before now, real activism involved deep understanding of the issues at stake. Activism involved commitment and not cash and carry pursuits. More importantly, it is the activities you engage in as a group of people fighting the cause of the people that bring you attention from authorities and the people. Now, an unknown group of people can just hide under one name and send out falsehood and the media give them audience,” Yaya said.

    Asking the media to wake up to its responsibilities, Yaya said it is not enough for media houses to just take press releases from everyone who has access to the internet without adequate verification of the claims they make and the activities they claim to engage in.

    His assertion appeared to corroborate an earlier charge by Comrade Waheed Lawal that most of the claims the so-called coalition sends out should be verified by media houses. “For instance, often times you read about that group claiming to have held press conferences in Osogbo whereas no press conference was held. That is unprofessional and fraudulent,” he said.

    Adeoye, the regular issuer of the press statements containing the allegations against Aregbesola says he is not connected in any way to politicians in the state, yet there are those who insist that he is one journalist who has had more than casual relationship with politicians and still enjoys same with some of the leading opposition figures in the state. As a former correspondent in the state, he was was alleged to have taken a stand against the government of former Governor Bisi Akande; a situation that was said to have endeared him to Akande’s political opponents, including Omisore, the then deputy governor.

    Adeoye later became two-term chairman of the Nigeria Union of Journalists’ Correspondents’ Chapel in Osun and subsequently won election to become the State Chairman of the NUJ. In all these periods, he was said to have openly identified with Omisore and his political allies.

    “Call him a politician and you will not be far from the truth,” says Ibrahim Lawal, a lawyer based in Osogbo, who said he had watched the activities of the group and the involvement of Adeoye.

    “I think he uses his pen to arrange imagined atrocities of the Aregbesola administration with a devious view to raising anxiety and causing confusion. That is what they send out every day in the name of press releases. But the people in this state know the truth. There is no coalition anywhere. It is just a camouflage by Adeniyi Sulaiman and Seun Adeoye.”

    A quick ride through the state capital gives the impression of a peaceful city. While the effect of unpaid workers’ wages appears to have slowed down business, commercial activities in the state capital do not reflect the topsy-turvy pictures that are being painted.

    Bose Ande, an event management consultant in Osogbo says the state remains at peace with itself.

    “If you go by the impressions being created in the minds of news readers, you would think the state is upside down. But that only exists in the imagination of those who are doing that for their own reasons.” She said.

  • Ooni: Aregbesola, Ile-Ife chiefs hold talks

    Ooni: Aregbesola, Ile-Ife chiefs hold talks

    BARRING the unforeseen, the remains of foremost monarch Oba Okunade Sijuwade, the Ooni of Ife, will be flown back home from London, this weekend, The Nation learnt yesterday.

    It was also learnt that Adetokunbo, the eldest son of the royal father, was billed to leave London for Lagos last night.

    The development came on the heels of a visit by members of the Ife Traditional Council to Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola at the Okefia Government House in Osogbo, the state capital.

    For the second day running, the chiefs, led by the Lowa of Ife, High Chief Joseph Ijaodola, dismissed the death of the Ooni as a rumour.

    The passing on of a frontline monarch in the mould of the Ooni is not announced until 30 days after his demise, a source said.

    At the meeting, which lasted for about 10 minutes, was the Council’s Secretary, Chief Adetoye Odewole and high-ranking government officials who hail from the ancient Ile-Ife city.

    Others at the meeting were: the Senator representing Osun East Senatorial District, Babajide Omoworare,who is from Ile-Ife; the former Commissioner for Home Affairs, Culture and Tourism, Alhaji Sikiru Ayedun and the former Special Adviser to the Governor on Youth, Sports and Special Needs, Mr. Biyi Odunlade.

    The arrival of the chiefs at the Government House drew the attention of many, who thought they had come to officially break the news of the Ooni’s death to the governor.

    But the Lowa told the governor that the monarch was alive and kicking.

    Ijaodola, who maintained that the Ooni was hale and hearty, regretted that Oba Sijuwade was often a target of negative publicity.

    He noted that the Ooni had been declared dead many times in the past by the media.

    The high chief said: “We were all shocked when we heard the rumour. If at all such an incident had happened, the traditional council would be the first to know and to break the news to the entire public.

    “Sixteen of us are his chiefs and when he was travelling out, he didn’t look like he was going to die and should that have happened to him, we would have been informed even before anyone would hear about it. We pray that Ooni will live long in good health.”

    Aregbesola, who praised the chiefs for holding the forte in Oba Sijuwade’s absence, prayed for sound health and long life for the monarch.

    The governor and the chiefs later proceeded to another room within the Governor’s Lodge to hold another meeting behind closed doors.

    When reporters attempted to speak with the chiefs after the meetings, they declined comments.

    All was dull yesterday at the Ooni’s palace – unlike Wednesday when crowds of people stormed the palace to confirm the news of the monarch’s deathý.

    Only the palace guards and two policemen manning the gate were immediately visible at the palace.

    When his body is brought back, it will lie inside an ancient building valled Ilegbo – where the beaded crown known as Are is won by the Ooni once every year during the Olojo festival.

    The Are is worn through the back because it is forbiden for the Ooni to see its inside. And when it is worn, the rain must not touch it.

    He will be brought in at night, The Nation learnt, after being flown in through a Chartered air ambulance.

    A source told this newspaper that his remains will be taken into the Ilegbo through a special door meant for that purpose. The door is beside the Ife museum and is facing Iletimi.

    “It had to be broken when Oba Adesoji Aderemi died because it had been closed for 50 years. In his case, it has been closed for 35 years,” said the source.

    Once his body lies there, only men will be allowed in and they have to be fortified because he is considered a deity.

  • ‘Aregbesola, pride of Ijesa’

    ‘Aregbesola, pride of Ijesa’

    The Ijesa Society, an elite society representing Ijesa sons and daughters, has described Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola as a pride to the Yoruba nation.

    The society’s president, Tunde Aluko, said Aregbesola is a torch bearer, who has represented Ijeshaland well.

    He said it was the duty of all Ijesa and Osun indigenes to support the administration.

    Aluko added that contrary to wrong impressions created by cynics, the governor’s passion for rapid development informed the level of financial commitment to various projects across the state, without jettisoning workers’ welfare.

    He hoped that the financial challenges confronting the state would soon be over, adding that the governor is creating a legacy that would outlive him .

    The governor described the visit as “huge and significant at a time some people were sponsored to rubbish our achievements”.

    “This is an elite association which is acknowledging our government as having performed significantly,” Aregbesola said.

    He reiterated his displeasure about the salary situation, adding that the challenge would soon be over.