Tag: AREGBESOLA

  • ‘Aregbesola’s critics are ignorant’

    ‘Aregbesola’s critics are ignorant’

    Ayo Akinola is the Coordinator of Osun Concerns Group, a group of professionals creating awareness on the political and social activities in the state. In this interview with our correspondent, SOJI ADENIYI, he notes that Governor Rauf Aregbesola is the most patriotic leader the state has had in recent times. He is also of the opinion that the governor is highly misunderstood, deliberately so by the opposition.

    You have been an avid supporter of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola since the campaign that brought him into office for the second term. Why is this so?

    I have said it in different fora that this is the very first time in the recent past that we are having a semblance of good governance since the creation of Osun. Baba (Bisi) Akande set the ball rolling for a prosperous Osun but was hated for taking the bull by the horn as they often say. You know, people hate honest people. They will prefer those who will deceive them using cosmetic hand-out, cash here and there, patronages here and there. The then opposition propaganda machinery was very rife, coupled with the then federal might; the man was not allowed to finish what he started.

    That was the beginning of the sorrow we are witnessing today in Osun. All what Baba did was overturned, to create a false Eldorado. That is what Ogbeni met on the ground and was managing to ameliorate. If this man was governing a more prosperous state like Lagos, he would have turned the state into a mini New York. He is a manager per excellence. Even as commissioner in Lagos, see what he did. Let me tell you this: all the criticisms on Ogbeni you see daily inside the newspapers and in the social media are handiworks of the opposition. They criticize him because they are too lazy to dig deep and appreciate the enormous tasks ahead. And it is deliberate. They want to discredit him for them to return to power, which is impossible. Their time is gone for good and forever. They will soon be tired. See what is happening in Lagos. They have been criticizing and the more they do, the more they lose because they lack credibility. This is because our people in Osun and Lagos are no fools.

    To come to your question, some of us from Osun who live in Lagos and witness the rapid development in Osun cannot just sit down and watch them retake our state. We worked underground in 2011 when he was robbed of the seat. I left my home and job in Lagos and relocated to my Irewole Local Government, mobilised the locals and made effective use of the media and, thankfully, he won. But the PDP machinery will not allow it. I have said it in an article published in some dailies that great leaders are made great by horrible circumstances. This man will not let go. Vintage Ijesa man; he fought through the courts and some of us from Osun were almost saying this man should forget the mandate and go into another election, which was fast approaching. That is one lesson I took from him: fight your fight to the last. He did and his mandate was restored.

    Within the short span of time, we noticed rapid infrastructural development and deliberate effort at raising human development. He was managing the resources like a private concern; the same way Papa Awolowo managed the economy of the Western Region, which pushed the region to the foremost position in everything: having the first television station in the whole of West Africa, the Liberty Stadium as well as the Cocoa House in Ibadan. You can imagine the kind of criticism the then opposition would be heaping at him then, for having foresight, the same way Ogbeni is today being vilified as wasteful.  Foresight is the difference. The opposition in Osun lacks it. The good thing is that our people are more enlightened than them. Some may be illiterate but they know good governance when they see one. These are the reasons why we supported him during the elections of 2014 and even now.

    But the current travails of Osun workers are dire…

    This is another annoying thing promoted by the faceless opposition. They are cowards, if not they should come out under the banner of their party with the allegations instead of dividing our loyal workers. A good opposition is never afraid to do so. When the APC was in the opposition, they talked under the banner of their party; they were not instigating the people. I think it is evil, if you ask me. Now, ask yourself or ask them, is Osun the only state in Nigeria owing its workers? Most of the states owing are or were ruled by the PDP. As at the last count, we have about 24 states, including the federal government under PDP owing workers.

    Even most of the states whose revenues triple that of Osun, and some littoral states owe. So, what are we saying? The Ondo state workers are threatening to down tools and nobody is shouting. Ondo is a littoral state that earns stupendous from the commonwealth, and nobody is shouting (Olusegun) Mimiko. Is it because Ondo is governed by the PDP, their party? So, with that alone, you can know where the noise is traceable to. I’ve always said it that Ogbeni is the whipping boy because they are envious of him and his achievements. Can’t they at least check the books and the records which are in the public domain? I’ve taken pains to go through it and put in the media, so also has unbiased columnists like Professor Niyi Akinnaso. These are people you cannot buy, even with all the wealth of Nigeria. They have all taken time to analyze the situation and given kudos to Ogbeni. And let me also say it that it is a miracle how Ogbeni has been able to steer the wheel of the state. That shows ingenuity and we must give it to him.

    Are you aware that this situation was caused by three major reasons: the daily theft of crude, the fall in crude price and the recently exposed non remittance of revenue to joint account due to corruption? At least former President Jonathan should have control over the first and the third. What did he do? So, it is a complex, yet simple situation for a determined leader. Thank God for the change we now have.

    What is the lasting solution to this problem?

    Thank God we are in a new dispensation. A lot of things really have to change, if the change we voted for will have impact on our lives. And we will need everybody’s support in this regard. The structure of the country itself needs some change. We’ve been operating our federal structure as if we are in a unitary government. How can you, for example, explain a situation where the federal government will dictate to a state how much that state should pay its workers, without corresponding consideration on how such wage will be paid? Is that not absurd? What is the concern of the centre on that and so many other things? State A may decide to pay minimum wage of N30,000 based on its revenue base and other reasons, while another state B, may not be able to pay more than N15,000. If a worker decides that he is not satisfied with State B, he is free to migrate to seek employment in state A. Don’t forget that state A that is paying N30,000 is taking into consideration, probably, high cost of living in its state, which may not be as high in state B. So, a blanket wage increase for all states is an anomaly, as resources are not the same.

    Second solution is that it is high time we started discouraging our citizens from depending on government or paid job for existence. We need to educate our youths that self employment, creative thinking is the new order. Gone are the days of yore when you finish school and get government or paid employment and your financial problem is solved, that is what we used to call job security. No more job security. It is a world-wide change. The only job security there is now is self employment. Nobody can sack you from the job you create. Look at the Pensioners. Those who receive theirs as at when due, is it enough for their upkeep? And the only way you can build wealth and help your state or country is to set up cottage industry, where you will employ people, take them out of employment and contribute in tax to your state. We must all tell our youths the home truth, not to rely on government or paid employment for our sustenance. It’s not really sustainable in the long run. It is like a rat race. Nobody becomes wealthy by relying on paid employment. This is what our politicians are afraid to tell our youths. And this is what Aregbesola has been tactically preaching through his various capacity building programmes.

    Let me tell you this: if a university graduate starts a barbing saloon, for example. He’s going to go places because of the education he’s received at the university. Kings and heads of states will invite him. Look at educated youths who are into photography, decoration, fashion, music and and comedy, etc. Imagine the trails they are blazing. These are the things we should be telling our youths instead of encouraging them into the civil services which are already bloated. There is so much redundancy in our civil service, and you can’t believe the level to which this has grown. You will find six staffs doing the job of only one person. So, there’s need for restructuring in the various states and federal bureaucracies. There’s need for very lean civil service, maybe just 20 per cent of what we currently have. People say, if you downsize, won’t there be social vices? I disagree. Look at what they do in the military. Every year, the military downsizes. But what they do prior to that is to create a skill in tailoring, barbing, catering etc for the would-be retirees and then pay their terminal benefits with which they set up. They even live better post-retirement than when they were in salaried employment. States and the federal governments should start to look into that direction. States must start to emulate that by downsizing every year and keep their staff strength at the barest minimum, effective and efficient. Deploying that bogus percentage of revenue to recurrent is bad.

     

  • I’ll not be distracted, says Aregbesola

    I’ll not be distracted, says Aregbesola

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has said his administration remains focused in its commitment to improving the state’s fortune, despite the calculated efforts of adversaries.

    The governor spoke at a parley with the Association of Advertising Agencies of Nigeria (AAAN) on its 42nd Annual General Meeting at the Government House in Osogbo, the state capital.

    He said at this critical stage of the nation’s economy, all hands must be on deck to ensure that the “ailing economy” is healed, rather than making a governor the scapegoat.

    Aregbesola said it was unfortunate that the country  found itself in the present economic doldrums, adding that the situation must be seen by all as a national problem.

    He vowed not to be distracted in the provision of social welfare programmes for the people, adding that Osun has the highest development index in the country, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

    The governor said Osun was next to Niger in the poverty reduction index released by the National Bureau of Statistics in 2012.

    He said, “As horrifying as the picture our opposition has been painting to you of our people, I am sure that you would have noticed that all what they are saying do not reflect in the faces of the accommodating people you see around.

    “You will have also noticed that Osun is one of the best places to be in Nigeria. Osun had the highest development index in Nigeria in 2012.

    “The Bureau equally said we are next to Niger in the poverty reduction index and we would have been above Niger because the large chunk of Niger’s rating was influenced because of its boundary with Abuja and others.

    “Social welfare programmes, such as our Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES), have impacted 40,000 youths so much that the World Bank is ready to partner any state on our model.

    “We have also embarked on feeding our school children through OMEAL programme. The programme has increased school enrolment, it has also employed 3,009 women.”

    Aregbesola described detractors who condemned the state’s airport project as ill-informed, saying on the strength of the historical relevance of the project alone, it should have earned his administration kudos.

    He regretted that critics merely looked at the surface without looking at the abundant opportunities that lay ahead for the state.

    “To those who condemn our airport initiative, I want to tell them that the history of aviation in this part of the world started from Ido-Osun. And the building of the airport did not even start with our administration but the one before us.

    “With this historical issue, it is up to us to continue with what the previous administration started.

    “It will not take time to develop the airport to an aircraft maintenance hub in Africa. We only have just three aircraft maintenance hangers in Africa. We need not go to Europe or America to get our aircraft maintained.

    “All we need to attract that business is to develop the facility that we have in Ido-Osun. We have signed an agreement with two firms, knowing that aircraft maintenance business is a money- spinning investment.”

    AAAN President Kelechi Nwosu praised the governor for patronising only qualified advertising agencies.

    He said the state was a nice place to be in with its accommodating people and tourism sites.

  • Why ‘Progressive Left’ fights for Aregbesola

    Why ‘Progressive Left’ fights for Aregbesola

    Comrades of Osun Progressive Left organised a solidarity rally to show support for the government of the state. Adetutu Audu, who had an encounter with the convener of the rally, Comrade Wale Adebisi, reports

    In reaction to the alleged crisis in Osun State and the recent call for the impeachment of Governor Rauf Aregbesola by some of his critics, some human rights groups under the auspices of the Osun Progressive Left have organised a rally to drum support for the government which they claim is pro-people.

    Comrade Wale Adebisi, the convener of the group, notes that the rally is to show support for a government constituted by a popular mandate through victory upheld in the election that has been said to be free and fair in all the tribunals up to the Supreme Court. The rally is to show that the man is transparent, still credible and has the interest of the labour at heart. At no point has he ever been anti-labour in his policies. He has been always ensuring that the interest of labour is uppermost in his government. For instance, since he came into power in 2010, for the first time in the history of the state, he gave the workers 10 percent bonus on the basic salary. In the second year, he gave 25 percent and third year he gave 50 percent. Then last year December, immediately after the election, he gave 100 percent. This has never happened in the history of the state.

    But is it not the same labour that is protesting against the government? Adebisi explains, ‘the governor is a product of popular struggle, labour struggle and he has worked with trade unions; there is no way he would be anti-labour.  Governor Aregbesola is not being fought by the labour, the anti-Aregbesola rally was sponsored by the opposition, led by some hoodlums who claimed to be pensioners’.     The governor, according to him, has increased the pensioners’ money since 2010, so the people can’t say he is anti-labour. ‘The genuine pensioners have never agitated; they want to hide under the issue of non-payment of salary to cause anarchy in the state. We know those who are behind them. The state of Osun is not the only state that owes salaries; 24 other states owe.  Non-payment of salaries is a national calamity as a result of the past administration’s mismanagement of the nation’s resources’ he said.

    So why is Osun State singled out? “It is because of the vibrancy of the governor and the fact that the state is the political heartbeat of the South-West. With the kind of politics Governor Aregbesola is playing, the PDP is going into extinction in the state and that is why the opposition is hiding under non-payment of salaries to foment trouble.  The Centre for Human Rights and Social Justice under the platform in which they organised the rally is not in existence in Osun State. We have the list of the registered coalition groups in the state. They don’t even have a secretariat,” Adebisi said, adding, “the workers in the state have a very good working relationship with the government except for the drop in the allocation, which has adversely affected the state. Let me give you the rundown of the allocation as at today.  In January 2015, N 1.25b was released. The original allocation for the state was N4.6b, now it has dropped since 2013 but because of the ingenuity of the governor, he warehoused the excess crude oil accrued to him; that was why the issue was not exposed last year. But in one of his public discourse, he had mentioned and raised an alarm that the federal government might not be able to sustain the state because there is crisis in the oil market in the world.  In February, it was N1.12b, in March it was N624m,in April N466m,in May N2.2m. If we want to look at the payment of salaries, the payment of salaries is supposed to be based on the allocation; you cannot pay outside the allocation. What the state owes the workers is six months by allocation. One has been paid last week, remaining five. By allocation, it is months by calendar are 7months. Same thing pensioners by allocation it is seven to five months, by  calendar it is eight months. Local government by allocation is four months by calendar it is five months and you cannot pay beyond your allocation. The shortage is the world oil market; for instance, Nigeria by OPEC’s quota is supposed to be producing 2.6m barrel per day. But on record, it is 2.1 and former Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala,   told us about the theft of 400,000 oil barrel per day. The whole issue is now unfolding; in NNPC, several monies did not enter into NNPC accounts.  All the 36 states are affected except Lagos because of her IGR base.

    Many have argued that Aregbesola should have alternative like IGR instead of depending on the allocation from the federal government. The convener of Osun Progressive Left however differs on this. According to him, there is no true federalism in Nigeria so, what we should be talking about is the management and the lopsidedness in the sharing.

    ‘We are talking about statutory allocation to the states. People should not look at it as if the states are begging. What is federal government doing, how many local government is the federal government taking care of? All the states of the federation own the money. The only thing we should talk about is the management and the lopsidedness in the sharing. There is no true federalism in Nigeria and that is why 56.68 percent goes to the federal government and 22.62 to the state and  the rest to 774 local government. What goes to the federal government is too much. People should not say the state should depend on IGR. The federal government does not have the right to hold money and give out as it pleases. The sharing is not regular. The states are even forced to embark on capital projects because of the negligence on the part of the federal government in the states.’

     He revealed that Osun State is being owed N34b by the federal government, which is enough to pay the workers if the money is released. He also adds that when Aregbesola came to power in 2010, the Internally Generated Revenue he met was N3.6b per year. But it is now N10b apart from the money in Omoluabi Savings and Loans which it cannot touch because it is for the generations yet unborn in the state.

    The governor, he disclosed, embarked on people-friendly projects, among which are the Agba Osun.’ To take care of the  elderly people in the state with N10,000 per month; O-meal  for  252,000 students  and food vendors are hired and they were given soft loans for empowerment; O-Yes is also another empowerment scheme. That is why we have peace in the state because the youths are engaged. The state is purely an agrarian society, agriculture is critical to the survival of o-meal because the agricultural products are also serving the o-meal programme,’ he pointed out.

    But there is argument in some quarters that the governor should put his helicopter for sale to augment salary payment, Comrade Adebisi in defence said the chopper is used to monitor crime in the state, which has since reduced drastically since the governor assumed office.

    ‘How much is the helicopter we are talking about? He queried.   People are just frivolous. And this is just pure politics. Individuals own private jets in Nigeria. The reason for the chopper is because of the security situation in the state. When he came into power, no banks opened in the state between 2008 and 2009. The armed robbery operation in the state was guerrilla like. Armed robbers operated in broad daylight with explosives and grenades. The chopper can monitor from the area view. Osun is the only state in Nigeria that has 25 armoured tanks. Since he came into power, the state has known peace.

    He found a note of warning to the opposition that Governor Aregbesola is a product of popular struggle, and that nobody should usurp power through the back door as the opposition is doing. ‘They will be charged for treason because they want to take power by force. We therefore advised that the police should be on the lookout for those promoting anarchy in the state. They are vilifying the governor because of his political sagacity and ingenuity in governance. Governor Aregbesola remains a credible and transparent man who is also a lover of his people.

  • Osun brand is too strong for politicians to destroy—Aregbesola

    Osun brand is too strong for politicians to destroy—Aregbesola

    Osun State governor, Rauf Aregbesola, on Friday, said, the strength of the branding of the state under his administration would make it to  remain investor-friendly and capable of attracting the best of minds for positive engagements.

    He made the remark after declaring open the 42nd edition of the Annual General Meeting of the Advertising Agencies of Nigeria which commenced in Osogbo, the state capital on Friday.

    He was represented by his Chief of Staff, Alhaji Gboyega Oyetola.

     He said: “You have come to Osun and you can see for yourselves whether the impression of a famine-gripped state painted by our political opponents is reflected on the faces of the accommodating people you see around.

    “The economic challenge of Nigeria must be seen for what it is:  a general crisis for which a state or a governor cannot be picked as the scapegoat. But unfortunately, that has remained the agenda of those who feel it is possible to destroy the efforts that had in recent years, advertised our state as a pride of the Black race.

    “ With construction of r‎oads and other infrastructure put in place by the government during the first term, the state has been able to attract global attention with globally recognised awards for its noble initiatives such as Opon imon, Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES) among others.

    The Bureau of Communication and Strategy in the office of the governor, has however told the former Head of Service Mr. Segun Akinwusi, to exhibit some degree of decency and honesty in the figures he advertises on revenues accruing to the state and stop deliberate falsehood against the government.

    The Bureau regretted that “Akinwusi has pitiably  turned himself to a laughing stock in the estimation of right-thinking people when he accused the governor of receiving N862 billion and less than two months after, came down to N317 billion.”

    Reacting to the various allegations leveled against the state government  at a meeting organised by Senator Iyiola Omisore, Niyi Owolade, and ,   and Akinwusi the defeated candidates of the PDP, Accord Party and Social Democratic Party respectively in Ile Ife on Thursday, the bureau said it amounted to hypocrisy, ignorance and sheer mischief for the organizers to continue to advertise outrageous figures as revenues to the state.

    “ What is most baffling and shameful is that the figures which these individuals willfully advertise either as financial resources that accrued to Osun within four years or the debt portfolio of the state are facts that in the public domain.

    “Where then do they derive this strong commitment to falsehood? At their conspiratorial meeting in Ife on Thursday which they prefer to call a summit, they all said again that the state got N317 billion in four years, about N111 billion off the mark of what the state got.

    The Bureau in its statement signed by the Director, Semiu Okanlawon, said, “Elder Segun Akinwusi is inconsistent and that is highly nauseating con_sidering the fact that he rose to become the Head of Service of Osun. In May, he raised a false alarm through his party, SDP that Aregbesola should account for N846bn he had collected as allocation in the last four years.

    “The same Akinwusi yesterday said Aregbesola had collected N317 in four years. Which one does he want Nigerians to believe?

    “The facts that are verifiable state that Osun got from the federation account N177 billion and when you add the unprecedented about N27 billion as internally generated revenue in the same period to that, you get the N204.

    ”The Bureau said for the opposition to continue to deceive Nigerians that Osun is indebted to the tune of N400 billion is the height of irresponsibility.

    “Recently, the Debt Management Office under the presidency came out to put the total debts of states at over N600 billion. How then do they explain the allegation that Osun alone is indebted to the tune of N400 billion?

    “If Osun is just one of the 36 states of the federation, how then can the mischief makers justify it of  being responsible for N400 billion out of this?

    “Even if all the banks in Nigeria come together, can they afford to give just one state, loans to the tune of this magnitude?”

     “Workers in Osun are aggrieved over the delay in getting their salaries which they were not used to because Aregbesola insisted all must be paid by 25th or 26th of every month. That was the culture before the economic storm affecting Nigeria set in.

    “No government would ever be happy seeing itself owing workers and this much, the workers themselves know. Clearly, it is the wish of those who have seen this unfortunate development for which the government is struggling hard to put behind it that this never ends. If these selfish individuals are working in the interests of Osun and the workers, they would be prepared to join hands with the government in finding solutions and not see it as opportunity to bring it down.”

  • Aregbesola’s transient challenge

    Aregbesola’s transient challenge

    In a developing economy like ours, the government is the highest employer of labour and most workers depend on their salaries to meet basic needs. The failure of any appendage of the government to pay earned wages will therefore attract condemnation and protests. This monolithic economy of ours which depends on oil is prone to vagaries of international economic politics. Coupled with the inability of most state governments to generate adequate revenue internally, the average Nigerian worker is exposed to the vulnerability of deficit budgeting. That the state of Osun owes workers’ salaries is in no way an implication that its governor lacks any sensitivity to the plight of its workers; neither is it a result of financial recklessness or impropriety of any kind. Far from it, his zeal to deliver the dividends of democracy to the people of Osun is almost fanatical.

    Five years ago, I was at a gathering in Ede, Osun State when the skies opened up unexpectedly and it began to rain. Perhaps the man responsible for the presence of thousands, now soaked, should have been embarrassed by the increasing intensity of the downpour. Instead, he burst into a Yoruba song: “We are not afraid of the rain; after all, we are the owners of the clothes we wore.” The crowd responded in glee, matching the power of the rain with the enthusiasm of their singing and dancing. The audacity of Rauf Aregbesola, Governor of the State of Osun, was as infectious then, as it is today.

    Governor Aregbesola, Ogbeni to his admirers, may be diminutive in stature, but he is gigantic in vision, combining in one incarnation, the virtues of Oranmiyan and Awolowo. Deeply religious to the point where early naysayers painted him a bigot, Ogbeni has led by example, disavowing frivolities of any kind. The frequent misadventures and questionable acquisitions of some of his counterparts in neighbouring states are not found in him. Full disclosure: My bond with Ogbeni is a special one because we share some things in common. Aside from party affiliation and a strong belief in progressive governance, I have also been pleasantly surprised to find that though a devout Muslim, he acknowledges rather than avoids my Christian faith, calling me a Nazarite, because we both avoid alcohol and tobacco, wear white and keep beards. It is a mutual recognition that those who truly seek a Good God will be made better by Him, even if they do not agree completely.

    The quest for the greater good also comes alive in Ogbeni’s approach to governing. The reason we were happily drenched that day was the launch of the OYES programme, ambitious in scope but absolutely necessary towards the empowerment and engagement of the state’s unemployed youth. Where others have only aspired toward “stomach infrastructure,” Ogbeni has made serious minded investments in education and capital projects since the beginning of his tenure, even as Osun State received less than its fair share of allocations from the Jonathan-led Federal Government. From “Opon Imo” to the aforementioned OYES, interfaith projects, construction and maintenance of roads and much more, his time as governor has been marked by a continuous stream of local, national and international accolades and recognition of his achievements and tireless efforts on behalf of the state of Osun.

    Yet, there is no salve for money owed or song to ease the pain of unpaid wages. The employees of the State of Osun deserve to be compensated for their outstanding service. But this financial downpour of misfortune is not unique to their state and if any blame is to be laid at Ogbeni’s feet, it should be for the unfortunate timing in making the kind of far-reaching, but necessary infrastructural investments his predecessors failed to execute due to short-sightedness.

    Small solace it may be right now, my hope is that the people of the state of Osun can find the strength to stay the course, understanding that tomorrow’s rewards will surpass today’s pain because of these sacrifices. Those who have been affected by this crisis, while justified in raising their voice in protest, would be wise to not give in to the will and machinations of political opportunists, who care more about pulling Ogbeni down than lifting up the people of Osun. Surely, we know better than to listen to the accusations from voices that sprang up today, but were silent during the massive erosion of this country’s wealth under past administrations. We also do not have to look very far to see the type of “leadership” that emerges when progress of this calibre is truncated.

    It is my earnest desire that the people instead support Ogbeni Rauf’s continual efforts to boost the state’s internally generated revenue in a way that places no undue tax burden on the working poor. While the monthly intake has grown five times from N300 Million to N1.5 billion per month under his watch, the yield of the capital investments made in the last five years will bring Osun even further along towards self-sustainability, insulated from fluctuations in oil prices and the politics of federal allocations. The governor’s recent assurances of a better future beyond this temporary setback are more than just empty words; they carry weight because of his confidence in the groundwork of wholehearted actions that preceded them, actions few other Nigerian governors can lay claim to.

    Like it did five years ago, it is raining again in Ede; indeed it is raining all over Nigeria, but the people own the government they have. I am confident that under the leadership of people like Governor Aregbesola, President Buhari, and others of similar disposition, men and women of integrity and action who believe in a government that works for all and not just for the elected, we will all rejoice once more, to the glory of God.

    • Senator Boroface writes from Abuja
  • Chief Imam calls for support for Aregbesola

    Chief Imam calls for support for Aregbesola

    The Chief Imam of Osogbo,  Sheik Musa Animasaun, yesterday told a huge congregation of Muslims to support  Governor of Osun State, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, in his efforts to transform the state into a model for other states in the country.

    He said the governor could not be accused of being the architect of the delay in the payment of salaries in the state.

    The cleric, at the prayers  marking the end of the Ramadan fasting at the state capital, said those focusing on Aregbesola were only dissipating energy as he said “there is a malady afflicting the national economy for which Nigerians must seek God’s favour and intervention”.

    He commended Governor Aregbesola for the development he had brought to Osun, admonishing him to always seek God’s guidance.

    The Chief Imam urged the people of the state to be prayerful and put their trust in God.

    The cleric lauded the government for the truce reached with workers and the commencement of the payment of   salaries.

    He said: “All of us should put our trust in God and desist from sins because  sins brought us to where we are in the country today.  Everything that is happening is the wrath of God. We need to turn to God to heal our land.

    “We are all witnesses to the transformation that Aregbesola has brought to the state.  No government in the history of the state did what he has done.”

  • Aregbesola: moving Osun from  mediaeval dependency to modernity

    Aregbesola: moving Osun from mediaeval dependency to modernity

    The past few months have witnessed critical and growing press attention to the crippling insolvency of twenty three of Nigeria’s thirty six state Governments, a situation that became public knowledge after several states had failed to pay workers’ salaries for upwards of six months.

    This distress has not discriminated against the States in any discernible pattern- by political party affiliation, geographical location, ethnic composition, etc, the usual culprit factors that political commentators often latch on to. Financial distress as grave as this was last experienced thirty two years ago (in 1983) during the reckless Second Republic government led by President ShehuShagari when  most of the then nineteen states of the Nigerian Federation ran their economies aground by depleting the dwindling federal allocations that all had depended on without exception.

    The reasons for the 1983 salary crises at the State and Federal levels were: drastic fall in the price of Crude Oil in the international market, profligate spending, and white-elephant projects executed with little attention to financial and schedule discipline, and outright theft of state resources. The states, then as now, were heavily dependent on the tempting but unreliable income from Nigeria’s Oil export, which experiences cyclical glut and price fluctuations with the boom-and-bust cycle of the world economy, a systemic problem only occasionally ameliorated when the shock of war jacks up Oil prices in key oil supply markets.

    Ironically, it was MuhammaduBuhari, (President of the APC-led Federal Government), then a serving army General who led the military coup that swept away the foundering democratic regime of President ShehuShagari on the 31st of December, 1983, to the relief of many Nigerians who were tired of the politicians and economic difficulties they plunged the country into. We have returned to that terrible past of insolvency and economic stagnation, with some distinct differences.

    The country’s population has more than doubled from 68million people in 1985 to 174million today, while the number of states has also almost doubled as if on a cue. Nigeria is now unique in being perhaps the most over-governed but under-administered territories in the world where most of the wealth is arrested from circulation or cornered by officials past and present, leaving over 50% of the sprawling country’s population illiterate, and over 70% of the population in grinding poverty and governments inefficient and the society in decay. And the country has not managed to construct a viable economic foundation since the 1982/83 crash.

    Of the twenty three State governments affected by the salary crisis, Governor Aregbesola’s administration has been singled out for a most severe attention about which Ogbeni (as he is fondly called), has agonised in public and in private. The crisis and its virtual grounding of the State’s economy and the resulting harsh situation have left an overwhelming number of government pay-dependent families without alternative income in serious financial and emotional distress.

    The strong feelings brought on by months of waiting for salaries the payment of which government workers had long taken for granted has soured the governor’s once excellent relations with labour in the state; however, the generality of the citizenry has shown understanding for Aregbesola’s predicament and still support him. All that will help now is rescue by every means available.

    No argument, no matter how logical, will assuage the strong feelings of workers who find themselves stranded and helpless ‘for no fault of theirs’.  The Federal government’s immediate financial rescue can forestallturning workers’ frustration into open antagonism, the possibility ofsuch an outcome is being constantly explored by the OsunPDP‘s warlord politicians who are stoking civil conflict with all manners of provocative publications and discredited allegations.

    The situation has created a feasting frenzy for faceless hack writers, paid jobbers and ‘critics’ of Governor Aregbesola who churn out damning commentary based on inaccurate data and ill-educated, and coloured observations about the State government’s policies and thestate of things in OsunAregbesola’s often brilliant and biting insights on the political-economic state of Nigeria and his hard extempore jibes unsettle many without a doubt, and they want a pound of his flesh.

    Some of the anti-Aregbe opinionates may benefit from informed responses so that the reading public is not misled by the critics’ biases. We are in a season when contract writers resurrect once dead journals for tempting profits in the spirit of capitalistic amoral adventurism, when the sworn enemies of labour and do-gooders primed in the art of exploitation of the disadvantaged swear by mammon that they love the Osun government workers more than Ogbeni, because of this salary palaver.

    One reason that Aregbe has been singled out for this hash treatment is because he is seen as the arrow-head of the ‘APC Change Movement’. I ask the critics to not forget thatthe salary payment default contagion actually involves twenty three state governments or nearly two-thirds of the States, as well as the Federal Government of Nigeria, and more States will likely follow unless some drastic measures are taken now to increase available resources, expand government’s revenue base, cut wages, or lay-off workers, or do all four. I shall argue here for the option of shifting or transfer of labour to sectors where they are most needed.

    All of these four actions may in fact be needed to get States out of the logjam. It should be borne in mind that Nigeria is a free enterprise mixed economy, and no question about it, at some point we must take that bitter pill.

    The wide-spread nature of the salary default tells us that something fundamental is amiss; it is not enough to make a bogeyman out ofAregbesola, whose strength of character and uncommon political vision and coherent theory of governance are only matched in this dispensation by another Comrade, Adams Oshiomhole, Governor of Edo, with some distinct differences. This is not a coincidence but the result of their backgrounds, deep self-learning and immersion for decades in practical matters of delivering public goods. This is what informs the level of social consciousness and astuteness noticeable in their governance styles and their ability to mobilize public opinion with ease. These are the formidable huddles that desperadoes who want to bring Aregbe down face. It is an aberration to pretend to govern a people without passion or a coherent theory. (I shall come back to this point later).

    Causes of the 2015 salary default backlog in Osun

    •Drastic drop in funds allocated to States from the FederationAccounts

    •Direct impact of the 2011 across-the-board pay rise for Government workers

    •Large investments in economic infrastructure and social services

    •Low IGR

    •Effects of the brutal 2014 Osun Governorship electioneering

    All of the above factors have combined to create the backlog of unpaid salaries and the general lack of development in most of Nigeria’s states. Aregbesola, easily one of the most communicative State governors in Nigeria, has taken the pain to explain over and over again that the seeds of today’s problem were sown by the astronomic rise in the wage bill due to the compulsory implementation of the new minimum wage set by the federal government in January, 2011, barely two months intohis administration. Osun government employees had insisted at the time on an across-the-board wage increase to reflect the new N18, 000minimum wage, and to drive home their demand theyembarked on a crippling strike action that lasted for several months.

    The new government of Aregbesola, compelled to accede to the across-the-board pay rise had lamented that the increase meant that its financial burden rose by three hundred per cent (from N1.4billion to N3.5billion per month!) and that this was unsustainable and would have consequences sometime in the future for the state’s development. But nobody listened or took him seriously.

    Late in 2013, there was a sudden drop in funds allocated to the State from Federation Accounts beyond all rational expectationswith the situation becoming worse in 2014.But Nigeria earned $92.752b as excess crude revenue from January to December 2014 (from crude oil sold above the Government’s budget reference price of $65 per barrel),a contradiction of the reason for the drop in allocation.

    The cut in allocation made it virtually impossible to fund or sustain government’s commitments. Another factor is the relatively low level of internally generated revenue of the State government, which had actually doubled from N600million in 2011 to N1.2billion per month in 2013. It should be noted that Aregbesola was elected with a mandate to implement major social and infrastructural change in the State as enunciated his green book- “My Pact with the People of Osun” and was duty-bound to fulfill this mandate in best interest of the State.

    Aregbesola’s Osun development blueprint and strategy

    The Aregbesola administration came in with an Agenda styled the Six-Point Integral Action Plan designed to banish poverty, unemployment and hunger, and restore communal peace and progress and finally to promote functional education as the bases upon which to build a thriving society in Osun.

    Bearing in mind that without a strategic initiative to increase its limited IGR,Osun would remain a rural backwater state continuing along the well-worn path of arrested its development, government embarked on a major change project. This involved new infrastructure at various levels, agricultural development and provision of social services and employment generation as the means of building a viable alternative economic base in Osun in place of going cap in hand to Abuja every month.

    With the understanding that providing an attractive environment and the right tools for human capacity development will aid productivity improvement, the Aregbesola government pursued key projects and programmeswith three to five-year horizons toward this end.

    These have laid astrong foundation for sustainable development in Osun, a notable departurefrom the entrenched preference for short-term goals and high recurrent expenditure of the past.Of course, major infrastructure projects absorb a lot of finance and they do not yield direct revenue to the state’s coffers in the short term, but they impact economic activities far into the future by attracting investors to the state.

    A state enjoys a sub-sovereign status as a going concern with longevity, like a nation, and it makes sense to embark on infrastructure development early because inflation is ever on the move, and if one delays, project cost doubles within eight years with inflation at 10% per annum; time makes all the difference.

    The quality of infrastructure and efficiency of the services it renders are the keys to economic development and growth, and through their multiplier and knock-on effects businesses will thrive and government’s tax revenue will grow.

    The bitterly fought August 9th 2014  Osun governorship elections

    Another factor in the financial crisis in the State was the bitterly fought governorship elections and the strains of campaign expenditure in the face of low level state revenue. It was widely reported that PDP in its determination to wrest power by all means from APC in Osun pumped some N15billion into the elections, giving free Kerosene, Rice and cash for votes. Fifteen billion naira is equivalent to five months’ revenue for the State, and this is approximately the amount which had been cut from the state’s federal allocation between January and July in the months preceding the elections! One can imagine the financial demand that a meaningful, if asymmetrical response to this kind of challenge would have imposed on the APC government. The impractical alternative of folding the arms and resigning to fate in the face of the desperate and overawing onslaught by the irresponsible Osun PDP and the PDP Federal Government could not even be contemplated by a seriousAPC government. Ironically, the group of electorates most courted by the PDP during the electioneeringwasgovernment workers and some had gladly lapped up PDP’S inducement largesse – the consequence of which is today’s predicament for all. PDP had believed that it could exploit workers’ grievances to thwartAregbesola’s re-election as was done to Chief BisiAkande’s second-term election bid in 2003. For this reason, the solution to the salary crisis must include a campaign funds reform, eradication of pervasive poverty, abhorring greed and opportunism (andembracing ethical maturity) on the part of the citizenry so as to prevent the corrupt use of money infuture elections.

    To survive,the states must face down their wages overburden

    Governor Aregbesola had argued strongly back in 2011 that salaries could not be uniform across the country in a Federation, since no two states had the same quantum of resources or cost of living.

    He also argued that salaries should not be adjusted across the board in tandem with the new minimum wagesince doing so would increase the gap between the poorest paid and the highest paid, thus eroding the intent of the pay rise and leading the State into insolvency and as well as stalling the its development projects.

    During the emotionally-heated debate on the effects of implementing the new minimum wage by the state, Governor Aregbesola in presenting the difficult choices before the new government and people of the state had made it clear to the Unions that if workers’ emoluments outstripped available revenue, government would have no choice than to retrench workers since it could not borrow perpetually just to pay salaries, whilst neglecting the core reason for having a government.

    It was noted that State’s revenue could not fully augment the new wage bill if there was a shortfall in federal allocation. Thus, assuaging workers’ demands for across-the-board wage rise by spending all of the state’s earnings on emoluments means leaving nothing for the future, and trusting the future to chance,postponing the evil day.

    The governor had also reminded all back then to bear in mind that the Federal allocation to the state was meant for all of the state’s 3.2million residents (now 3.5million), and not the exclusive entitlement of the 40,000 or so State employees and political appointees. This was not a popular position to take at the time, but it was, and still is the plain truth.It was decided instead to work harder to generate more internal revenue for the State, until it could not cope in the months before the August 9th, 2014 governorship elections, and ever since, things have remained difficult.

    the euphoria of better pay for as long as it lasted from 2011 to 2013, but it was not long after that the Federation accounts allocation to Osun dropped dramatically from a high of N5billion (Five billion naira) in 2012, to as low as N400m (Four hundred million naira) per month in April 2015. With this, the salary crisis had become an emergency: workers could no longer be paid, and the banks which had been extending credit to government to bridge the ever-widening gap in its obligations stopped extending credit to the State. This effectively brought all activities, including on-going capital projects in the state to a halt. As things stand now, the State’s entire Federal Allocation is exclusively for the benefit of government and its workers;we are operating an unsustainable welfare state that will sooner anger the excluded 98% of the population who fend for themselves. The States and Federal governments owe collectively close to a trillion naira debts for salaries, pensions, bank charges, contractors’ bills, etc without payment of which their economies will remain in a state of paralysis. The injection of cash from the Public Sector through payment of workers’ wages and contractors’ bills provides disposable income that translates intoincome for businesses, traders, transporters, artisans, food vendors, etc, and tax revenue for government. The absence from circulation of this important cash for over six months is deeply felt in the local economy. The cash –flow of a modern State ought not to be so tied to one risky source; this is not good for the future of labour, government or businesses.

    UNDERLYING REASON FOR STATES’ LOW IGR AND FEDERAL DEPENDENCY STATUS

    The underlying conditions that triggered 2014/2015 salary crisis are a repeat of the conditions leading up to Nigeria’s economic disaster of 1982 because we have not taken to heart the lessons from that era.  Like the federal government, most of the States failed to anticipate and prepare themselves to cope with the scale of the financial down-turn again this time because we found ourselves somewhat insulated from the 2008 financial melt-down in the leading industrial economies. Nigeria’s governments after the First Republic have been propped up with Oil income and government organs have been multiplying like mushrooms in theforest and in effect loss-making ventures where budgets reflect neither true costs nor benefits for the citizens.The inability of Nigeria’s dependent States to generate an impactful level of internal revenue is rooted in the absence of a genuine local economy based on industries that are not tied to Government’s Oil revenue and the importation syndrome. Industry is the biggest source of IGR in a normal developing economy.Nigeria’s so-called neo-liberal macro-economic policy centred on importation of foreign goods (in effect exporting Nigerianjobs abroad), and entrenchment of inefficient municipal services, corruption, etc, are all leading to de-industrialization and ever deeperdependency and underdevelopment. This is the result of Nigeria’s so-called development strategy: import substitution turned to import dependency and trickle-down development. If Nigeria’s fortune is to change for the better, this recession gives us the opportunity to confront the realities of our weak and shallow economy. States’ lack of sizeable internal revenue is an indictment of Nigeria’s lopsided federalism whereby the states are mere adjuncts incapable of making any fundamental changes to macro-economic policy, and this makes both State and Federal Governments weak and vulnerable to manipulation by foreign interests. The states are guilty of fickleness, juvenile dependency behaviour and lack of creativity, intuitive initiative and the discipline to follow through good ideas for the longer term benefit of their people because of bad politics- the right things never get done out of fear of losing an election, an all-too-real fear. The great diversity of Nigerian States, cultures and climatic conditions, the bases of complementarity and means of positive competition, two critical ingredients for national economic virility and success have remained unharnessed. This makes Nigeria hostage to a neo-colonial and subordinate mindset of waiting for ‘ideas from abroad’ in a world of developmental competition anchored by a strong sense of national identity, initiative and creativity.

     It is time to formulate a thorough-going economic strategy for the country and its component regions with which we can build without further delay a lasting foundation for a vibrant economy and finally change the culture of entitlement and sharing of booty that has become  ‘Public Service’ in Nigeria. For example, why should Federal allocation be for payment of government salaries? Federal allocation belongs to the entire population of a state and should be invested primarily in capital formation projects and activities, such as critical infrastructure and direct business opportunities that enhance growth, create jobs and expand revenue), thus enabling the economy of a state to grow. When contractors handling visible construction works that help to create a future for the children of today’s government workers don’t get paid, their workers don’t get paid. Let us treat all workers equally, government and contractors’. A State’s government’s workforce should be paid from the state’s internally generated revenue, and thisshould in turn determine the size of the workforce. No business employs more workers than it can reasonably pay from its earnings, not from donations. We are not in a war-torn zone where disruption of normal life makes charitable donations the only lifeline available. It should be mandatory for government to pay its employees based on performance as it is done in the rest of the economy,rather than continue in the indulgence that is ruining many lives unknown to most of them.

    The high cost of generating alternative power with diesel-electric sets has forced many manufacturing companies to move their operations outside of Nigeria while manufactured goods are smuggled in. It is such that even IT and mobile telephone service companies touted as models of growth now prefer to locate their core activities in territories with dependable and cheap power supply. Another serious problem is extortion and collusion by government agents and officials who facilitate the exporting of capital that is badly needed for development at home. The number of manufacturing companies in an economy that is the biggest consumer of imported goods in Africa is not unexpectedly small for all these reasons. Until there is a change from this economic policy and the negative operating environment, Nigerian states will continue to generate very low levels of IGR and attract only a handful of desperate ‘businessmen’, not genuine investors and manufacturers. A trickle-down economy works like the filter blocking the passage of the solidsin a stream (such as targeted investmentsin resource utility maximization and talent development) the building blocks of a production and manufacturing economy; this means that the pivot on which our IGR hope hingeswill be built only when we have a different kind of development policy.States’ IGR breakdown shows that they are dictated by Nigeria’s importation-centred economic policy which kills industries and bloats up the bureaucracy- the reasons why the States are unable to grow their IGR substantially. The absence of industries has meant that most of the states depend on Government workers’ PAYE tax for fully 50% of their IGR, a great irony whose meaning is better understood now that government is unable to pay its workers. It is an absurd kind of economy.  Other sources such as licensing fees (vehicles, radio, TV, etc), real estate land charges, tenement rates, markets rates and rents, and the least of these, Private Sector small businesses’ taxes, (including PAYE) in a healthy and diverse economy should be contributing at least 60% of the IGR.A few states Lagos, Anambra and Osunhave managed to invest in construction and industrial manufacturing ventures. Anambra has no debts primarily because the state under Governor Peter Obi failed to embark on any long-term vision-driven project, typical of a former banker who fearsto take the pill they shove down the throat of borrowers. But the future will come sooner and Anambra will find itself ill-prepared to deal with its infrastructural bottlenecks.Infrastructure-led development, investing in Agriculture,industrial entrepreneurship and human capital development and tools, not patching up what we have today, are the keys to long-term competitiveness.

     

    CONFRONTING THE REALITIES OF NIGERIA’S WEAK AND SHALLOW ECONOMY

    ‘A weak system breeds a weak ethos and makes a cynical society’

    Nigeria’s economy is truly an irrational one. It is a fact that corporations are more efficient than countries, and it is important to know why. The main reason is focus on objectives, resource concentration, efficient organization design, lean management, more hands at the coal face, systems, processes, standards, effective mission controls, performance management, fairness to all, caring for their greatest assets (human capital), etc. Let us have some perspective on Nigeria’s true status in the world. The world’s biggest company is a retailer(Wal-Mart)operates in 11,495 locationsand employing 2.2million people it earned revenue of $486billion in 2014, meaning that each employee contributed or (is worth) $1.434million. Toyota, the world’s biggest manufacturer employs 338,875workers and earned revenue of $252billionin 2014, meaning each employee contributed (or is worth) $743, 637.  These corporations have run their businesses profitably for generations and they are growing stronger. These businesses spend no more than 15 to 20% of their revenue on administration and you can see the work done, compare this to Nigerian governments that spend 70% of their budgets on salaries and nobody can point to work done anywhere!The total output of Nigeria’s 176million peoplewith‘rebased’ 2014 GDP is $594billion dollars, meaning each Nigerian contributed (or is worth) not more than $3, 375 or N675, 000. If you ask the average Nigerian,that is ‘big money’ and he/she will gladly ask to be given that N675, 000 as their share, now!This is really the way we are and itmeans thatany Nigerian, no matter how ‘big’ we may consider him/her to be,is seen in the eyes of the world to be worth no more than just that. And it is one reason the world treats us shabbily. We produce next to nothingbuthave a high taste for the goods that others produce and we import, if possible, steal them. Our dependency is both external and internal, for example, most southern States depend on the northern States for at least 50 per cent of their food consumption. We import and burn N3.5trillion on diesel and petrol for standby generators and automotive cars, trucks and trains annually, whilst also flaring all the gas we could have used to generate the electricity needed to save ourselves from this wastage. Besides the capital cost of generator imports, self-generated power costs ten times as much as grid power! It is like buying one item and paying for ten without knowing. This way of life fuels inflation, extortion, ever rising demand for wages by the unions, pilfering, treasury lifting and all manners of fraud just to ‘meet up’, and everybody puts everyone else they can under pressure. It has institutionalized wickedness as the way of life in Nigeria. In the midst of all this the main reason we have government is forgotten: the security and welfare of the citizens (i.e. empowerment to grow and prosper in safety and security). The States and Local Governments simply complete the circle of Nigeria’s irrational economy.

    Those who work for our governments (from the President, State Governors, Senators, Representatives, Justices of the Supreme, High and Low Courts at the Federal, State or Local Governments),  are addicted to this system of guaranteed personal income, whether work gets done or not, relevant quality or not, and efficient or not. It has created a State in name but not in character. Also common to the state and federal civil services is the absence of a genuine performance management system, meaning that workers get paid whether they perform and deliver results or not, because there are no performance standards (tasks and targets, qualitative and quantitative) to hold workers up against. Yet there is an annual performance appraisal system which is merely a bluster and blackmail instrument. Everybody scores 90% and above!

    Many activities of government lack rigorous monitoring and control because of a cultivated mind-set that prevails among government employees as State dependents that live on the assumption that a seat is all it takes to own the budget and one’s monthly pay is assured without a question. It has also cultivated a cynical citizenry who believe that those inside our governments are simply salting away money, and on this account do not trust them.

    But we have progressed somewhat: from reckless sharing of money without any development worth its name to overleveraging what little there is because there is not enough left after salaries. This leads to heavy indebtedness to local contractors on account of which many projects are executed in fits and starts with consequent price escalation from accumulated interest on bank loans, the cost of rework of projects damaged by rains such as unprotected earthworks, vandalism and the effect of inflation on prices. This situation calls for careful selection and balancing of project portfolios and tightly disciplined cost and schedule management that is not a  strength of government.

    OSUN REVENUE: FACTS AND FICTION

    Between November 2010 and December 2014, Osun received a total statutory allocation of N108.3billion, and if we add Osun’s receipts from January to April 2015 of N7.04billion, this makes a total of N115.34billion. Osun expenditure on salaries alone from November 2010 to December 2014 was N120.4billion. This left the state with a deficit of N12billion. If we add other emoluments, Osun’s total recurrent expenditure comes to N206billion, compared to its statutory allocation of N108.3billion. If we add other accruals from Abuja, the grand total of all receipts from Abuja is N204billion. Yet a newspaper published the unverified claim made by the politically interested former Head of Service of Osun and candidate of SDP at the last governorship election that Osun received “over N350billion” in federal allocation since Aregbesola’s inception as governor! He also made other unverified allegations to the effect that N436billion in statutory allocation was made to Osun’s thirty Local Governments in the same period.  To put things into perspective, in 2011, allocation from Federation Account to Osun was an average of N4billion per month, this level held steady until it fell to N2.6billion in July 2013, from when it began a downward slide to N466million in April 2015! At first the downward slide was thought to be temporary, but alas, it became a collapse!  Osun’s internal revenue grew remarkably from N600million in 2011 to a peak of N1.6billion in 2013 as a result of Government’s revenue drive but it is not sufficient to meet its obligations to the citizens. When Aregbesola mounted the saddle on November 26th, 2010, the total monthly salaries and emoluments bill was N1.4billion, (including N200million for pensions). In 2015 Osun workers’ emolument was N3.6billion, and Pensions: N530million, and since workers’ salaries are adjusted every six months these will jump up to N4billion in December! In January 2015, net statutory allocation to Osun was N1.25billion; February N1.12b; March N624m; April N466m. If we add to these other accruals, such as VAT, SURE-P, Excess Crude, Exchange Rate differential, total allocation for January is N1.99billion; February: N2.05b; March: N1.61b; April: N1.39b. About N700million is deducted for repayment of Osun’s loan liability every month.   However, from July 2013, just as the IGR milestone achievement was being commended, there was a sharp drop in federally allocated funds to Osun; this drop became very pronounced from January 2014. With the knowledge that the longer one delays, inflation escalates project cost and renders a project less effective and less attractive, contracts for various major projects had been awarded in earnest in 2011 by the government based on its long-term finance plan and scenarios. There is also the matter of mass exit of older experienced staff at the end of 2012 in order to beat the deadline for the introduction of the mandatory contributory pension scheme (PENCOM) that was to take effect from January 2013, to replace the traditional government pension payment system.  This mass exit has also led to a big rise in the State’s commitment to payment of gratuities and pensions to historically high levels and added to the financial shocks the state is contending with. New workers recruited to fill the vacancies created by the retiring staff lack the experience to deal with issues that call for systemic knowledge and this has also created some challenges.

    LABOUR AND AREGBESOLA’S ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY

    Nigeria is a country at the ‘food stage’ of development and badly in need of industries that produce what people need and want to pay for: food, clothing, consumer goods needs, including shelter and household needs, that’s where surplus labour should be shifted to as rapidly as we can. These cannot be provided by the multiplication of layers of government bureaucratic jobs as we have been doing until now. It will take rare courage on the part of the governors to make the initially disruptive shift of labour to productive economic activities where many hands are needed to wean Nigeria from the consumption of imported goods. With the understanding that people always move where the money is, it should be possible with some competitive inducement to persuade the state’s labour force to make the transition to productive areaswhere more hands are needed to help turn around the state’s fortune.I believe that this step will prove to be a blessing in a couple of years to many. Agricultural production and processing, and production of goods currently being imported will absorb hundreds of thousands of workers (more than the State government’s current labour force), relieving the State of its debt burden of salaries for sinecure jobs. Labour, Capital and Technology must move to the markets where the needs and opportunities are, or atrophy.The 2015 salary crisis, a repeat of the 1982/83 experience is an object lesson by first-hand experience that the neo-colonial state was not designed to bring about sustainable development and cannot always pay its workers. Only a productive and vibrant economy has such a chance in today’s world of free enterprise mixed economy and competition, we owe it to ourselves to create one; and the earlier, the better. This means that the State and Federal governments must make major macro-economic policy changes: ban or place prohibitive tariff and administrative, regulatory restrictions or huddles on imported items that can be produced in Nigeria from the land and natural resources. Federal and State governments should enable ventures processing into finished goods and enforce standards for local consumption and support demand and market supply chain. This will grow the States’ IGR through a wider and more realistic tax net.

    AREGBESOLA’s VISION, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY AND PROJECTS

    Anyone who came to Osun before the advent of Aregbesolain 2010 will have taken it for granted that it is a prototype rural state where everythingshould look like it wasin mediaeval times. It was, and still is a place where opinions are strong and tend to be fixed and the people are very politically astute. Aregbesola inherited a State of sprawling rust, dust, decay and chaos, where there were no social services or institutions worth its name to talk about, and to cap it all, with an empty treasury and a mountain of debts for projects with little economic foundation or possibility of positive returns. This is the tradition of Nigerian governance for which our misbegotten elites are to blame. The people copy whatever the elites do.

    From the beginning, Governor Aregbesola demonstrated an uncommon and penetrating insight into the condition of Osun, the economy, the land and the people as shown by his in-depth and engaging discourses and legendary consultations with people. On the bases of these, he came up with an intuitive strategy and intelligent and inclusive solutions to issues, always taking the long view of the development of Osun, never held down by the pedestrian limitations. Aregbesola is audacious and not a novice when it comes to state governance and administration, he has been deliberately cautious in the handling of issues affecting various political interests and constituencies in the state whilst keeping his gaze fixed on the long-term objective: making Osun the number one State in Nigeria in all important indices of development, human, social and economic.  While acknowledging his predecessors in office, especially the highly disciplined and irrepressible Chief AdebisiAkande, he has been careful and strategic in his selection of projects, the likes of which had never been attempted in the state while implementing his vision for a great State. His first project was to work to change the mindset of the people and how the state was perceived.He did this by creating a new brand identity-IpinleOmoluabi, the State of Osun, Nigeria.  He next faced the thorny issue of youth unemployment and disorienatation by setting up the OYES (Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme), a scheme that has drawn many curious delegations to visit the state. OYES engaged 40,000 youths in the first four –year term of Aregbesola. OYES was recommended for adoption/adapataion as a model job creation and youth enegagement scheme by the World Bank who styled theirs YESO.Ogbeni as he is fondly called came up with his well-publicised Five –Point Integral Action Plan for the total transformation from mediaeval city to a modern society, a hub of Commerce, Industry, Culture and Tourism. He pioneered several unique and far-reaching programmes and projects, like the super highways from Gbogan junction to Osogbo, Osogbo-Ila-Odo, the East Bypass (Oni Aderemi Road), and the MoshoodAbiola Airport, besides over 600kilometres of asphaltic roads Roads (within townships, intercity and inter-state), (fifteen kilometers in every town and Local Government), besides the special attention to Osogbo.  The remodeling of the Osogbo Railway Station and the rail corridor into a beautiful avenue is now noticeable and it triggered a directive by President Jonathan’s government to the Nigerian Railway Corporation to beautify the Rail terminuses across the country.

    Osun has embarked on a number of far-reaching economic and social infrastructure projects and programmes, some of which have received international and local acclaim and have been adopted as national programmes by the APC Federal government of President Buhari because of their high impact multiplier effects and potentials. For example the O’Meals Elementary School free lunch programme has raised primary school enrolment in Osun to the highest level in Nigeria, developed commercial scale food vendors and created a vibrant agriculture and agro-processing sector in the state. These social change programmes include: Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES), the community service volunteer scheme that has trained 40,000 youths in various skills and re-oriented them toward rendering selfless service. Others are Schools infrastructure reconstruction and upgrade, O’Meals Elementary Schools’ Lunch and Health programme, Opon Imo (Computer Tablet), Omoluabi Scholar buses, the schools’ uniform project that has now attracted industrial tailoring a major growth industry to the state, schools calisthenics programme (teaching pupils orderly behaviour, organization, situation awareness, team work and coordination). He invested the state’s resources in rural economic infrastructures: extension of electricity and roads to many rural farming communities, to make the industrialization of the rural economy possible in a few years through the commercialization of Agriculture. He created countless innovative and far-reachingprogrammes in Agriculture for farmers for livestock breeding and multiplication: O, Bops (broiler), O’Fops (Fish), O’Beef, O’Honey, and for arable farmers, all targeting the Schools feeding programme. Not to be ignored are the new security infrastructure, and social services introduced in the state: network of Police Patrol, armoured protective vehicles located near Banks and strategic spots, emergency ambulance service, township door-to-door garbage collection service, channelization and de-silting of streams and rivers that has put an end to perennial flood disasters, and environmental beautification projects visible in Osogbo and the Ibadan-Ilesa Expressway.

    The leveraging of state funds for financing major capital projects has enabled some States to raise long-term funds, in particular, bonds from the capital market for major infrastructure, such as Dual Carriage ways, flyover bridges, etc. These projects are expected to stimulate economic activities and trigger businesses to invest in the states, and increase State revenue from taxes and levies paid by businesses from which the state will pay back the long-term funds (bonds) in reasonable time. One impact of Aregbesola’s developmental efforts is the jump in the population of Osun 3.2m in 2010 to 3.6m in 2014.

    Osun now needs a deluge of direct investments in key commercial, industrial, agro-processing, mining and tourism in order to begin to reap the benefits of Aregbe’s first term investments as they get completed one after the other over in the months ahead.Osun has a great potential in Tourism because of its history, culture, abundance of vibrant community festivals and nature sites that draw hundreds of thousands of people even with little or no publicity and certainly few facilities, if any. Before the immediate past Federal government wrecked the security of the country and its economy to boot, Osun had been a major internal educational tourist state attracting pupils from as far away as the Niger Delta and the Eastern part of Nigeria; the fair number of highly reputed private Secondary schools in the state attests to this fact. Today, Osun has been restored to one of Nigeria’s most peaceful and most secure states by Aregbesola’s regime. Thus investments in Schools, health facilities, roads agricultures and in an International Airport are coherent and fore-sighted initiatives designed to complement and enhance the State’s endowments. Soon investors, businessmen and tourists will begin to respond positively to these developmental strides. It is called infrastructure, human capital and services-led development.

    It has been argued by some that a number of these projects are sheer ego trip but at the bottom, some of it is sound economics. Inflation of course, will double the cost of any project in Nigeria in less than eight years, so the earlier you embark on a key economic or social infrastructure project in Nigeria, the better you are. The only proviso is that it must be able to attract and secure economic returns on the invested funds over time. Of course, uncompleted projects do not give people any beneficial service but they can create a whole cascade of troubles.

    We are in a state of economic emergency in Nigeria today precisely because nobody had bothered to create an alternative economy based on regional comparative advantage and complementarities since the last massive economic down –turn that lasted from 1982-1999. We have no choice but to wean ourselves (politicians, importers, retirees, workers, unemployed and students) from the psychosis of the dependent economy and the juvenile mindset and disposition it has engendered in Nigerians. The world will not wait for us and they don’t owe us a meal.

    To the credit of RaufAregbesola who inherited a State  deep into debt overhang from projects of doubtful economic or social value for a hinterland state (five stadia at a go!), given Osun’s lack of a meaningful economy. He worked out or engineered a financing strategy that enabled the state to embark on major game-changing and face-changing projects for Osun, that had been marooned in rural obscurity where even its principal city, Osogbo was simply a rustic backwater glorified with the label of State Capital, had nothing capital about it and little trace of Stately existence. As far as some cynical citizens who work for government are concerned, as long as money can be found to pay salaries the state can remain in this depressed condition for ever. Everybody takes it for granted that their grown-up children and wards must go to Lagos or travel abroad as economic refugees elsewhere and then come back home to build houses they will live in for a few days in a year while on holiday. Resignation and self-condemnation to hopelessness in the face of this level of decay tells us more about ourselves than would anything else. The people who constantly undermine their best this way have no self-confidence and I doubt that God will help such.

    Although Aregbesola’s physical infrastructure projects are yet to be completed, even his worst critics give him credit for daring to transform the state from its mediaeval look to a worthy place in the modern world. He has been criticized for looking too far ahead in his frenzied drive to secure for the state a future commensurate with its historical and cultural potential. His massive and well-targeted infrastructural change projects have been carefully prioritized to make the desired impact. Beginning with roads in the most populous residential areas of nine major towns and cities of Osun and its thirty Local Government headquarters, the State Government did 10 kilolmetres of high standard asphalted roads with reinforced concrete drains and road markings to enhance safety, the LGAs also did 5kilometres of roads to a similar standard, to give the entire territory a total of 295 roads and the state at least 450kilometres of good roads. At the same time, he embarked on rural access roads (non-asphalted) totaling about 250 kilometres with good drainage to ensure that farmers have access to farms and ease evacuation of produce to the markets. He has also constructed over 60 brand new schools to a standard that only the best Private Schools have and offered free lunch to elementary school pupils attract and to keep them focused on their future.

    Aregbesola has been implementing his big and bold vision for Osunelucidated in the green book ‘My Pact with the People of Osun’and he has never hidden the fact that a state of well-being for all citizens that he has envisioned can be made possible only through the devotion of the greater part of the resources of the country to empowerment of the citizenry for the development of a viable economic base and a positive and vibrant societal ethos. As the widespread problem of state insolvency has revealed, we have only multiplied the problems of thirty two years ago, and have found no solutions. Except for Lagos (and for exceptional reasons), our thirty six State governments are infantile. The Stateseach with its Civil Service executive bureaucracy, legislative and judicial arms, and a total of 774 Local Government administrations, and Federal government altogether employ about four million workers between them and gulp down enormous resources but with none of them, Federal, State or Local Government having any viable internal economic activities to turn to for succor. They are the results of a presumptuous, even reckless convenience, naïve and adolescent mindset, not of necessity.This situation calls for a fundamental review of the entire gamut of the Nigerian State, its philosophy, activities and departments to align them with what ought to be the essence of a modern independent state- empowerment of the people as the source of strength of the State. A population of 176million people divided into 774 Local Government Areas works out as an average of 225,000 persons per LGA per State.The question has been asked time without number: Do we really need to have 36 State governments, 36 Houses of Assembly, 36 Arms of the Judiciary and 36 Civil Service bureaucracies and Federal government as large as we have today? Each one of these competes for the right to salaries and other emoluments and pensions that cannot be rationalized on the basis of productive output, or available resources.An apt question to ask is what does each member produce? How do they live and what do they really wish their lives to be like, say in 5, 10, 15 or 20 years compared to what it was twenty or thirty years ago? Collective answers to these questions should be formulated into Communal, Local Government Area, State and National Development Master Plans, (instituting a bottom-up approach to planning and entrenching a truly grass-roots democratic culture) which should become the reference document, (MOU or Social Compact)with each territory and people-thus setting an agenda that matches means-and- ends, sets the right priorityand addresses the core issues of politics and governance in each territory. It is from this Compact, based on the Master Plan for Local Community, Area and State that should be aggregated astheNational Development Plan from which Political Parties should derive their Manifestoes and Agenda for canvassing for the support of the electorate. This will provide the ultimate solution to the unsteady progress of the Nigerian state under Presidents, Governors and LGA Chair persons with widely different inspirations and motivations and bring an end to the culture of wastage, abandonment and frustration common in government. The proper role of Political Aspirants willbe that of mobilizers and leaders of the effort to implement society’s agreed and documented vision and skillful motivators and managers of the process of putting into effect the collective will. Ideally, our governments should operate like PLCs where the LGA Chairman, Governor and President are the CEOs and report to us the Shareholders yearly or twice yearly for evaluation of their performance score cards, based on the concrete tasks and targets we set for them. This is the crux of the matter and kind of thought thatAregbesola has consistently championed. It is the source of his good troubles for being an advocate of CHANGE!

    ‘The cut in allocation made it virtually impossible to fund or sustain government’s commitments. Another factor is the relatively low level of internally generated revenue of the State government, which had actually doubled from N600million in 2011 to N1.2billion per month in 2013’

    • Abimbola Daniyan, Osogbo

    13th July, 2015

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Aregbesola explains 50 per cent payment

    Aregbesola explains 50 per cent payment

    •Labour expresses disappointment 

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has explained why some workers were paid 50 per cent of their salaries.

    A statement by his media aide, Semiu Okanlawon, said: “The government wishes to state that it realised the need to accommodate our senior citizens, the pensioners, within the limited funds available to ensure an all-inclusive payment that will alleviate the hardship that the delay in salaries and pensions had caused. It should be noted that happiness never decreases by sharing.

    “The government’s attention has been drawn to a growing discontent among workers on the partial payment of salary to workers from Grade Level 08 and above.”

    The governor said he was committed to meeting his obligations to the workers as more funds become available.

    Appealing to the workers to be calm, he said: “This period calls for deep understanding of our challenges and we are calling on all and sundry for cooperation in this regard.”

    Labour leaders yesterday expressed disappointment at the payment.

    They wondered why the government would pay Level 1 to 7 their full January salary while Level 8 and above were paid half of their salaries for the same month.

    Speaking with reporters, the state Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Jacob Adekomi, said the payment of 50 per cent salary was unacceptable.

    He ordered workers to remain at home until the government lives up to its agreement with the labour unions.

    Few civil servants went to work yesterday as many offices at the state secretariat were not opened.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) urged workers to show understanding.

    In a statement by its spokesperson, Kunle Oyatomi, the party said: “The government will pay all arrears. If 50 per cent is given now it does not mean that the government will not pay the rest.”

  • Don’t demonise Aregbesola, Osun APC warns

    Don’t demonise Aregbesola, Osun APC warns

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State has called the attention of Nigerians to what it described as “a devious orchestration of series of allegations targeted at demonising the state governor, Rauf Aregbesola.”

    In its reaction to media reports alleging that some unidentified thugs attacked some residents at a newsstand in Osogbo, the state capital, the party in a statement said “available facts indicate that what was sold to the media as an attack by thugs fraudulently and mischievously called APC thugs, was a disagreement that ensued between two people who engaged each other in arguments over football and politics.”

    According to the statement by the chairman of the party in the state, Prince Gboyega Famodun, the situation was the usual happenings at newsstands where people gather to buy and read newspapers and engage in debates.

    The party said it gathered that the argument degenerated into a free for all, which also led to the destruction of the newspapers of one of the feuding parties.

    It added that investigations showed that after the fight which involved the two people with their own supporters, “the development got to the knowledge of the same people who were behind the failed protests in Osogbo on Tuesday.”

    The party said: “We have since found out that the fight between these people and their friends led to the tearing of newspapers belonging to one of them who operates the newsstand named Kazeem.

    “Therefore, we shudder to think how anyone can link this to the government or the governor of Osun? However, we learnt that the fight got to the knowledge of the group calling itself Coalition of Civil Society Organisation for the Emancipation of Osun, which organised Tuesday’s failed rally against the government. They were the ones who thereafter saw an opportunity in this and felt it would make good news and help their campaigns of calumny to link the fight to the government.

    “It is instructive that the statement on this so-called attack on people was written and sent out through the same email address of the group, osuncoalition@gmail.com. The question should then be asked: what evidence have these people provided to establish this link to the governor or our party, the APC?

    “It is also instructive to note that the matter in question, if it was of the magnitude painted by the organisation in the email sent out to journalists in and outside the state, was never reported to the Police. How could three buses loaded with thugs have carried out attacks on innocent people in the state capital without the Osun Police Command being aware of it?

    “It should be noted that the scene of the alleged attack, which is opposite the Old Governor’s Office in Osogbo, is just about a kilometer to the headquarters of the Nigeria Police Force, Osun Command less than 300 metres to the popular Olaiya Junction where one of the Police Armoured Personnel Carriers of the state is stationed. It is equally less than 400 metres away from the Directorate of State Security (DSS) office in Osogbo.”

    The APC queried why “all these agencies were not able to arrest the thugs especially with evidence that they are members of our party.”

    The party said the chairman of the Newspapers Vendors Association had denied accusing the government of the violence.

    The party insisted that the report was just the creation of those who wanted to cast aspersions on the governor and the party.

    It further added that the call by the group asking President Muhammadu Buhari to call Aregbesola to order was calculated at tarnishing the image of the governor.

     

  • Deputy praises Aregbesola

    Deputy praises Aregbesola

    Osun State Deputy Governor Grace Titi Laoye-Tomori has praised the “stability of the Rauf Aregbesola administration”.

    Speaking at the launch of a book:  “A History of Osogbo Progressive Union”, she enjoined residents not to be discouraged by the present economic downturn but to “see the light at end of the tunnel”.

    Mrs. Laoye-Tomori assured the people that respite would  soon come their way.

    Praising the people, particularly workers, for their patience over the delay in payment of their salaries, she solicited for their understanding.

    The deputy governor said the book does not only have a historical value but also includes a blow-by-blow account of how communities can complement the social engineering effort of any government.

    She said the 85-year-old author, Pa Hezekiah Adetunji Odetoyinbo, who is a lawyer and her uncle, had illustrated the public spirited efforts of the OPU in empowering youths in the town.