Tag: Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

  • Nigeria needs help, says Tinubu

    Nigeria needs help, says Tinubu

    The National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has declared that Nigerians must pray for God to raise disciplined leaders that will make the nation work.

    Nigeria, he stated, needs divine intervention.

    In his Eid-el-Kabir message from his media Office, the former Lagos governor said: “Nigeria needs help. The problems we ought to have overcome now threaten to overcome us. Millions of our people endure the daily grind of poverty and deprivation.

    “In the midst of plenty we remain empty. May Nigeria experience a new day.”

    While congratulating Muslims for being alive to witness another celebration, he reminded them that the task of rebuilding Nigeria requires collective efforts.

    This, he reasoned, will be possible with sacrifices on the part of all Nigerians.

     

  • ‘Poverty and terrorism threaten  foundations of our democracy’

    ‘Poverty and terrorism threaten foundations of our democracy’

    Text of the opening remarks by All Progressives Congress (APC) National leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu at the inaugural lecture of the Freedom House Democracy Lecture Series at the Muson Centre, Agip Hall, Lagos, Nigeria… yesterday.

    I thank all of you for participating in this maiden Freedom House lecture on democracy. I want to express special appreciation to Professor Larry Diamond for honoring us by accepting to deliver this inaugural address. It is my fervent hope that what we embark on today shall become a perennial institution, a permanent feature of our democratic landscape.

    Such lectures are needed because our nation needs a broader, deeper appreciation of democracy in all of its complexities and ramifications. To state it bluntly because I know of no other way to state it, we do not understand enough about democratic governance and practice.

    What we practice is often not democracy.  How this nation is governed is a hybrid process where democracy is often the junior partner and minority attribute.

    As such, the system of governance we practice has not yielded the desired results – the dividends of democracy have been painfully elusive. How could it be otherwise? It would be wrong to anticipate a pear to grow from apple tree or a dog to give birth to a goat. Thus, it is wrong to expect this current form of governance to produce the fruits of democracy when it is the wrong type of tree.

    To think otherwise is not to be optimistic. It is to engage in unproductive wishful thinking that precludes us from doing the heavy and hard work needed to transform “what is” into “what ought to be.” This lecture series is a modest contribution toward this benign change.

    Since the 1999 transition from military to civilian rule, we have effectively limited our definition of democracy to the holding of elections with little regard to the quality thereof. There are two jarring problems with this self-imposed constraint.

    First, most members of the Nigerian political class was weaned on the rancid milk of dictatorship and the imperial mindset upon which it is based. Fairness and openness of process and outcome discourse and debate, and compromise and conciliation have no place in this realm. In this authoritarian world, the ends justify the means and the only ends pursued are those that increase the power and wealth of the people wielding them.  It is a top- down world where the top dictates the tune and everyone dances to it or gets kicked into the shadows.

    Most adult Nigerians have spent the majority of their lives under military, or its antecedent, colonial rule. Neither one is a good primer for democracy. Nigerians are smart people and learn fast. Too bad, our history has presented bad governance role models to us.  We have learned much. Sadly, most of it has been the wrong lessons from the wrong textbook.

    Thus, the conduct of elections during the past fifteen years has been basically an unbroken trail of malpractice and connivance to steer Nigeria to a contrived result with scant connection to the popular will.

    Instead of being the periodic celebration of democracy, elections in Nigeria have generally mocked the very notion of democracy they are supposed to uphold.

    Worst has been what comes after elections.  Since the winner often is not chosen by the people but by some subterranean process, he continues to dishonor the people while resorting to that subterranean process in how he rules. Generally, these office holders believe they have the inborn right to rule instead of have been given a duty to govern.

    For the most part, elections have become a perverse form of modern coronation. Instead of choosing public servants, elections in Nigeria have been basically to select a new aristocracy, an elected royalty.

    Government is run like a medieval court, full of intrigue and an excessive number of jesters and unproductive courtiers whose only reason for being is to use their proximity to power to extract rents from the improper operation of government.

    One can only find rhyme and reason in governance to the extent one can decipher or anticipate the whim and caprice of the man in power.

    Thus, we call ourselves a new, growing democracy yet we retreat further into the old ways. We slip into authoritarian darkness.

    Faced with a growing number of state governors in the opposition party, the federal government arbitrarily has reduced the revenues flowing to the states in order to punish the political opposition. In effect, the federal government has imposed economic sanctions simply because some political leaders have the temerity to belong to another party.  That the people are made to suffer means little for the people are not why they entered into governance. Power and privilege are.

    This is why they shut down newspapers recently and restricted freedom of movement by prohibiting key APC members from travelling into Ekiti state prior to elections.  This is why they deployed more security people to hover over the elections in Ekiti than they do to protect the people and tackle the security challenges in Borno state. The Minister of State for Defence has spent more time in Ekiti than he has in Chibok.  This is not responsible democratic governance. It is a hoax.

    This brings me to the point where I would like to say a few words about the topic of today’s lecture: Poverty, Terrorism and Democracy. In my view, the first two concepts have intertwined to form a terrible union against the third, against democracy.

    Some claim the rise of Boko Haram has nothing to do with poverty. They blame it all on ideology. Some go as far as implying that Islam is at fault.  Those who say this can be excused to some extent for they are as ignorant about Islam as Boko Haram is. However, Boko Haram cannot be excused. They are violent murders of both Muslim and Christians. There is not one word in Islam that supports the evil they do.

    It is obvious that Boko Haram terrorists have lashed themselves to a dangerous and desperate ideology. But we must ask who does such a thing and why do they seem to have so many adherents and supporters?

    Poverty is a big part of the answer. Poverty often distorts a person’s humanity. The destitute and the ignorant, casting about on their last strand of hope, are susceptible to a mean and wicked interpretation of the world that labels everyone not in that group as expendable sacrifices and objects of terror.

    Again to put it bluntly because I know of no other way, Boko Haram is an extreme manifestation of the chronic and acute misgovernance that has spread gross injustice and mass poverty across the face of our beloved nation.

    All nations have their wayward souls. However, in better governed, more prosperous societies, the number of anti-social actors is much less and even their extremism is somewhat muted. Because of their low numbers, they are confined to being a law enforcement problem.

    But here, abject poverty swells their ranks. Here, they have become a small army. With that, they are a national security threat and a political challenge to a free and open society.

    We must deal with them decisively yet wisely. Also, government must also be cautious in not using the fight against terrorism to truncate otherwise legitimate political activity by a legitimate and peaceful political opposition. Also, government must restrain itself from striking indiscriminately against people in the affected areas, in the process committing human rights abuses that undermine democracy and that become a recruiting tool for the terrorists.

    As such, poverty and terrorism are truly a compound threat to democracy. Not only do those who manufacture terror undermine democracy through their direct actions.  We also must take carethat government’s response is not such a heavy-handed and indiscriminate one that it undermines civil liberties and chases people into the camp of the terrorists.

    I shall end here that we may soon come to the meat of this gathering; Professor Diamond’s address.

    Again, I thank you all for coming today that we may use this lecture to take a step toward the democracy we truly seek.

  • Ex-Governor Otedola dies at 87

    Ex-Governor Otedola dies at 87

    Lagos lost yesterday one of its eminent sons and former Governor Sir Michael Agbolade Otedola, who died at 87.

    He passed on in the early hours according to his widow, Lady Doja, of old-age related ailment, which took him out of public glare for many years.

    Governor Babatunde Fashola ordered flags in the state to fly at half mast for seven days, saying Otedola, who was governor between 1992-93, during the Gen. Ibrahim Babangida’s unsuccessful transition to civil rule programme, will be remembered for his contributions to the development of the state.

    Fashola’s predecessor Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu also commiserated with Lagosians and the family member of the late elder statesmen.

    Fashola said Otedola would be remembered for his numerous contributions to the development of the state.

    He said he had known him long before he (Otedola) became governor.

    At the handing over of 100 patrol van and 150 patrol motor bikes to the Rapid Response Squad at the State House, Alausa Ikeja, Fashola directed that a minute silence be held for the late Otedola.

    Tinubu said the news of the passing away of Sir Otedola came to him while he was out of the country. “Though 87 years old, his passing away is still a big loss. I pray that God will comfort his family and stand by them. They must be comforted in the knowledge that Baba played his part well and the rest is now left to all of us”.

    Tinubu said Otedola’s tenure as Governor of Lagos State, though short witnessed some progress. “He brought stability to our state and maturity to our politics. He was quiet unassuming. An individual one would always want to have in the room and on his side. He was a key player in shaping the politics of Lagos State and Lagos will never forget him”.His philanthropy is almost legendary just as his devotion to serving humanity and God was unwaivering.

    Tinubu also sympathised with the family of the late Justice Chukwudifu Oputa a former Supreme Court judge who died on Sunday.

    “He was first among equals and indeed his legal brilliance and satorial elegance within the legal profession remains unequaled. During his generation, the Nigerian judiciary was at the peak of its reputation as the true hope for the common man. Only a few in his generation remain with us, thus his departure is the end of an era and a great lose to Nigeria and the legal profession.”Former Supreme Court judge, Justice Chukwudifu Oputa has left behind a legal legacy that may be yet unrivaled in our annals,” he said.

    The late Otedola was born on the July 16, 1926 into a Muslim family at Odoragunsin, Epe Local Government Area of Lagos State.

    Having completed his elementary studies, he moved to Lagos to pursue his education and won a scholarship to study Journalism at the Regent Street Polytechnic in London where he graduated in 1958.

    Otedola began his career as a teacher before working as a reporter at the St. Pancras Chronicle, then as a reporter and later sub-editor at The Guardian and The Times in England.

    When he returned to Nigeria in 1959, he became an Information Officer in the Western Nigeria government and was appointed the Editor of the Western Nigeria Illustrated.

    In 1961, he moved into public relations, working for Western Nigeria Television/Western Broadcasting Service (1961-1964) and Mobil Oil Group of Companies (1964-1977).

    He continued as a consultant to Mobil after leaving the company before joining politics.

    He was elected governor of Lagos State from 1992 to 1993 on the platform of the National Republican Convention (NRC).

    It is on record that his administration facilitated the Yaba College of Technology campus in Epe.

    Otedola, an accomplished technocrat, upon leaving office, continued his career as a writer, a consultant holding positions on the boards of various businesses.

    He was a philanthropist of great repute, a feat that got him Lifetime Achievement Awards from many organisations.

    He is the father of Mr. Femi Otedola, the billionaire owner of Nigerian oil giant Zenon Petroleum and Gas Limited.

     

  • Remember us at Offin Ile

    Remember us at Offin Ile

    GOVERNOR Babatunde Raji Fashola of Lagos State is a great man. He has done a lot to transform the state. We shall never forget him.

    His party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), and its National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, have also done much for Lagos and Nigeria. We shall always remember the good deeds of this former Governor of Lagos State.

    But I want to draw the attention of the governor to Offin Ile. We lack amenties in this locality. We don’t have good roads, electricity and secondary schools.

    We need these urgently, and we are sure our good governor will provide them.

    Ifedayo CDA,

    Offin Ile,

    Lagos State.ac

  • Youth leader hails Tinubu

    Youth leader hails Tinubu

    A youth leader in Yaba Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of Lagos State, Mr. Ehizode Kayode Uduebor, has hailed the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, describing him as a leader par excellence.

    Speaking during a youth programme in Sabo, Yaba, he said Tinubu is a model to coming generations and the youth in general.

    According to him, what Lagos State is experiencing in terms of development was made possible by the APC leader, who he said, raised the state’s internally- generated revenue from a paltry N600 million monthly in 1999 to a whopping N8.5 billion in 2007.

    He said the former governor’s love for humanity informed his involvement in the merger of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and others to form the largest party in Nigeria, which is sure of making a change in the country’s governance.

    Uduebor advised those still in school to study well and ignore distractions, adding that they should make sure they pass their exams with flying colours to get good jobs.

  • Excitement as commissioner donates  Easter gifts

    Excitement as commissioner donates Easter gifts

    Lagos State Commissioner for the Environment, Mr Tunji Bello, has advised members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Yaba and Mainland Local Government Council Areas to close ranks and work for the progress of the party.

    The commissioner spoke during his annual Easter festival distribution of gifts to APC members in the two LGAs which held at the Mainland Independent Group (MIG) office in Yaba.

    The items include: Sewing machines, hair dryers, grinding machines and various foodstuffs.

    Bello, who was represented by his spokesperson, Alhaji Ibrahim Megida, said: “My desire to give to members of our great party is in conformity with the spirit of our National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola, who are noted for their high-level performances.”

    Bello noted that the APC is the fastest growing political party in Africa and urged all its members to work in harmony to ensure victory for the party during the 2015 general elections.

    He added that the target of the party was to assume power at the centre, where the vision of its leadership to transform the lives of all Nigerians would be realised.

  • Meet the common man,  at Tinubu’s birthday

    Meet the common man, at Tinubu’s birthday

    But one VIP who ought to be there was not: President Jonathan

    If course Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has always identified with the common man, as numerous ordinary Nigerians have been drinking from his well of generosity. So, it was nothing new that the 6th Annual Bola Tinubu Colloquium, held at the Lagos Oriental Hotel, Lekki Road, Victoria Island, Lagos, on March 29, was tagged ‘The Summit of the Common man’. It was a befitting way to mark Tinubu’s 62nd birthday.

    Without doubt, some of those who came to the summit would have been wondering what the common man had to do with such a prestigious hotel. The invitation card was as simple as it could come, yet beautiful. The common man can still live with that elegance in simplicity. But Lagos Oriental Hotel, where I had to park my car on the fourth floor! Won’t the common man faint on seeing the place? What would be going on in his mind on getting there?

    Well, one may need to get into the inner recesses of the common man to find genuine answers to these questions. What is important for now is that as the event unfolded, no one was in doubt as to the fact that it, indeed, was a summit for the downtrodden. Don’t forget, the common man has many names: ‘the downtrodden’ is one of them; the others are ‘the masses’, ‘the hoi polloi’. In some instances they are more derogatively referred to as ‘the wretched-of-the-earth’. The summit turned out not to be the usual avenue for the rich and the mighty to talk to, or look down on the rest of the society, backslap and laugh heartily over champagne even as they decide who gets which oil bloc and which appointments, with due process least in their considerations.

    One needed to be at the event to appreciate the effort that was put into it. Kudos to those who conceived the idea of the annual colloquium as a way of institutionalising a platform for discourse on salient national issues. This year’s is spectacular in view of the Boko Haram mindless orgy of violence and the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) tragedy in which 19 Nigerian job seekers perished in their search for elusive jobs two weeks before (the colloquium). Since the common man is most affected by these tragic incidents, it is only fit and proper to ‘hear from the horse’s mouth’, as they say. The common man specially invited to the occasion came from all parts of the country and they also represented every aspect of our challenges as Nigerians, from insecurity to lack of social security even for the Older Citizens, to the chronic unemployment, to lack of capital for those who might even want to start their own business instead of roaming the streets in search of non-existent jobs, etc.

    Some of the accounts were as moving as they were gripping. Take the case of 23 year-old Emmanuel who had glaucoma in the secondary school which he needed N200,000 to treat. His parents could only raise N20,000. His dream of reading Sociology and capping it with a Master’s in Theology was seriously threatened as a result of the sight challenge. Emmanuel is currently an inmate in Bethsaida School for the Blind, 31, Agege Motor Road, Lagos, being managed by 43-year-old Chioma who was moved to found the home because some members of her immediate family were also blind. Emmanuel is sad because, according to him, the blind in Nigeria could have done better than the Steve Wonders of this world with the necessary encouragement. As with most similar homes, Bethsaida School for the Blind depends on the generosity of Good Samaritans, like the Tinubus, and at times, the inmates skip meals for lack of enough food to go round. It is a pathetic story that cannot be fully told here.

    There is also Mallam Aji who lost his wife and mother of their six children to the Boko Haram sect. As a lecturer, he says he is an endangered species. The armed gang came looking for him twice and had to kill his wife on the second occasion, because they thought she was hiding him from them. Mallam Aji also lost his uncle to the Boko Haram gangs and said that troops only responded after the harm had been done, despite warnings of impending attacks by the deadly sect.

    Soprinye Victor, a 2010 chemical engineering graduate of Niger Delta University came to Lagos in search of job. Unable to find one, she returned to Bayelsa, her home state, and began a hair dressing salon. This she lost to flood; she is still searching for job. She cracked a very costly joke which sent many guests laughing at first but later registered as a big indictment on the government, when she said someone told her she was not competent to speak on unemployment, as she is only three years on the unemployment queue!

    Mr Ron Mgbatogu was also there to speak for the neglected Senior Citizens. At 68, and after governments have taken his tax for over 40 years, he merely has a roof over his head but not a home of his own. He is lamenting the lack of rebates on goods and services for his category of citizens.

    Farmers were also represented by Alhaji Gambo Haladu from Kano State, who spoke about the racket that fertiliser subsidy has become; widows by Mrs. Elizabeth Unah, whose husband died in the attempt to rescue their children from an inferno. Her life has never been the same ever since their breadwinner died. As for fishermen, Chief Eric Dooh, from Goi Community in Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers State who lost his livelihood to oil pollution, stood in gap for them. The testimonies were rounded off with a video clip on the NIS tragedy. Depressing as the March 15 tragedy was, it was also a good mirror of the Nigerian society, from government’s sheer greed that will make it collect millions from jobless Nigerians, to the brutality of security agencies who treat Nigerians with contempt.

    Anyone with conscience must have left that place so dejected and asking how come we are suffering like this in the midst of plenty. Who did we (Nigerians) offend that is making us go through this kind of punishment in the hands of callous leaders that keep recycling themselves?

    Although, as expected, the place was jam-packed with the crème de la crème of the society, some of those who really matter were absent. The most conspicuous of them all was President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, thus prompting one to wonder whether he was not invited. If he wasn’t, that must have been a big oversight on the part of the organisers. He needed to be there to see it life, hear it life and probably feel it life. Perhaps what he would have heard and seen would have reminded him of his early childhood and thus prompted him to be more serious about governance. If he had been at that event, he would have known that corruption in Nigeria is indeed underestimated, contrary to his belief that it is exaggerated. His presence at that forum could have made him to ask more probing questions from his minister of finance and coordinating minister for the economy, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, when next she brandishes statistics showing that things are looking up in the country when they are actually looking down. I have always advocated that our big people, particularly those formulating policies must take time off their usual cocktail circuits to see and hear some of the things that we saw and heard at the summit. There is no way someone can know what the common man is going through unless the person takes time out to be with him.

    Anyway, it is not too late to let the president into the proceedings at the summit. Copies of video recording of the occasion should be sent to the Aso Rock Villa for President Jonathan’s attention and possibly, action. But my take is that the ruling party is already lost and its situation irredeemable; it does not believe Nigeria has serious challenges; the president’s position on corruption is my witness.

    But verily, verily I say unto you, the tragedy for the Nigerian nation is for the opposition parties not to do something about the country’s dire situation. The opposition, particularly the All Progressives Congress (APC) must get its axe together in its preparation for the next general elections. The ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has sufficiently messed up the seat of power such that Nigerians must be ‘compound fools’ to return it to power. Like the fowl that is defecating in the soup pot, the party does not realise that it is already spoiling its final resting place.

  • APC ready to liberate Nigeria, says Tinubu

    APC ready to liberate Nigeria, says Tinubu

    Former Lagos State Governor Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has spoken on why he joined other progressives to form the opposition All Progressive Congress (APC).

    Speaking at the weekend to an African audience at the Njala University, Sierra Leone where he was conferred with the Honorary Doctorate Degree of Civil Laws (Honoris Causa), Tinubu told the excited crowd of academicians, students, politicians and business leaders that the party was formed so that Nigeria could avoid social calamity.

    “We formed the APC so Nigerians from all walks of life and social station might gather under one tent to develop the nation on the basis of equity and shared prosperity. What we seek is a fair social compact that we may avoid social calamity,” he said.

    Tinubu said the APC is more than a political party interested only in political power. He described the party as a mission, “a calling forth of the nation to realise its better self”, insisting that it is a call for the nation to fulfill its destiny.

    “We realised that if Nigeria continues as it is, it will soon collide into the barrier of its internal contradictions. A land of vast wealth yet vast penury; a people of great talent and energy but also of despair and unproductivity born out of their jobless poverty. A land that exports the raw materials that helps fuel, electrify and lubricate the global economy but one that lives more in darkness than in light.”

    The APC leader said for that change to happen in Nigeria, all those who desire change must be committed to the same cause. “I have worked too hard and long for the progress of our people to countenance such a broken outcome. We must reform ourselves so that we can fully occupy the destiny our people deserve,” Tinubu said.

    Njala University, the best rated higher institution in Sierra Leone, in picking Tinubu for the award, cited his contributions to the deepening of democracy Nigeria and the sub-region and the tremendous transformation of Lagos State when he was governor. The university, which marked its 50th anniversary, also contends that Tinubu towers above many people considered for the award as he remains active in public service.

    Describing him as a “great son of Africa”, the university attributed the award to Tinubu’s virtues, political exploits, intellectual acumen and strategic thinking.

    In his acceptance speech to the over 6,000 people, titled: “The best is yet to come”, he saluted the comeback spirit of the people of Sierra Leone.

    Tinubu said: “From the ash and dust of war, you have stepped forward as a nation, a small nation engulfed by such a big war, you persevered defying the odds. No nation, no people ought to have suffered as you have, you teetered on the brink of extinction. Yet with some help from your friends, you averted a disaster that seemed inevitable and permanent.”

    Tinubu said Africa needs to invest in the education of the youths, who are the limbs and hands of future development, saying for Sierra Leone the worst is over.

    “You held fast to a thin ray of hope until it grew to fill the sky above the nation, where there was nothing but breakage and destruction, now is learning and the building of new buildings, new lives and new dreams. A new nation has risen from the old, the worst has passed, the best is yet to come,” he said.

     

  • Jonathan executing coup against democracy, says Tinubu

    Jonathan executing coup against democracy, says Tinubu

    Former Governor of Lagos State Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu yesterday described Sunday’s police disruption of the rally organised by the Save Rivers Movement as a coup against democracy.

    In a strongly-worded statement last night, the All Progressives Congress (APC) leader, said the “brutal disruption” of the rally by Commissioner of Police Mbu Joseph Mbu on the directive of the Goodluck Jonathan administration adds “another dimension to the dangerous course this government has charted.”

    Tinubu said: “The People of Rivers State and of the Save Rivers Movement did nothing wrong. What the police did was criminal. The violent and direct attack on Senator Magnus Abe is a frontal assault against democracy. The Jonathan government, which is supposed to protect the public order, now constitutes threats against the very thing they have pledged to uphold. The police have been unleashed on the people.”

    The former governor also wondered why the police felt compelled to shoot and beat “unarmed fellow citizens” whose only offence was the difference of their political affiliation to the Federal Government. He said the events in Rivers showed a disdain for the law and its rule.

    He condemned the Police for the role it played in the event saying it had become a tool of political oppression. “The police no longer arrest, they are primed to shoot first and ask questions later. We are supposed to live in a constitutional democracy, but we are burdened with a Police Force that has now become an agent provocateur and a tool of political oppression. They are the partisan, strong-arm division of the Jonathan Presidency.”

    Giving the Jonathan administration more flaks, Tinubu said the Federal Government wanted to break down democratic institutions in the country. He said the presidency cannot take away the “alienable rights” of Nigerians to associate with any political party of their choice.

    “Sadly, a Presidency that was a major beneficiary of constitutional democracy conspires in Abuja to desecrate our political rights and mortgages our democracy. This government doles out money from the public treasury, not the private pockets of the Abuja despots to service hired mercenaries and political thugs. It is a deep tragedy that the public’s money is being used to employ people and weapons to shoot at the public. This is the depth of political immorality.”

    He accuses Jonathan of lording it over Nigerians: “The Jonathan Presidency is willing to sacrifice the lives of countless Nigerians so that it can continue to lord it over Nigerians. If they could shoot a current Senator in broad daylight on a Sunday, imagine the mayhem they will set upon the average citizen seeking to advance his political rights. Their purpose is not to govern Nigeria but to break down the rule of law and our democratic institutions so that they may own Nigeria.

    “The illegal conduct of the Police in Rivers should be called what it is; it is uniformed gangsters, a coup against democracy. The rights and the protection guaranteed to the Nigerian people should never be a function of the party they are affiliated with. Under the current Jonathan government, we move towards fascism.”

    Tinubu called on the National Assembly to stop the impunity before it is too late. “The National Assembly must rise to its statutory responsibility in defence of the people’s rights and to exercise legislative oversight of an executive branch through the police and a Presidency that has lost all sense of democratic balance and fair play. If the Assembly does not rise at this junction, things will only worsen and at some point, they will be forced to confront the violent misbehaviour of a government intent on perpetuating itself.”

    He called on Nigerians to set themselves in “vocal and sure opposition” to the authoritarian evolution of the Jonathan administration, while urging the international community to prevail on the Jonathan administration not to push the people to the wall.

  • Osun and the quest for continuity

    Osun and the quest for continuity

    A social commentator, Idowu Ajanaku, writes on the developmental programmes of the Aregbesola Administration and the people’s quest for continuity in Osun State in 2015.

    He, who comes to governance in Nigeria and wishes to be on the good side of history, must do so with a good dose of creative ingenuity mixed with the power of vision. He must come with candour laced with uncommon courage; to dare where angels feared to tread. And to leave impressionable imprints in the sands of time one must be propelled by policies and programmes that are people-oriented, pragmatic and purposeful as Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola has done since November, 2010. But it does not come by mere wishful thinking. No!

    The sterling factors that fuel such feats come from an inner nudge- to do one’s best and let history be the ultimate judge. Add these to some forms of divine touch; implicit belief in God the creator, a measure of righteousness and never forgetting the source of the rivers of fortune and the picture of the positive persona of our subject, Aregbesola seems complete. For a gubernatorial hopeful, who put all his faith in God during the trying years to reclaim his stolen mandate, and for a Nigerian male, who confessed openly that he had never philandered or strayed away from the arms of his loving wife and for a principled politician, who has remained steadfast and grateful to his political mentor Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, unlike the generation of goats, there are several lessons to learn. As for his support for the Yoruba cause,the South-West integration and the progressives he has been consistently focused.

    Driven by the will to win, against seemingly insurmountable odds, staked high against his frail figure, Argebesola came into office eminently qualified with a wealth of experience that spoke volumes about his sheer determination to make the desired change. For instance, as the erstwhile Commissioner of Works in Lagos state, the Centre of Excellence, the roads and bridges constructed during his tenure remain enduring legacies till this day. These as well as the solid infrastructure the admirable administration of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu laid formed the foundation built upon by the current Governor Babtunde Raji Fashola-led administration.

    Mounting the saddle as a critical thinker, he saw the need to reposition Osun within the constitutional framework of fiscal federalism that we all still dream about. So came: ‘The State of Osun,’ complete with its anthem and logo and the Omoluabi as the driving mantra for morality and responsibility in governance as well as a means for the citizens to have a sense of self-identity. Though back then lesser minds tried, vainly to rouse a rabble, they were soon reminded that before him Alhaji Lateef Jakande did the same in Lagos state. If Shehu Shagari as the then president did not bat an eyelid why should anyone now? And come to think of it-if we truly want to imbibe the doctrines of presidential democracy as the United States which we claim to emulate then each and every state needs such a distinct identity. Not just for its name sake but to imbue in the citizens self pride in what rightly belongs to them, rather than being seen as a mere appendage to an overlord of a federal government.

    That singular rebranding of Osun state was a right signal of the ground-breaking and epoch-making achievements soon to be unfolded from the fecund mind of the man fondly called Ogbeni Aregbesola. He knew from the outset that he needed to assemble a team of top technocrats to drive his vision which took some thorough thinking through. It was that team that came up with the now hailed Six-Point Integral Action Plan.

    And fully aware that no meaningful progress could be made in the absence of peace, communal peace and progress has reigned supreme in the entire state since the assumption of office of the administration in line with the sixth item on the Six-Point Integral Action Plan. At the inception of the administration, one major step taken in the line of enhancing justice and facilitating the judicial process was the institution of the Peace and Reconciliation Panel. That formed the platform for victims of “various acts of oppressive threats, intimidation and tyranny had been meted in the past went to table their plights. The intent of this, as defined and demonstrated by the administration, was not to punish, witch-hunt of black-list anyone; but to reconcile all opposing parties in every dispute and entrench peace process in the true spirit of Omoluabi.”

    Before then there were series of communal conflicts and centrifugal forces mostly by chieftaincy disputes and/or land boundary disagreements. It would be recalled that the erstwhile PDP-led administration in the state put in place forceful enthronement of royal/traditional fathers in many communities where such stools should ordinarily be declared vacant. But these have since been amicably resolved. The Aregbesola-led administration pacified the aggrieved parties; letting them see the need for peaceful resolution rather than taking the laws into their hands.

    One other area that deserves commendation is that of reducing to the barest minimum the culture of wanton waste that characterized local government administration in the state. It was the practice during the locust years of Oyinlola for PDP chieftains at the community level to grace the premises of local government council secretariats all over the state. That was especially on pay-days to collect unmerited salaries. The consequences were grave as that the councils were unable to achieve or execute impact-making solid infrastructure or put in place capital projects for the benefit of their people.

    According to Osun Defender, “another area where local government councils were victims of compulsory deductions from their monthly statutory allocation from the Federation Accounts was the compulsory N1 Million deduction from the monthly statutory allocation coming to each o the thirty local government councils and the Ife East Area Office in connection with the Songhai Programme. These deductions were made for a period of more than a year.”The rip-off amounted to N31 million every blessed month! But Ogbeni by plugging such obnvious loopholes, has since restructured them from drain pipes to service pipes delivering goodies to the rural populace with accountability as the watchword.

    Fully aware that sound education delivery would revolutionalize the thinking and actions of his people he took off on an illuminating platform. He had this to say on August 27, 2012 during the 21st anniversary of Osun State: Our focus is human development because it is humans that drive development, not machines…If our people have quality education, are gainfully employed and well fed, they will recreate their environment, create wealth and engender development. Our people are great and we have a history of greatness. Events since then have proved him right.

    The introduction of the first-of-kind Opon Imo as the Tablet Of Knowledge is one of such giant steps taken. In specific terms, it has 63 e-books covering 17 academic subjects as well as the History of the Yorubas, Civic Education, Sexuality Education, enterprise education, Ifa teachings on morals with tips on passing SSCE and living a healthy and happy life. Furthermore, the test zone comprises over 40,000 UMTE and WAEC practice questions sand answers spanning over two decades. There are mock tests in over 50 subject areas packed full with 29,000 questions with relevant images numbering 825.

    As rightly highlighted by Aregbesola during the launch of Opon Imo, it will enhance the students’ access to relevant texts “regardless of means, location or status.” Similarly, the students would be able to read ahead of their teachers on various subject areas. They could test their ability to grasp how much of the lessons taught has been fully understood.

    Also important, is the economic implication to the government purse. As noted by the governor: “If the government was to buy textbiooks for 17 subjects,51 Audio Tutorials, and JAMB past questions for for ten years for the SS class students it would cost the government abot N50.25 billion”.

    Interestingly, this laudable initiative is springing forth from where the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo instituted free education in the defunct Western Region back in the sixties. The joy in it all is the focus of government on providing quality education right from the secondary school level, ‘the fruits of which would be visible in a decade or even less from now.’

    Honestly,the current status of education in the country is far cry from what it should be. According a recent World Bank report, over 10 million Nigerian adults are stark illiterates while another 10 million of children of school age are out of school. It also decries a situation where there is a glaring disconnect between the supply of schools and the labour market.

    In a similar vein, the recent Education for All global Monitoring Report from UNESCO made available in May 2013 during the World Economic Forum on Africa, says that if the mineral and oil and gas resources in the country were judiciously utilized in a transparent manner Nigeria would be able to take 2.4 million out of the about 9.6 million out-of-school children off the streets. The country was listed as one of the 17 developing ones that could effectively make access to education for 86 per cent of this category of disenfranchised youths.

    Still on education, at the inception of the multi-campus Osun State University (UNIOSUN) in 2005/2006, the Oyinlola administration could not afford the means to finance and sustain simultaneously with theadded task of funding Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH), Ogbomoso, co-funded with its partner Oyo State. Oyinlola’s turned to local government for compulsory imposition of levies deductible from source of the monthly statutory allocation from the Federation Accounts. At the beginning, the fraction deducted was 10 per cent. Later it was reduced to 5 per cent monthly. But the harm has been done already. Again Aregbesola has since brought sanity to that querulous area of running the tertiary institutions in the state.

    .For long in the State of Osun, elections could not be held into local government councils. The issue at stake was to challenge the constitution of the State of Osun Independent Electoral Commission (OSSIEC). But on Friday, December 17, 2010, justice was dispensed through the judgment delivered by the Supreme Court of Nigeria.

    On the infrastructural front various completed and ongoing local government feeder roads attest to the desire for true rural transformation. Many have been achieved through the World Bank/ FGN- assisted Rural Access Mobility Project (RAMP).They are still being executed in the state in tandem with the well thought out Six-Point Integral Action Plan.Worthy of mention also is the Rural Electrification. The efforts made so far in the area of rural urbanization are contained in the activities of the Urban Renewal Committee.

    In a similar vein, the Lands, Housing and Physical Planning sub-sector has transformed the city of Osogbo in particular, which doubles as the host of the seat of the state capital. A lot of structures that were erected without proper planning have since given way to modern buildings. Before his coming, many residential houses were built anyhow and anywhere without approval from constituted authorities and without bathrooms, toilets and other conveniences; in gross violation of modern acceptable standards. Major roads linking Osogbo, Ikirun, Ila Orangun, Ede, Iwo, Ejigbo, Ikire, Ilesa and Ile Ife, Osogbo/Ikirun/Ila Odo/Erin Ile, Kwara State Boundary Road project as well as the Oba’s palace and Old Garage Area have enjoyed a face lift under the Urban Renewal Project. Indeed, the story has since changed for good.

    Still on infrastructure, in Osogbo metropolis alone, there are three international markets including the Ayegbaju International Market, the Aje International Market and the Dagbolu which have been transformed beyond the dream of the residents.

    Add all these to the paradigm shift to agriculture with O-YES project boosting food security, creating jobs and wealth for the teeming youths and one cannot applaud the political sagacity of Ogbeni Aregbseola. The acclaimed State of Osun has taken its rightful place not only as the economic hub of the South West but as model to others in the country. Osun’s transformation is no longer a dream but a sweet reality in only three years! Surely, he deserves another term to continue the good works he has started.