Tag: Dr. Kayode Fayemi

  • Fayemi, Emefiele for integrity award

    EKITI State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi and the new Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, will receive the 2014 prestigious integrity awards of the Nigerian Association of Christian Journalists (NACJ).

    The award is an annual event designed to specially recognise Nigerians who have demonstrated high sense of integrity in their respective official capacities.

    A statement by the Secretary General of NACJ, Charles Okpai, said the recipients were painstakingly nominated and voted for by the public in a transparent process.

    According to him, they become automatic ambassadors of the association as well as symbols of integrity.

    The 2014 edition of the awards, he stated, holds on June 12 at the Sheraton Hotels, Ikeja Lagos.

    Lt General Theophilus Danjuma(Rtd.) will chair the occasion while Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana, will deliver the keynote address with the theme: Integrity in leadership: A panacea to peace, economic growth and sustainability.

    Professor Jerry Gana will be the special guest of honour while Rivers State Police Commissioner, Tunde Ogunsakin, will be the presenter of the most prestigious integrity man of the year award to the winner.

  • Fayemi names Awelewa  Special Adviser

    Fayemi names Awelewa Special Adviser

    Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi has appointed Mr. Sina Awelewa as his Special Adviser on Rural Communications.

    A journalist, lawyer as well as businessman, Awelewa who was the immediate past Director General of the Broadcasting Service of Ekiti State (BSES), had also worked at various other media houses in the country, including The Punch newspapers, defunct The Mail newspapers and The Broadcaster magazine.

    His working experience cut across both the public and private sectors both within and outside the country and was once a full-time board member of Ekiti State public works.

    Awelewa attended Saint Mary’s Primary School, Ilawe-Ekiti and Corpus Christi College also in Ilawe-Ekiti for his secondary school educ-ation. He obtained B.SC (Hons) in Mass Communication from the University of Lagos (UNILAG) and another degree in Law (LLB) from the same university. He was called to the Nigerian Bar in 1995 after the completion of one year in Law School, Lagos. He also bagged a diploma certificate in Computer Science from the Long Island University, New York, USA.

    A prolific writer and a publisher, Awelewa has authored about four books and is engaged in philanthropy through his “Sina Awelewa Foundation”, which was inaugurated in 2001.

    Awelewa is well travelled and married with children.

  • Fayemi’s giant strides in road construction

    SIR: A fortnight ago, I, together with some publishers and editors of online news magazine and social commentators were in Ekiti State on the invitation of the government for an assessment tour of projects coupled with an interactive section with the governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi. We arrived Ekiti on Thursday February 6, and we were all lodged at Ikogosi Warm Spring Resorts situated at Ikogosi-Ekiti. The next day, we started the tour of 12 local government areas.

    While on the tour, I saw wonders. I encontered transformation. I saw creativity. I experienced innovative ideas. I met one-on-one with development. I saw newly renovated classrooms in all the secondary schools along the road. The primary schools seen were also in a perfect condition. I saw the General Hospitals under construction and renovation across the state. I saw the Oba Rufus Adejuyigbe Hospital under construction at Ado-Ekiti. I saw the newly completed Aduni Olayinka Cancer Diagnostic Center at the University Teaching Hospital, UTH, Ado-Ekiti. I saw the 40, 000 hectares tomatoes farm at Iyemero-Itapaji. I saw the civic center under construction at Ado-Ekiti; I saw the 12, 000-seater pavilion under construction at Ado-Ekiti. I saw the well-renovated Oluyemi Kayode Stadium at Ado-Ekiti, and the newly acquired three generating power plants at Ero Dam, Ikun- Ekiti.

    However, what I saw in Ekiti that propelled this piece was the road network across the state. In the words of Sam Fasanmi, a Varsity Don, “Any Community deprived of good roads will be outfitted of social, economic and educational transformation.”

    Virtually all the state roads in Ekiti have been fully tarred. The access roads in Ekiti are also under re-construction as each of the local government in the state have tarred five kilometres each. A total of 200 kilometers (access roads) have been tarred by the 16 local governments while the state government has tarred a total of 1, 200 kilometres of roads.

    On the state roads, the roads from Ikogosi-Erinjiyan-Ilawe-Ekiti needs to be rehabilitated. However, the roads from Erinjiyan -Ilawe -Ado-Ekiti were without a pothole. The dual carriage way from Ado -Ikere -Ekiti, the gateway to the state has been rehabilitated. The road from Ado -Ijan-Ekiti is under a massive re-construction.

    Driving through Okeimesi-Itawure-Efon-Alaaye to Ipole Iloro and back to Ikogosi-Ekiti was my most memorable time in Ekiti, the folklore land with rolling hills. No porthole seen. Also, the route from Iwaraja in Osun State to Erinmo-Ijesa connecting Efon-Alaaye to Aramoko-Ekiti to Ijero and from Aramoko to Igede-Iyin connecting Ado-Ekiti, the capital of the land of honour, as Ekiti is being fondly called, were all without a dent.

    I salute the Fayemi-led administration for their efforts towards making Ekiti a place to be and to visit. I appreciate his efforts aimed at abolishing poverty from Ekiti land. Fayemi’s giant stride in Ekiti is an outright vindication of Abram Lincoln’s affirmation about democracy being an avenue to serve the people!

    • Maxwell Adeyemi Adeleye,

    Magodo, Lagos.

     

  • For a violence -free election in Ekiti

    For a violence -free election in Ekiti

    Fayemi has more than demonstrated his preference for peace and I have heard him say on more than one occasion that any violence in the state is an embarrassment to his government

    In making public his decision to heed the yearnings of every strata of the Ekiti citizenry both at home and abroad, Dr Kayode Fayemi, the organisation’s man that he is, waited until the release of the election’s timetable by the Independent National Electoral Commission to declare as follows: “Following the groundswell of support by leaders and members of our party as well as the generality of Ekiti people from all the nooks and crannies of Ekiti State and in the Diaspora, it is with a profound sense of gratitude and responsibility that I today accept the calls by our people to seek re-election for a second term in office. You have made the calls, and today I have opted to act in deference to those sacred calls by throwing my hat into the ring for a free and fair contestation for the exalted office for a second term.” And justifying his decision further, he said “Our people can faithfully testify that together the Collective Rescue Mission we promised at the outset of our first term in office has crystallised. Indeed our people can testify to how we have rescued Ekiti State from the years of locusts and returned our dear state to the path of respectability, stability and development. Our people can affirm that we have kept faith with the Roadmap to Ekiti Recovery – our 8-points agenda. Every stratum of Ekiti State can see our footprints on those key sectors we promised to touch. My readiness to heed your calls today is therefore a demonstration of our collective commitment to continue the good work we have begun.”

    In confirmation of the above, I could not continue my: ‘FAYEMI’S QUIET REVOLUTION IN EKITI’ series beyond the governor’s second anniversary because enumerating his diverse, multi-sectoral and state-wide accomplishments – of which every city, town, village and community in the state benefited – will take nothing less than a whole book; not even a whole edition of this newspaper will be adequate.

    It will be recalled that aside the endorsement by the leadership of the APC in the geo-political zone, as represented by Chief Bisi Akande, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Akinrogun Segun Osoba and Otunba Niyi Adebayo, various interest groups, including women, youth, artisans as well as leaders and members of the party in all the 16 local government areas of the state have endorsed and called on Governor Fayemi to seek re-election for a second term so as to continue the recovery and restoration work he had begun in the state.

    In addition to promising a ‘focused and edifying’ campaign, and as has become the norm with him, he pleaded with his co-contestants to eschew violence and make the campaign issues-based. That it could be issues-based, however, is hardly possible since the opposition have nothing to show; not even the PDP whose seven years in charge have been dubbed the LOCUST YEARS, not to talk of parties without a scintilla of governorship experience. Apart from guaranteeing peace and security for all, a peaceful campaign would enable the good people of the state vote judiciously for the candidate who, in their collective wisdom, best aggregates their interests. This emphasis on security by the governor could never have come as a surprise, given that he is a security scholar and expert; one who has served severally as consultant to not only regional organisations, but also to Heads of State. He demonstrated his concern for security of life and property to an extent that for the first three years of his administration, Ekiti State ranked, indisputably, amongst the most secure and peaceful states in the country. Those three years, however, coincided with when some of our politicians have not received their Abuja briefs. The minute that happened, it became common place to have pockets of violence, especially whenever Honourable Opeyemi Bamidele came calling. The Hon member, formerly of the A C N, is now of the Labour party on whose ticket, it would appear, Abuja has pencilled him down as the candidate.

    Following former President Obasanjo’s letter to the president in which the latter was excoriated for his penchant for preferring other party’s candidates, it would appear that Abuja has scaled down its scheme of wanting to see Hon Bamidele emerge governor to that of his being a mere spoiler.

    This article is essentially a plea for a peaceful conduct of the campaigns and election as canvassed by Governor Fayemi. On his part, Fayemi has more than demonstrated his preference for peace and I have heard him say on more than one occasion that any violence in the state is an embarrassment to his government. Between 2007 and 2010 when he was going from one tribunal to another, and Ekiti people were hurting terribly from the feral rigging and the shambolic treatment Obasanjo put them through and when they were, indeed, ready to fight, this governor’s ringing plea was that victory for him was not worth the life of a single Ekiti. That was at a time he had no constitutional responsibility, sworn to at his installation, for guaranteeing the security of lives and property in the state. Viewed from that background, it is crystal clear Fayemi can neither order nor encourage violence.

    One can, therefore, reasonably narrow down possible sources of insecurity to the PDP and the Labour Party.

    Traditionally boisterous, in the certitude that they are above the law since Abuja will always protect them, the PDP could very well be a reasonable suspect. But truth be told, the party has been reasonably quiescent in the state as their aspirants go about their individual campaigns. This is, however, no clean bill of health for a party we know has a history of real crudity. And we do know that Labour is nothing other than PDP with a coincidence of interest.

    This, unfortunately, cannot be said of the Labour Party. If morning shows the day, then the state may have to expect some considerable level of violence. In the first place, Hon Bamidele has a lot to prove to both Akure and Abuja. Presumably, Akure was driven initially more by the need to have associates in the Southwest with which to tantalise and con Abuja than to ascertain his claims of popularity. Hon Bamidele is my House Rep, but apart from the fact that he cannot win an election in the constituency, federal or state, I do not know a singe local government area where he can boast 30 percent support. There were obviously no due diligence checks on Hon Bamidele’s claims of state -wide support and it mattered nothing to Akure and Abuja that at no time, and at no party level, did he indicate his ambition to contest before he shipped out. If this is a lie, Hon Bamidele should please publish for Nigerians to see, a facsimile copy of such communication. For any serious person to claim he left a party because he was disallowed from pursuing his legitimate ambition in the party, there should, at least, be an expression of such intent to a recognised party organ.

    Given, therefore, the fact that the honourable member’s umbilical cord is domiciled in a state with contiguity to the Niger Delta, it will not be unreasonable to suggest that Ekiti State may, unwillingly, play the unhappy host to Niger-Delta militants, serving and rehabilitated, since the 2015 interests of both coincide. For the sake of the good people of Ekiti, Hon Bamidele should endeavour to prove me a lie by fighting back any enticement in this respect. There isn’t a single reason why we cannot have a peaceful election in Ekiti especially if we refuse to assist the diabolical plans of those who traditionally love to make Ekiti a hunting ground for the PDP and have, in fact, promised to make ‘an example’ of our dear motherland while protecting theirs hundreds of kilometres away from the burning inferno. Unfortunately, Ekiti PDP members will look askance since, according to ex-chairman Tukur, one of the arrowheads is the one to whom every hungry PDP leader in the Southwest runs.

    In the meantime, the good people of Ekiti can only pray for a violence-free election and hope that the Abuja power mongers will fear God and let our votes count.

  • Revenue allocation: Nigeria runs pseudo-federalism, says Fayemi

    Revenue allocation: Nigeria runs pseudo-federalism, says Fayemi

    Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi has described as worrisome the revenue formula which gives bulk of the resources to the Federal Government at the expense of the states and local governments, which generate the resources, saying that this shows that the nation runs a pseudo- federalism.

    The governor stated this on yesterday in Ado-Ekiti, while receiving participants of the Course 36 of the Armed Forces Staff College, Jaji, who were on a study tour of the state with focus on Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).

    Dr Fayemi said IGR is important to the independent survival of the federating units in a multi-ethnic federal entity like Nigeria, adding that the “question of who gets what and who spends what and who generates what and how you spend it is a perennial one that is very central to the survival of federalism itself”.

    He added that if federalism is about relative autonomy of the federating units, then there is need to create a condition for the units to generate the bulk of the resources they are going to spend and to be responsible the spending while being accountable to those who have provided the resources.

    “Majority of our federating units suffer a high degree of dependence on the federation account. When you have a federal entity by their very nature, they are supposed to have a level of autonomy that allows them to generate resources to run their federating unit. There is a sense in which we can argue that we are a pseudo federal entity and when you are not a true federal entity, sometimes it is difficult to also have expectation of real federalism in a pseudo federal entity. In the first republic, at least we used to operate a 50 per cent derivation principle and we used to generate from the resources that accrue to you”, he said.

  • Work for a better nation, Fayemi urges Nigerians

    Work for a better nation, Fayemi urges Nigerians

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi yesterday urged Nigerians to pray for a better future as the country marks its centenary anniversary this year.

    In his New Year message, he urged Ekiti people to pray and work towards the peaceful conduct of the governorship election.

    Fayemi assured them that his administration would continue to lead responsibly and protect the people’s interests.

    He said: “Nigeria’s centennial coincides with a new phase of our struggle for the soul of our great nation. 2013 was a very historic year in the political space; 2014 promises to be even more eventful. I urge us all as a people whose destiny is connected inextricably with our great country to keep praying as we support the agitation for the restoration of true federalism and the entrenchment of equity and justice in our polity.

    “I remind us all that a nation, in spite of its complex institutions and structures, boils down to the family unit comprising individuals. Indeed, the fate of Nigeria is in your hands and dependent on the choices and decisions each of us make daily. We cannot be collectively complaining of corruption bedeviling the nation when in our individual lives, we cut corners and devise ways to undermine laws and the institutions that enforce these laws.

    “Therefore, as Nigeria clocks 100 years, I urge us all to rededicate our lives to practicing the ethos of honour and integrity that Ekiti people are known for in our individual lives, families and communities. By the grace of God and the righteousness of our people, Nigeria will overcome its current travails and be exalted in the comity of nations.”

    On the governorship poll, Fayemi said: “2014 is a year of crucial decision in our state. Our still young republic grapples with the legacy of militarism, its violent imprint on our politics and a generational perception of political competition as a form of warfare. It is unfortunate that politics is not widely seen as a contest of ideas for hearts and minds, but a desperate means to get to power by all means possible.

    “I seize this opportunity to remind all and sundry, particularly those interested in contesting the upcoming election, that the quality of power is defined by the nature of its pursuit. When we mortgage our consciences and values in the pursuit of power, no matter how dignified or admirable our intentions, it costs us bits of our humanity and deprives governance of the moral authority that is its true foundation.

    “We should refrain from inciting our people to violence and other negative tendencies. Ultimately, an anarchic approach in which the contestants for power deploy all means, fair or foul, to win, de-legitimises and de-humanises politics. We cannot afford to lose the grounds we have gained in establishing peace and tranquility in Ekiti over the last few years.

    “I urge our people to join us in appealing to every aspirant not to make their liberty a bondage for Ekiti people. We should all focus on issue-based campaigns, while we sell our candidacy to our people.

    I urge all our people to demand of every contestant what he/she can do differently from what my administration has done for you. It is a fact that we have touched all communities in our development drive and these facts – these tangibles – are what we will be campaigning with, not lies or violence.

    “Ekiti people have a duty to sieve through all promises, all statements, all lies to arrive at the truth and make the best decision that would further galvanise our state on the already begun journey to lasting development and progress.

    “Our government shall continue to provide the required leadership and strive to meet its obligations to all in the face of depleting resources. We also seek the cooperation of all and sundry to join the task of sustaining our modest achievements so far. We are holding the candle for our people to find the pathway to prosperity.

    “I am a firm believer in the sanctity of life and on no occasion will I tolerate the attempt by desperate politicians and agents of reactionary tendencies to import violence into the state and subsequently turn around to blame such on the government.

    “I urge all stakeholders, the people, political elites, traditional institutions, security agencies, etc, to put in all efforts to ensure Ekiti records a free and fair election that would be a model to other states and a reflection of the honourable people that we are.”

  • Bola Ige  Symposium postponed  to Jan. 15, 16

    Bola Ige Symposium postponed to Jan. 15, 16

    Activities marking the 12th Bola Ige Memorial Anniversary, earlier slated for Wednesday and Thursday, have been postponed to January 15 and 16.

    The two-day event includes a symposium and the showing of the film, Ofin-Ga, by renowned playwright Prof. Akinwumi Isola.

    At the symposium, Governors Rauf Aregbesola (Osun) and Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti) will speak on Impacts of unresolved political assassinations on future elections and on Nigeria’s security; and National Conference according to Bola Ige’s dream.

    Isola will chair the symposium. Interim National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Chief Bisi Akande will be the father of the day.

    APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu is expected as the chief guest of honour. Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola will be the special guest of honour.

    Governors, lawmakers and the Chief Justice of the Federation (CJN) are expected at the symposium.

    Inspector-General of Police M.D. Abubakar and Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof. Attahiru Jega will speak on assassinations, security and elections in Nigeria.

    Lead discussants are Ekiti State Deputy Governor Prof. Dupe Adelabu; Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Adeyemi Ikuforiji; Oyo State House of Assembly Speaker Mrs. Monsurat Sunmonu; Southwest Chairman, Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON), Prince Kunle Ayantoye and Chairman, Amuwo-Odofin Local Government Area of Lagos State Ayo Adewale.

    The events will hold at 6pm on January 15 and 11am on the 16th. The venues remain the Arts Theatre and Conference Centre of the University of Ibadan (U.I.).

    Chairman of the Organising Committee Awa Bamiji said the postponement was in response to appeals by students, who are off campus because of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike.

    The late Ige started his political career/unionism as a student in UI.

  • Letter to my friend, the Governor

    Letter to my friend, the Governor

    My dear Kay, Let me humour our civil servants by starting my letter with a parody of a trite phrase that introduces all their speeches including those delivered at funeral ceremonies; “It gives me great pleasure” (to write you this letter). It beats me hollow how an individual can derive “great pleasure” at the death of a fellow human being. What a wicked joke this is! Is the service that intolerant that it does not allow room for linguistic upgrading and lexical restructuring? Or is it the civil servants themselves that are prisoners of linguistic conservatism? Little wonder that most of their speeches contain lethargic influenza.

    I write in respect of the defection of Michael Opeyemi Bamidele (The MOB) from All Progressives Congress (APC) to another party of his choice. We both know that he has gone even though he is yet to make a formal declaration of his defection. The MOB visited Chief Bisi Akande and Asiwaju Bola Tinubu (at different times) with a 35-man-entourage, including an octogenarian Bishop from Ilawe, thus foreclosing the possibility of reconciliation. He had gone to inform them of his decision to leave the APC. What is happening to our culture and sense of dignity these days? Why should an 83-year-old man allow himself to be dragged from Ekiti to Lagos for a meeting that took place between 3.00a.m. and 5.30a.m.? What does a Bishop, whose less than ¦ 20,000 per month pension was raised by the Fayemi Administration to ¦ 100,000, want that he allowed himself to be parcelled into the betrayal train of a young man of his son’s age at such unholy hours?

    I can imagine how devastated ‘Oga’ (Tinubu) was when he was confronted with the reality of Bamidele’s exit from APC. Whatever relevance Bamidele had today in Nigeria’s politics was made feasible by Tinubu who ignored early warnings about Bamidele’s treacherous romance with the Judas of Ekimogunland. Sometimes I wonder how and where Tinubu finds the strength to absorb the perfidy of those he helped to power, because they are legion. Many pretenders and unctuous power seekers had exploited Tinubu’s unstinting readiness to help, to get to power only to stab him in the back by betraying his trust in them.

    When at the 3rd Anniversary Mega Rally at the Ado Ekiti Stadium, you and Rauf Aregbesola were hoping for a last minute miracle that will see MOB renouncing his prodigal adventurism by changing his mind and staying put in APC, your supporters, encouraged by KWAM 1’s songs of hostility, knew you were playing politics. I am sure you saw the ecstasy and hysteria that followed when KWAM 1 sang his famous lyrics: AÌgoÌ loì ma deì ¹di̹ gb¹ÌhiÌn… ¸ maì ce gbaìra leì wÍn ÍÌdaÌl¹Ì ni wÍìn… ¸ni maì lÍ koì miìa lÍ, ¹ni maì lÍ koì miìa lÍ… Nothing could be more declaratory than what Opeyemi said to Asiwaju during the meeting: “…Asiwaju, I can afford to offend you but I cannot afford to offend my supporters who want me as their next governor…” A progressive who moves from the mainstream party to a Labour Party of suspect identity had already committed political suicide. Though, the late Akin Omoboriowo who left the progressive Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) for the conservative National Party of Nigeria (NPN) was treated with contempt by the Ekiti people till he died, I plead for sympathy for our very good friend with whom we shared some good times in the past. A man who is troubled by complex and ambition deserves our compassion and nothing more.

    From what happened during the 3rd anniversary celebration, there is no doubt that the Ekiti people are in love with your administration because of the numerous projects and progammes that your government has done in the state. Mrs. Bosede Balogun, the second market woman that spoke in Ekiti dialect during the mega rally, did a good job for you when she highlighted all the achievements of your government using the 8-point agenda as her framework. It was a convincing presentation and that was why she received the loudest ovation at the rally. Hers was not a make-believe or stereotyped narrative of achievements. She spoke with passion for your government. She spoke with love for your government; she spoke with an affection for a government that had touched the lives of the people in the rural communities in particular and the state in general.

    Talking about the rural communities, what I witnessed in Annunciation School, Ikere -Ekiti during the second phase of the Grants in –Aid To Communities across the state; 32 (Ekiti North), 36 (Ekiti Central) and 27 (Ekiti North), showed that your government’s acceptability was not just because of what you are doing in Ado Ekiti, but also because of the massive development and transformative projects that has taken place in these rural communities. According to some of them, your interventions in the areas of infrastructure, provision of portable water, school renovations, primary health care, etc. have endeared your government to them. The Alawe of Ilawe, Oba Banji Alabi, was so elated that he was boasting that Ilawe-Ekiti is now like New York, London, Tokyo, Paris where youths can access the internet within a given distance courtesy of an ICT Centre the community was able to put together with the grant-in-aid it received from your government.

    I am aware that some people are accusing you of giving contracts to non-indigenes. Kindly handle this with some maturity. During the commissioning of some roads your government constructed, you mentioned the names of the local contractors that handled some of those roads and also challenged your accusers to name any local contractor with a good track record of performance in his fields of interest that had not benefitted from contract awards.

    You also needed to let them know that the reason you inherited many abandoned projects was because local contractors patronised by previous administrations failed to discharge their contractual obligations even when there was evidence that they had collected between 80 and 100 percent of the contract sum. While local contractors have the courage to abandon projects, non-indigenous contractors do not have such courage because of the implications. An indigenous contractor, for instance, can claim that because he is an indigene of the state, he should be forgiven for abandoning a project that he was adequately mobilised for. But a “foreign” contractor feels unsafe and unprotected should he dare abandon any project that he had been mobilised to do.

    Another complaint which seems to be very prevalent among a particular group of people in the state is that of “stomach infrastructure”. Some of them are complaining that you do not behave like a typical Nigerian politician who throws money from his open jeep as he goes on a campaign trail around town. I must confess that this is a knotty issue to crack because an intellectual-politician like you should not be seen throwing money to people on the road during campaign. But meanwhile, try and look for a good construction company to construct roads, dig boreholes, renovate schools inside such people’s stomachs since that is where they want their own ‘infrastructure’.

    If you must know, you are not the only one accused of not doing “stomach infrastructure”. They are also accusing Senator Femi Ojudu and Yemi Adaramodu, your Chief of Staff. The impression that was created about Femi Ojudu was that of an “absentee Senator” or in their own language “Senator moÌ nìbÍÌ”. When I told Femi what the people were saying about him in town, and he told me the numerous projects and programmes he had done for his Senatorial District in two years, I was amazed. All these activities, projects and welfare programmes were captured in a publication on his two-year stewardship – titled: Half Term Score Card. I am bringing this to your attention because they were saying that Femi was creating problem for you because of his non-performance in Ekiti Central. When Femi told me of how much he had spent in his one week stay in Ekiti for the Ileya festival, it was shocking. Seriously, I pity Femi when he was debunking all these snide comments by people who use stomach infrastructure to measure the performance of their elected representatives. If Femi’s case was deserving of commiseration, that of Yemi Adaramodu was nothing but a baloney. At every event, the same Yemi that they accuse of not ‘doing anything’, is always hailed and applauded by the same people accusing him of non-performance. May GOD deliver all the “Alajese” people in Ekiti land.

    If today, the Ekiti people are hailing and applauding your achievements, it is because you have performed far above the expected benchmark, and I can imagine how tough it has been. To satisfy an average Ekiti man who also believes he can perform similar feat given the same resources and opportunity could not have been an easy hurdle. It becomes a more herculean task when you have to impress all the “Professor Iguns” and “Professor Alukos” that hibernate in every Ekiti village.

    What I observed was that the people are happy with your government and what it has done in the state. But you can never tell with our people. I know you already know what to do: keep working hard as you have been doing, remain focused, be strategic, be prayerful, be watchful. Regaining the legacy is commendable but please don’t stop there. Move on until you have raised the legacy.

    Finally, I thank you for giving me a copy of your latest book, Regaining The Legacy. Nice book, I must say. It contains all the speeches, papers and tributes which you delivered at different fora both at the local and international levels. It is a professional delight both in contents and packaging.

    However, I am sure the book is not meant for those suffering from Stomach Infrastructure Deficiency Syndrome (SIDS) in the state. How do you expect somebody afflicted with this kind of disease to find the space in his brain, nay stomach, to digest the theme in the Part II of the book: The Sub-National: Structural Reconfiguration, Good Governance and The Imperative of Sub-Regional Strategies? If you have no cure for “stomach infrastructure”, why are you adding “stomach constipation and intellectual congestion” to their problem? Is it now a sin for the Ekiti people to have put an intellectual in power? Haba!

    Thank GOD, Ekiti is blessed with “Book people” who can read and understand the loaded contents of your book. I suggest you compile the names of all serving and retired professors, bishops, civil servants and traditional rulers in Ekitiland and send copies to them. This is the strategy of “occupy till I come”. They have a veritable companion to keep them busy till the end of the election, otherwise the restless ones among the retired professors will turn themselves to emergency auditors scrutinising all contracts awarded since you came to power including the total cost of the food and drinks you consumed in the Governor’s Lodge since the past three years. An idle hand is a sure tool for the devil. Extend my greetings to Bisi – your wife, girlfriend, sister and one and only Erelu Bambam.

  • Fayemi advised to set up farm settlements

    Fayemi advised to set up farm settlements

    In Abuja-based social group, the “Group of Gatherers”, has call on Ekiti State Governor Dr. Kayode Fayemi to establish farm settlements  in each of the three Senatorial Districts in the state.

    The chairman of the group, Dr David Olajide Ayenibiowo, who made the call in Ado-Ekiti, explained that farm settlements will improve agriculture, adding that government should put up a machinery for its monitoring.

    He said the state has good land for planting a variety of crops but needs to be supported with fertilizer which government and people of the state must venture into.

    He said: “Ekiti people are known for hard work, diligence, respect, openness and all that is good.

    “Once you respect Ekiti people, you have already won them because they so much love respect.

    “Ekiti is homogeneous because we came from the same ancestor; we have the same character and same reading culture”.

    Cocoa production, he advised, should be resuscitated by inviting experts  to educate people on ways to create employment opportunities for the youths, while the government should also ensure that one World Bank-assisted project is in the state through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture.

    The group chairman suggested that a steel industry in Ekiti should be established because the state has the materials needed to support it.

    “We are concerned about the welfare and development of Ekiti people and not based on any political affiliation. By this, we are serving between the government and the governed, while the legislative arm can formulate this into law.

    Dr. Ayenibiowo urged the state government to involve eminent citizens of the state in the supervision of the project to ensure its sustenance and effective management.

  • Christ’s school  ado-ekiti  at 80

    Christ’s school  ado-ekiti  at 80

    In a particular year at the University of Ibadan, Christ’s School accounted for 8 out of the ten University Scholars

    As all roads lead to Ado-Ekiti this weekend for everybody  that ever had anything to do with our truly remarkable school- Christ’s School, Ado-Ekiti, which we call The School: alumni, parents, spouses, family  and the lot, it is all glory to God that He inspired some of His anointed men to plant and water what has turned out to be a truly phenomenal institution molding men and women of intellect,  not only in Ekiti, its location and primary catchment area, but all over Nigeria. Today, hundreds of Christ’s-School products are professors in all areas of study; from the Humanities to Medicine, to the professions, even to Aerospace science and are spread all over the world doing what they know best to do – banishing ignorance and expanding the frontiers of knowledge just as thousands of its alumni, as medical doctors, engineers, teachers, administrators, etc are providing various services to humanity both at home here in Nigeria and overseas. Amongst our alumni are two of the earliest winners of the Nigerian Merit award, just as The School has produced university Vice-Chancellors and state governors – military and civilian.   Or need I say that two of Nigeria’s most celebrated professors of Neurosurgery, the late Professor Kayode Osuntokun and Professor Adelola  Adeloye cut their teeth in The School? The Ekiti State governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi is, for instance, a distinguished alumnus of The School just like his deputy, Professor Dupe Adelabu and the Secretary to the State Government, Dr Ganiyu Owolabi. Such is the sheer profundity of Christ’s School that a whole page of this newspaper will be infinitely inadequate to tell its story.

    Our School is so unique that not a few has  accused us of acting like a cult because whenever or wherever we ex-students  meet, irrespective of age and when exactly you  attended The School, you immediately become like uterine brothers and sisters.

    This was precisely the objective of the founding fathers.

     Archdeacon Henry Dallimore who founded The School in 1933 was clear in his mind as to what sort of education he intended and what manner of character he wanted foster among the students from the very beginning. ‘The total impact of the education to be given,’ wrote Professor Olofinboba and co in THE BUILDER, ‘was to make the individual a useful person to himself and his community’. For this reason, initial subjects taught in The School included the following outside the normal academic subjects: Tailoring, Brick-making, Plastering, Building, Carpentry for boys and Weaving and Knitting for girls. Agriculture and Cattle keeping were added in 1945, thus by many decades before, Christ’s School was already doing what today’s 6-3-3-4 and all its other newer variants had been grappling with for decades. Above all, however, the founders wanted to nurture the ‘total man’, whose entire life will be rooted in and around Christ. To amply demonstrate this, everything about the school revolved around Christ: the name, the motto, Christus Victor, just as the first two letters of the word ‘Christ’ is inscribed in Greek.

    But if Apollo (Archdeacon Dallimore) planted The School, our Paul, who watered and nurtured it to world renown is the Rev Canon Leslie Donald Mason, C.B.E, O.O.N, M.A, Dip.Th, Dip Ed, whose children we all are since he never was married. To all Christ’s School students, Canon Mason was Principal, father, counsellor, benefactor, friend, teacher, all. He ensured you never dropped out of  The School for financial reasons. He indeed paid the fees of many a student.  He knew all the students by their first names and could identify thousands by their voices.

    For a very long time, he was our doctor and dispenser as he converted one of the rooms in his hilltop house to a dispensary. A strict disciplinarian, all the same, Canon Mason was a man of simple taste and life style and so was able to handsomely impart in the students respect, simplicity, humility, honesty, loving kindness and diligence. It should therefore not be a surprise that wherever you find an old student of Christ’s School, you are face to face with a complete gentleman/lady who is ever willing to lend a helping hand, whatever the circumstances.

    In appreciation of all that Canon Mason did for us at The School, a book: The Reverend Canon Leslie Donald Mason (1908-1989): THE BUILDER, was written in his honour by the alumni association under the lead of the late Professor M.O.Olofinboba.

    He was succeeded in 1967 by Chief R.A. Ogunlade, another truly remarkable man of God who also gave his all. Indeed, he made Biology easier for us than eating very ripe banana. He was such a gifted and exprienced teacher.  An old student of The School himself, Chief Ogunlade ensured there was not the slightest diminution of all the good standards Canon Mason with whom he had worked very well had laid down. One of his key achievements was the seemingly effortless manner in which he successfully achieved the tasking merger of the Ekiti Anglican Girls’ Secondary School which was founded in 1955 by the Anglican Church, with Christ’s School; a thoroughly daunting  assignment.

    Christ’s School had been founded in 1933 as Ekiti Central School, taking students into classes V and VI and took in students from within and outside Ekiti. It moved to its present AGIDIMO HILLS site in 1936 and it was there, on a visit by the Governor-General of Nigeria in that year, that he named The School, CHRIST’S SCHOOL.

    Christ’s School has, however, also had unsavoury stories to tell. For a very long time you would think it was taboo for an old student of The School to be appointed the Principal. It was even rumoured at that time teachers of some specific subjects, like Mathematics, were being deliberately denied the school. This time, therefore, coincided with that period when a series of individuals for whom our culture, history and practices meant nothing, or principals who were, in fact, jealous of its popularity were appointed as principals over it. This was mostly during the military era but there can be no denying the fact that some principals in the same period did their very best for The School. A good example of the latter is Chief R.F Fasoranti who gave impeccable service to The School that he is still fondly remembered till today.

    Christ’s School will always remain a pace setter and its products exemplars. In a particular year at the University of Ibadan, Christ’s School accounted for 8 out of the ten University Scholars, chosen solely on performance at the entry point examination. Today, there is hardly a university of note without some of its professors being ex-students of The School. In Medicine in particular, where it must have close to a hundred professors, if not more, Christ’s School continues to make terrific impact even in the UK, and the U.S.A, just as it has produced men and women in the professions and in the Episcopacy, especially the Anglican Communion where it has produced many Bishops.

    The 80th Anniversary, which is a mammoth home-coming for ex-students from every nook and cranny of Nigeria and the Diaspora, kicked off to a wonderful Thanksgiving service in many churches locally, and abroad on Sunday, 23 June, 2013. In my church, at the Archbishop Vining Memorial Cathedral, Oba Akinjobi Road, Ikeja, Lagos where the Lagos branch had its own thanksgiving, it was a wonderful sight-seeing  the entire congregation, not only joining us to mellifluously sing The School song, CHRIST IS OUR CORNER STONE,  but for most, who must certainly be aware and appreciative of the huge impact Christ’s School has made and continues to make, to  actually join us at the altar for the blessings.

    Friday, 28 June, 2013 will equally be awesome as the one and only, Sir Christopher Kolade, himself an old student and former Nigerian Envoy at the Court of St James’, London, takes to the rostrum to give the anniversary lecture. Saturday will be unique as we spend the day with the students and the evening, is already billed as an evening of fun at the evergreen Quadrangle where I had last been in my final year which is exactly 50 years ago this year. On Sunday, we shall return again to church to thank our Lord Jesus Christ for all He has done for us individually and collectively and, very importantly, for The School.

    All these will then come to a befitting end with The School Prayer:

    Grant O Lord

    That Christ’s School may continue

    To be a Christian School

    Not in name only

    But in deed and in truth

    For the sake of Christ

    Whose name we bear

    Amen.