Tag: DSS

  • Why Osun  politicians are after us, by DSS

    Why Osun politicians are after us, by DSS

    The Department of State Service (DSS) is being hunted by political parties for rejecting a N14 million bribe, the agency’s spokesperson, Mrs Marilyn Ogar, said yesterday.

    Speaking with reporters yesterday at the National Briefing Centre in Abuja, Mrs. Oga said: “The DSS director in charge of election duty in Osun State was asked to come and collect N4 million for himself and N10 million for his men. The offence of the DSS is that it rejected the money.

    “The rejection is bringing misunderstanding between political parties and the DSS. It is unfortunate. There is a big man occupying a sensitive position in Osun State. The man should thank his God that it was not the DSS that arrested him with the huge amount he was found with.”

    Stressing that the agency cannot be induced with money, Mrs Ogar said: “We are well paid and our operations are well funded. Compare N14 million to the N200 million that was spent; which one will you go for? People should stop using money to entice security forces. The Federal Government and Nigerians, who engaged us, are capable of taking care of us.”

    She said if security forces were not fully on ground for the election, the story would have changed.

    Urging parties to leave security agencies out of politics, Mrs Ogar said: “We thank God the All Progressives Congress (APC) won the election in Osun State. There was no bomb blast because there was enough security presence. The security forces that assisted in the election in Edo State were the same ones that went to Ondo, Anambra, Ekiti and Osun.”

  • ‘Our opponents sustain their campaigns with falsehood’

    ‘Our opponents sustain their campaigns with falsehood’

    Osun State is in the focus of the nation as the people go to the poll next Saturday, August 9, 2014.  The tension in the state is palpable. Last Wednesday, July 29th, gun-wielding men of the Directorate of State Services (DSS) and other security agencies paraded through major streets of the state capital, Osogbo, shooting sporadically into the air. If it was meant to be a show of force, it was largely met with consternation by the residents.  It was against this backdrop that Governor Rauf Aregbesola, the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate in the election sat down with a select group of journalists – among who was Festus Eriye – to discuss issues in this coming weekend’s election. Excerpts:

    The governorship election in Osun State is here. Do you fear a repeat of what happened in Ekiti?
    The real issue is not about you as a candidate but the quality of the electoral process. Once the quality is good and high, whatever the people say because they are the ultimate decider of who represents or govern them. A democratic choice is expected to be correct, good and right but it is not always that the choice is good, correct and right.
    But to answer the question properly, I have prepared so well for the office in a way that going by the normal run, I should not be working as hard as I am working now for re-election. Why we are different from them is that we have always been with the people from day one of our administration.
    How many governors walk the streets with their citizens? I have been doing that since the first month in office. How many governors created interactive forum in Nigeria before me? There is none. I was the first governor that devoted close to ten hours of continuous engagement on a quarterly basis with the citizens. The people ask any question in no- holds-barred atmosphere.
    ‘Ogbeni Till Daybreak’ is a worldwide engagement because we take feedback from social media. The Gbangba dekun is a monthly community interactive forum where the governor sits with all stakeholders in the community to ask or make inquiries on any issue. This is the picture of direct engagements that we are doing with the people that no government in Nigeria has ever attempted to do. We also have a carnival-like procession in ‘Walk to Live’ where we just walk round the communities and it is too engaging and popular because everybody wants to be with the governor. Hardly is there any community in this state that I have not touched personally.
    In terms of physical and social services, this is the first government that will say that there is no household, be it PDP, APC and others, that our programme has not reached. I feed 300,000 pupils every school day at the cost of N3.6 billion a year, I have been doing it since 2012 and I have spent N7.2 billion on that. You can go to the school by yourself and access what the children are eating to be sure whether it worth what we are saying or not. I can tell you that nobody touches the money except those in charge.
    Long before we commenced the feeding arrangement, we empowered poultry farmers to produce poultry products so that the chicken and eggs the children consumes are all sourced from them. We gave close to N600 million to the poultry farmers and also the fish farmers. The only people we buy from now are the cattle rearers.
    We have the second batch of O’Yes cadets, the first batch of 20,000 had gone, the 2nd batch of 20,000 is on and they are from homes. They work two or three days a week and they have the entire days of week left for them to see what they can do with their hands and earn a living because they are taught entrepreneurial training but they earn N10,000 monthly as cadets. On this scheme alone, this administration has spent N9 billion. I tell people what this type of scheme means for national government.
    You have in that scheme a directly injected N9 billion to the economy that has no means of going out because a man earning N10,000, unless you promised to double his investment, he has no business travelling to Ibadan with that N10,000. If it’s not going to yield anything more, he won’t go to Ibadan. Every bit of the money is better spent here. Every O ‘Yes cadet has a smart card and the issue of anyone handling or tampering with their money does not arise.
    We are one of the few governments that develop a meaningful programme for elderly citizen’s care. We are not into a blanket social welfare scheme for the elderly, we have a package that did an extensive survey of citizens that are 65 years and above, we have them in our database. We now identified those among them that are without any support that is the first time any government will so do in Nigeria.
    We identified 1,800 of such people state wide. The selection was purely based on their conditions, no primordial sentiment. We didn’t do the selection anyway, Professor Ogunbameru of OAU administered everything, gave us the list and the addresses. We have been giving them N10, 000 monthly since 2012. Still along that line, before now the only usage of ambulances here is to carry dead bodies, whereas it is not meant only to carry dead bodies but the conception of it is simply as a morgue vehicle.
    We have ambulance points everywhere in the state now working 24 hours. We just launched debit card with cash between N100, 000 to N150, 000 with which they buy their farm inputs by their doorsteps. They will buy on guaranteed credit and will pay back with either their commodity or they sell and pay back.
    I look at my engagement with the people, the products of my government which has not left any home unaffected positively, and I said if election is about acceptance, popularity and impact you have made on the people, we are waiting for what the dictate of democracy would be. In a credible, transparent, free and fair election, Rauf Aregbesola does not have any worry at all about what people will say about his administration.
    What is your reaction to the heavy security presence in the state?
    It is not just voting that is democracy. Everything pertaining to the capacity of the people to vote or not to vote and to freely decide what they want must be of interest to all of us. Whenever that right is abrogated, it is a total assault on democracy. And we cannot call that democracy.
    The fact that they disallow air of freedom greatly affects the quality of the democracy we are talking about. Rejecting the militarisation of the state is not one man’s job. We owe it a duty to let the whole world know what is happening here. This is against the right of the Nigerian people. We’ve all forgotten that we pay the salaries of the security agencies. We don’t pay for them to wear mask in our towns. They should only wear masks when they engage terrorist and if they have to operate in a region where seeing them will might compromise their own safety and security.
    What would they say is the reason for what they are doing now other than threat, shock and awe? So, what this means is that they want to conquer and cow our people, which is a direct assault on democracy. Yes, you ask for what I am doing. I won’t take gun against them but I will not be quiet.
    I believe that your supporting us to highlight this horrendous bent of the Nigerian federal authority to use all means at its disposal to cow how people must be condemn. We should all talk and condemn it because this is not about Aregbesola alone. You people may not have any press office to work with if this continues. Don’t think it will stop there. By the time they finish with the press, they can say you should not even go and buy yam to eat somewhere. Everything will be affected.
    Is your administration in good terms with four critical sectors, namely, teachers, civil servants, okada riders and students who can vote?
    I will answer in this form: most people don’t even know how to assess relationships. They assess it from the complaint they get from dissatisfied section of a critical lot. It cannot be. It is impossible for human to exist without conflict. The Yoruba has an idiomatic way of expressing it, they said teeth and tongue fights but they are always still together. A sociologist in human scientists would not therefore base his assessment of any sector on when there is disagreement. Let us look at what we have done and then situate our relationship within it, though some people for whatever reason does not just like you.
    I was telling someone that what should concern you is not those who are opposed to you especially as it gets to the run-up to the election. When you are still far from it, you may be bothered so that you can make it up. But when no matter what you do, that is their attitude, you just stay put. From the newspapers, there are not less than 20 parties seeking power, democratically. If you have 60 per cent, which does not mean you don’t have opposition. The 40 per cent who doesn’t want to see you and may cut your head if you are careless not only vote against you. If you have 60 per cent, you are home and dry. In a struggle with other stakeholders, six is a good number. What we are doing is to ensure that each of these critical sectors don’t have any basis at all to be opposed to us.
    Let us start with the students: we met a condition when we came in that students were given a bursary of N3, 000 and they won’t even get the bursary on time and it was full of scam. They brought it to me to sign and I said why do I have to sign N3, 000 for anybody? It’s best if we don’t give this bursary or we give it meaningfully. We raised the bursary to N10, 000 flat. For medical and law students N20, 000 while our indigenes in Law school get N100, 000. The school authorities give the money to students in their system.
    I don’t see how such students will hate us in the majority, I can’t see it. Whoever now hates us has something else against us not for the fact that we have not done the needful. The increase wasn’t solicited; we did it out of our own understanding of the reality of what the students are going through.
    There was clamour for reduction of fees; we reduced the fees from a huge amount to something that is comparably affordable. Also, we have been investing in developing the institutions much more than any administration has done in the history of this state. Yes, we are having some challenges with the lecturers but it’s not peculiar to us but you just have to bear it.
    For Okada riders, they have no problem with us. They may want us to do things for them as we have done to some other groups, but it not as if they said compared to others, these are the problems. The roads here are appreciated even by those who used legs. Has any government succeeded in constructing 200 kilometres of road in all nooks and crannies of the state?
    There is no part of this state that we have not constructed a new road and it’s not just any road but roads with concrete drainage, with stone base and kick asphaltic cover and above all when I get to campaign grounds, I say our roads have tribal marks. In all general roads, we have roads to with marks. We now have special roads, when we complete some of them, they will be tourism attraction and centres on their own. The road we are building in Gbogan, people will be coming to look at it, mark my words. That road you see, Gbongan to Akoda, will be a tourism attraction because it is not an ordinary road because it’s a road that took me time to conceive and design and we are taking our time to develop it. So, when people talk about the cost of our roads, I just laugh because it’s not good to be talking to people who don’t know what they are saying. We have different types of roads.
    That road is going to be a reference point in road construction. We are changing the landscape and making the state of Osun a hub of everything that is good. We also want to tell the world that the black man is a human being.
    Before our advent, the civil servants never knew that salary could be paid before the end of the month. For seven and half year, salaries were never paid here before the end of the month. But from when I assumed office, we changed that. Before the year ended when I assumed office, I paid 10 per cent of their basic as 13th month salary and paid December salary before the end of the year, the civil servants were dazed.
    Since that day up until December 2013, I pay salary on or before the 25th of every month. But as from January 2014, we ran into trouble which we explained to everybody six months before then. In July 2013, the Federal Government began a squeeze that they themselves know that nobody believed them. They said 400,000 barrel of crude oil is being stolen every day.
    We didn’t know problem was coming. Instead of collecting N4.6 billion, they gave this government N2.6 billion, 40 per cent slashed. We thought it will be temporary because after that month, they said the stolen crude has reduced to 200,000 barrel per day. When the oil being lost reduced, would you still expect a 40 per cent cut? From that July to now, the maximum allocation this state has ever received is N3.2 billion which was in November 2013.
    I am not making up anything, simply saying the truth. Now ask me how was I able to pay up until December 2013? My people are called osomalo- they are very deft in the management of money and I took this from them. I had been saving through the Omoluabi Conservation Fund in which 10 per cent of all allocation must just go and rest. So, I had money in reserve, which was a build-up for my refusal to form cabinet for 10 months, I had the money. Whereas my income fell to N2.6billion at the lowest and N3.4billion at the highest for a month, my statutory expenditures which are expenditures that I have no control on once we have agreed on it, for instance salary, pension and they are N3.6 billion every month, I have no power over it. I can’t say no, am not paying, Between July and December, I augmented my income with N5.4billion.
    All in the hope that this thing will go, it didn’t go. It has not gone as we speak, it is even worse. Before, when you get your allocation, you will cash it by the 15th of every month that is why they are paying salaries on the 15th of the month before we came in. That used to be the practice. But now, because you want to squeeze the opposition government, they even squeeze themselves. Nobody gets the reduced allocation earlier than the 26th of the following month.
    But before now, I wasn’t waiting for their money; I just pay on or before the 25th. If for whatever reason, because when we wanted to introduce the digital automation, it was difficult to do cross over it will get to the 1st or 2nd of the following month, not that the money is not there, we have arranged, banks just pay, we have money with them. To make up the deficit in what I received and what I must pay, I spent extra N5.4 billion.
    However, I told you earlier that I gave 10 per cent of basic salary for 13th month salary; the second year I gave 25 per cent; the third year I gave 50 per cent; the fourth year, I gave 100 per cent. So, December of 2013, I gave every worker in the employment of Osun 100 per cent of their basic salary as extra income which I paid before the end of the year, ordinarily, why should any worker say I am not friendly with them.
    Before, workers here were given their leave allowances en bloc at the end of the year, I told them this is unreasonable because we don’t go to leave at the same time, so choose when you want your leave allowance to be paid. Is it at your birthday or the anniversary of your employment into the service?
    So, whenever you submit your birthday, your leave allowance will be credited to you. I don’t know if any other government in Nigeria does that. Two, go and visit the secretariat and see what we have made of their work environment. So, if these are things that should motivate workers, I stand tall and proud because I have done my best.
    No matter what anybody tells me, majority of them will appreciate these things. However, since January because I have exhausted my reserve, it is when we get money that we now go to look for money to add to it and pay. That began in January. The difference between me and others is that I don’t hide anything; I tell whosoever cares to listen.
    I am the most loquacious governor in Nigeria. I went to the retreat of lawmakers’ and I said what is happening in Nigeria today is equivalent to the declaration of economic war on the states. If it is just mere shortage and it comes early, of course we will pay, it doesn’t come early. As we speak, we have not collected June allocation. What we are saying is that is either people don’t even care or they think you can just conjoined money or they know what you are going through.
    I said at a rally recently that from what I have heard from their grapevine because they had a meeting where they said that, squeeze them, if they can’t pay salary, you will create problem for them. Mark my words; they might not give us June allocation until the end of August. But we will pay our workers, already we have pay June.
    I am happy to tell you that majority of our civil servants see and appreciate what we are doing. You can to the secretariat and see what we are doing. We increased the car loan by 400 per cent; we increased housing loans by 100 per cent. For 36 out of 43 months we have been paying regularly, let’s even assume that there is a problem of delayed payments now, I cannot believe all the workers will be against us because I have done my best. If the demonstration of interest of workers in their remuneration and allowances counts and with what we have done, I don’t think they will be against us.
    I read the advert they published and I laughed because it indicted them. They wrote that my income was N2.8 billion and this is what I have to pay, N3.4billion and pegged it with state and local governments. There is no way I can touched local government account because is separate and distinct. We made sure nobody touches local government account and get away with it. Local government has its own separate account and I don’t know where their account is. I can only give policy statements on that.
    Our teachers in the state are now very well motivated such that you cannot distinguished between our them and bank workers. When you see a teacher in Osun before you know. They are so depressed, unmotivated and absence of facilities. Our teachers now appear corporate and well-motivated. It is not that there won’t be some of them who for whatever reason don’t like us but they are in the minority.
    Don’t buy the talk that you hear that teachers don’t like him, I don’t believe that. We do independent, scientific opinion poll does not support all these talks. You need to how people respond to us everywhere, people just swarm around me. I have never being in a place where my presence does not generate euphoria. You don’t get such reception if people have problem with you. I don’t really believe I have any problem with any critical sector. There is nothing that they have done to deride us.
    There is no household in this state that does not feel our impact. We are talking about how to make education the central focus of our administration because I am no longer thinking of now but we want to create a new sets of Nigerians on which a new society would be born and we can’t do it on what is there now. Mine is the first government in Nigeria to give free uniform to all students.
    The first government that will say that you don’t need to buy textbooks for your children in the high school, Opon Imo and its targeted at 150,000 students. One of the attractions is that it reduces the cost of book. With that number and with what it cost us to procure the e-book, N200m for 53 books. If you divide N200 million by 53, you will get the cost of per book on that basis.
    If you now divide the outcome with 150,000, do you know that the cost of the book will be N2? Opon Imo should be celebrated by all because it reduces the capital outlay on books. Tell me any government anywhere in the world that can provide eight textbooks free of charge to students. How many parents can buy all books required by their children, but we have changed this by putting into the hands of all our students in high school a library of 53 textbooks.
    Our students here keep it with them, go home with them, and sleep with them for as long as they are in school. That was why I said that we have saved our state N8 billion to procure these books for the students. Immediately they heard that I said we have save the state of N8 billion naira, they said Aregbesola has stolen N8 billion. That was the genesis of the money they said my son took from Opon Imo. Let’s asked them where the N8 billion is.
    How much of an impact do you expect what is now referred to as ‘stomach infrastructure’ to have on the poll this weekend?
    To those who people who are elite and are therefore separated from the people, this term may make a new meaning to them. I am a product of the popular forces, the people and I am part and parcel of them. I emanated from them and a product of their struggles. What is now known as stomach infrastructure is what we know as interaction, engagement, living with the people and meeting their aspirations and needs.
    That is what we have been doing from the very beginning of this administration; I feed their children every day meal. The Akara seller knows that I feed her child every day. I identify with them on a daily basis in their struggle to live and they understand that everything we do is to make live easy for them. My administration does not suffer alienation from the people, it is one and same with the people and that is the basis of our confidence in their ever ready support at all times.
    Is there any aspect of the state that you think you have not touched?
    There is no trade, commercial or social group in the state of Osun that we have not impacted. There is no aspect. Apart from Lagos, we are the only state government that has an emergency call centre but has been made dysfunctional because the federal government just refused to give us short code to make it work.
    I am telling how totally insensitive some of us are to the critical issues of our people. Whether you are APC or PDP, is your commitment not to improve the lot of your people? And when you get to these offices you must show shun partisanship because you have sworn to an oath of allegiance to the Constitution and service to the people. I challenge anybody to say that my programmes are discriminatory? Why should it be anyway, are they not our citizens? We have a nation to build and a people to serve administration has done in the history of this state. Yes, we are having some challenges with the lecturers but it’s not peculiar to us but you just have to bear it.

    For Okada riders, they have no problem with us. They may want us to do things for them as we have done to some other groups, but it not as if they said compared to others, these are the problems. The roads here are appreciated even by those who used legs. Has any government succeeded in constructing 200 kilometres of road in all nooks and crannies of the state?

    There is no part of this state that we have not constructed a new road and it’s not just any road but roads with concrete drainage, with stone base and kick asphaltic cover and above all when I get to campaign grounds, I say our roads have tribal marks. In all general roads, we have roads to with marks. We now have special roads, when we complete some of them, they will be tourism attraction and centres on their own. The road we are building in Gbogan, people will be coming to look at it, mark my words. That road you see, Gbongan to Akoda, will be a tourism attraction because it is not an ordinary road because it’s a road that took me time to conceive and design and we are taking our time to develop it. So, when people talk about the cost of our roads, I just laugh because it’s not good to be talking to people who don’t know what they are saying. We have different types of roads.

    That road is going to be a reference point in road construction. We are changing the landscape and making the state of Osun a hub of everything that is good. We also want to tell the world that the black man is a human being.

    Before our advent, the civil servants never knew that salary could be paid before the end of the month. For seven and half year, salaries were never paid here before the end of the month. But from when I assumed office, we changed that. Before the year ended when I assumed office, I paid 10 per cent of their basic as 13th month salary and paid December salary before the end of the year, the civil servants were dazed.

    Since that day up until December 2013, I pay salary on or before the 25th of every month. But as from January 2014, we ran into trouble which we explained to everybody six months before then. In July 2013, the Federal Government began a squeeze that they themselves know that nobody believed them. They said 400,000 barrel of crude oil is being stolen every day.

    We didn’t know problem was coming. Instead of collecting N4.6 billion, they gave this government N2.6 billion, 40 per cent slashed. We thought it will be temporary because after that month, they said the stolen crude has reduced to 200,000 barrel per day. When the oil being lost reduced, would you still expect a 40 per cent cut? From that July to now, the maximum allocation this state has ever received is N3.2 billion which was in November 2013.

    I am not making up anything, simply saying the truth. Now ask me how was I able to pay up until December 2013? My people are called osomalo- they are very deft in the management of money and I took this from them. I had been saving through the Omoluabi Conservation Fund in which 10 per cent of all allocation must just go and rest. So, I had money in reserve, which was a build-up for my refusal to form cabinet for 10 months, I had the money. Whereas my income fell to N2.6billion at the lowest and N3.4billion at the highest for a month, my statutory expenditures which are expenditures that I have no control on once we have agreed on it, for instance salary, pension and they are N3.6 billion every month, I have no power over it. I can’t say no, am not paying, Between July and December, I augmented my income with N5.4billion.

    All in the hope that this thing will go, it didn’t go. It has not gone as we speak, it is even worse. Before, when you get your allocation, you will cash it by the 15th of every month that is why they are paying salaries on the 15th of the month before we came in. That used to be the practice. But now, because you want to squeeze the opposition government, they even squeeze themselves. Nobody gets the reduced allocation earlier than the 26th of the following month.

    But before now, I wasn’t waiting for their money; I just pay on or before the 25th. If for whatever reason, because when we wanted to introduce the digital automation, it was difficult to do cross over it will get to the 1st or 2nd of the following month, not that the money is not there, we have arranged, banks just pay, we have money with them. To make up the deficit in what I received and what I must pay, I spent extra N5.4 billion.

    However, I told you earlier that I gave 10 per cent of basic salary for 13th month salary; the second year I gave 25 per cent; the third year I gave 50 per cent; the fourth year, I gave 100 per cent. So, December of 2013, I gave every worker in the employment of Osun 100 per cent of their basic salary as extra income which I paid before the end of the year, ordinarily, why should any worker say I am not friendly with them.

    Before, workers here were given their leave allowances en bloc at the end of the year, I told them this is unreasonable because we don’t go to leave at the same time, so choose when you want your leave allowance to be paid. Is it at your birthday or the anniversary of your employment into the service?

    So, whenever you submit your birthday, your leave allowance will be credited to you. I don’t know if any other government in Nigeria does that. Two, go and visit the secretariat and see what we have made of their work environment.  So, if these are things that should motivate workers, I stand tall and proud because I have done my best.

    No matter what anybody tells me, majority of them will appreciate these things. However, since January because I have exhausted my reserve, it is when we get money that we now go to look for money to add to it and pay. That began in January. The difference between me and others is that I don’t hide anything; I tell whosoever cares to listen.

    I am the most loquacious governor in Nigeria. I went to the retreat of lawmakers’ and I said what is happening in Nigeria today is equivalent to the declaration of economic war on the states. If it is just mere shortage and it comes early, of course we will pay, it doesn’t come early. As we speak, we have not collected June allocation. What we are saying is that is either people don’t even care or they think you can just conjoined money or they know what you are going through.

    I said at a rally recently that from what I have heard from their grapevine because they had a meeting where they said that, squeeze them, if they can’t pay salary, you will create problem for them. Mark my words; they might not give us June allocation until the end of August. But we will pay our workers, already we have pay June.

    I am happy to tell you that majority of our civil servants see and appreciate what we are doing. You can to the secretariat and see what we are doing. We increased the car loan by 400 per cent; we increased housing loans by 100 per cent. For 36 out of 43 months we have been paying regularly, let’s even assume that there is a problem of delayed payments now, I cannot believe all the workers will be against us because I have done my best. If the demonstration of interest of workers in their remuneration and allowances counts and with what we have done, I don’t think they will be against us.

    I read the advert they published and I laughed because it indicted them. They wrote that my income was N2.8 billion and this is what I have to pay, N3.4billion and pegged it with state and local governments. There is no way I can touched local government account because is separate and distinct. We made sure nobody touches local government account and get away with it. Local government has its own separate account and I don’t know where their account is. I can only give policy statements on that.

    Our teachers in the state are now very well motivated such that you cannot distinguished between our them and bank workers. When you see a teacher in Osun before you know. They are so depressed, unmotivated and absence of facilities. Our teachers now appear corporate and well-motivated. It is not that there won’t be some of them who for whatever reason don’t like us but they are in the minority.

    Don’t buy the talk that you hear that teachers don’t like him, I don’t believe that. We do independent, scientific opinion poll does not support all these talks. You need to how people respond to us everywhere, people just swarm around me. I have never being in a place where my presence does not generate euphoria. You don’t get such reception if people have problem with you. I don’t really believe I have any problem with any critical sector. There is nothing that they have done to deride us.

    There is no household in this state that does not feel our impact. We are talking about how to make education the central focus of our administration because I am no longer thinking of now but we want to create a new sets of Nigerians on which a new society would be born and we can’t do it on what is there now. Mine is the first government in Nigeria to give free uniform to all students.

    The first government that will say that you don’t need to buy textbooks for your children in the high school, Opon Imo and its targeted at 150,000 students. One of the attractions is that it reduces the cost of book. With that number and with what it cost us to procure the e-book, N200m for 53 books. If you divide N200 million by 53, you will get the cost of per book on that basis.

    If you now divide the outcome with 150,000, do you know that the cost of the book will be N2? Opon Imo should be celebrated by all because it reduces the capital outlay on books. Tell me any government anywhere in the world that can provide eight textbooks free of charge to students. How many parents can buy all books required by their children, but we have changed this by putting into the hands of all our students in high school a library of 53 textbooks.

    Our students here keep it with them, go home with them, and sleep with them for as long as they are in school. That was why I said that we have saved our state N8 billion to procure these books for the students. Immediately they heard that I said we have save the state of N8 billion naira, they said Aregbesola has stolen N8 billion. That was the genesis of the money they said my son took from Opon Imo.  Let’s asked them where the N8 billion is.

    How much of an impact do you expect what is now referred to as ‘stomach infrastructure’ to have on the poll this weekend?

    To those who people who are elite and are therefore separated from the people, this term may make a new meaning to them. I am a product of the popular forces, the people and I am part and parcel of them. I emanated from them and a product of their struggles. What is now known as stomach infrastructure is what we know as interaction, engagement, living with the people and meeting their aspirations and needs.

    That is what we have been doing from the very beginning of this administration; I feed their children every day meal. The Akara seller knows that I feed her child every day.  I identify with them on a daily basis in their struggle to live and they understand that everything we do is to make live easy for them. My administration does not suffer alienation from the people, it is one and same with the people and that is the basis of our confidence in their ever ready support at all times.

    Is there any aspect of the state that you think you have not touched?

    There is no trade, commercial or social group in the state of Osun that we have not impacted.  There is no aspect. Apart from Lagos, we are the only state government that has an emergency call centre but has been made dysfunctional because the federal government just refused to give us short code to make it work.

    I am telling how totally insensitive some of us are to the critical issues of our people. Whether you are APC or PDP, is your commitment not to improve the lot of your people? And when you get to these offices you must show shun partisanship because you have sworn to an oath of allegiance to the Constitution and service to the people. I challenge anybody to say that my programmes are discriminatory? Why should it be anyway, are they not our citizens? We have a nation to build and a people to serve

     

  • Lawyers condemn DSS personnel’s action

    Lawyers condemn DSS personnel’s action

    Lawyers have warned against heating up the polity ahead of the governorship election.

    Over 4,000 Department of State Security Service (DSS) personnel were reportedly deployed for the poll.

    They have continued to engage in a show of force since arriving in  the state.

    The operatives, said to have been hooded, shot sporadically into the air, with apprehensive residents running for fear of being hit by stray bullets.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Dr. Joseph Nwobike, said Osun is not known to be so prone to violence to warrant the deployment of such number of armed men.

    The Federal Government’s deployment of the DSS personnel, he said, is meant to create tension in Osun.

    “There are no security challenges in Osun State as to warrant the deployment of massive security operatives into the state few days before the scheduled election,” he said.

    Another SAN, Chief Emeka Ngige, said the security personnel should rather have been deployed to the Sambisa Forest, known as the notorious den of insurgents in the Northeast.

    Ngige said: “The militarisation of our democracy will do nobody, including the Presidency, any good. People should be allowed to express their political wishes without fear of intimidation.

    “The deployment of high number of military personnel in an election is suggestive that we’re in a civilian

    A law teacher at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), Mr. Wahab Shittu, said the massive deployment of armed security personnel could send a wrong signal that Nigeria is incapable of conducting a peaceful election.

    “While there is a necessity to guarantee peaceful, fair and credible election, we should be careful not to militarise the polity. That could constitute a danger to the democratic process,” Shittu said.

    Malam Yusuf Ali (SAN), however, said it is possible there is good reason for the deployment.

    “I’m not there and wouldn’t know what goes on in the place. When it comes to the issue of security, except you’re on ground, one wouldn’t know what informed that (deployment). I don’t want to make comments based on ignorance,” Ali said.

  • Secret service on BringBackOurGirls ‘franchise’

    Secret service on BringBackOurGirls ‘franchise’

    Going by the reaction of the Department of State Services (DSS) to the BringBackOurGirls protests in Abuja, it is clear that the federal government continues to loath the gathering, perhaps because officials see it as an embarrassment to the government and a reminder of its impotence in the face of the abduction of 219 Chibok schoolgirls that has lasted for about three months. Addressing a press conference in Abuja last week, the DSS spokesperson, Marilyn Ogar, told a disbelieving country that the protests had become a franchise organised in a way that its aims and objectives could no longer be described as altruistic.

    According to Ms Ogar, “BringBackOurGirls movement has become a franchise and security forces know what they are up to. If it is an ordinary movement seeking to pile pressure on government or security agencies to free these girls, there will be no need for the group to begin to have tags and insist that you must be registered. Security forces also know that they have bank accounts. We also know that they want to simulate a protest march inside Asokoro Extension in Abuja and claim that they were doing so inside Sambisa Forest, to be reported in some foreign media. We also know that they brought in some experts from outside the country to teach them how to beat security when they are demonstrating; to withstand police teargas and security operations. We are waiting to see when these things would work…”

    If the secret service knows all these things about the protests and their organisers, it is surprising that it has not made any arrest. The accusations against the protest organisers are so weighty that the DSS seems to be saying they had become subversives. It will be recalled that in May, the Federal Capital City (FCT) police commissioner, the controversial Mbu Jospeh Mbu, had attempted to ban the protests by also suggesting its organisers had become anarchists and subversives. Higher police authorities had to wade in to countermand the ban and save the country a huge embarrassment at a time the whole world was still demonstrating in solidarity with Nigeria over the abductions.

    Mr Mbu’s embarrassing order itself came after presidency officials and the first lady tried unsuccessfully to persuade the country to doubt the abduction story, suggesting carelessly that the story was cooked up to dishonour the presidency and undermine it. In spite of reports from security agencies in Borno State where the abductions took place confirming the crime against the schoolgirls, the federal government had to set up another panel to confirm the abduction and the circumstances that surrounded it. Useful time was lost in rescuing the girls.

    Apart from the troubling fact that the Jonathan presidency is run along amateurish lines, as the world attests without equivocation, the DSS now gives the unsettling impression it has little respect for the constitution and seems unmindful  of the fact that its actions and words indicate the secret service is more pro-Jonathan and pro-PDP than it is pro-Nigeria and pro-constitution. After many years of gaining respect for its professionalism and impartiality, the Nigerian Army is also unfortunately suffering from the same malaise of seeing itself as an instrument in the hands of Dr Jonathan and the PDP.

    The present attitude of the DSS and the army suggests something even more sinister – that increasingly the leadership of both security organisations lack the character necessary to stand up to the president and resist all subterranean efforts to undermine the constitution and the law. Indeed, the army keeps reaffirming its support for and defence of democracy. But its actions demonstrate otherwise. It lends itself to brazenly partisan tasks in its eagerness to stifle the opposition, muzzle the press and carry itself generally above the law. The credibility of the DSS and the army will continue to be eroded if their commanders fail to embark on the deep soul-searching they need to unite their men behind the law and the constitution and retain the respect and admiration of the country. If they fail, the fault will lie squarely on their drooping shoulders.

  • DSS parades suspected abductors of Jonathan’s uncle

    The Department of State Security (DSS) on Thursday paraded six suspects that allegedly kidnapped Chief Nitabai Inengite, an uncle to President Goodluck Jonathan in February this year.

    Chief Inengite was kidnapped at his Otuoke country home on February 23 and was held captive by his abductors for 17 days before regaining his freedom.

    The Service gave the names of the suspects as Eldred Magnus Jonah (30); Raphael Inengesi (32); Ibeabuchi Inya (29); Oreva Abridi (29); Tammy Tamarapreye Agbai (29); and a native doctor, Felix Onuoha (48).

    Spokesperson of the DSS, Ms. Marilyn Ogar , while parading the suspects, narrated how they ferried away the victim in a Honda SUV and later transferred him into a speed boat and headed to the creeks.

    The Service described Eldred Jonah, a 400 level undergraduate of the University of Jos as the mastermind of the abduction, adding that he provided the initial N40, 000 for members of his gang for arms procurement and logistics.

    Also on parade were 10 suspects arrested for the abduction of two sisters aged 15 and 17 years at Life Camp, in the Federal Capital Territory.

    The sisters were abducted from their parents’ home on June 8 and were held captive by the suspects for nine days. They were released on June 17, after the gang members had collected a N10 million ransom from the family.

    The Service gave the names of the suspects as: Oyemire Asagba (29); Sunday Attah (30); Zacheus Salami (30); Victor Bassey (32); Sani Mohammed (23); and Aragba Ademo (33).

    Others are: Ojo Idris Gambo (22); Haruna Asama (38); Dikko Iko (22); and Mohammed Adamu (20).

    Describing Asagba as the leader of the gang, the DSS said he recruited other members from different locations.

    The suspects confessed that Dikko Iko who worked as a security guard at the girls’ parents’ home provided information on the movements of the family members that led to the abduction.

    He also arranged for the gang members to rob his employer of cash and other valuables while the girls were being abducted.

     

  • SSS arrests Boko Haram impersonator

    SSS arrests Boko Haram impersonator

    •Army kills 50 insurgents in Adamawa, Borno

    The Department of State Security (DSS) yesterday confirmed the arrest of a person, claiming to be a member of Boko Haram.

    The Coordinator of the National Information Centre, Mike Omeri, who spoke at the daily briefing on the security situation, said the suspect has been extorting money from some influential Nigerians as a source of protection.

    “The Department of State Security (DSS) has apprehended someone masquerading as a front for the terrorist group, Boko Haram.

    “The suspect, who is being interrogated, has been  extorting money from some influential Nigerians as protection money,” Omeri said.

    He advised Nigerians to be vigilant.

    Omeri said the Army has killed over 50 terrorists and averted a massive raid in parts of Adamawa and Borno states.

    He said the terrorists were on their way to attack selected communities.

    Omeri said 30 rifles, 36 hand grenades, seven machine guns and 11 rocket propelled grenade tubes were recovered.

    “No fewer than 3,500 rounds of ammunition, six smoke grenade canisters  locally made guns and motorcycles were also recovered.

    “During the operation four soldiers were killed and some injured.

    “The attack was launched on the terrorists as they filed out of the forest to embark on their mission at  10pm on Saturday.

    “Over 50 terrorists died in fierce encounter that ensued,” he said.

    He said the injured soldiers are receiving treatment in the military medical facility.

  • Nyanya bombers and Ogar’s Freudian slip

    Nyanya bombers and Ogar’s Freudian slip

    LAST Monday, the Department of State Service (DSS) announced a breakthrough in the April 14, Nyanya, Abuja motor park bombings that embarrassed the Jonathan government about three weeks before the World Economic Forum (WEF). Some 75 people had died in that bombing, and about 20 more lost their lives in a follow-up bombing in the same vicinity, both giving the impression that Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, was under siege. Boko Haram, the sect waging a fierce war against Nigeria, claimed responsibility. It then warned that its fighters had breached the security of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and was prepared to carry out more attacks on Abuja and oil installations.

    Briefing newsmen on Monday, the spokesperson of the DSS, Marilyn Ogar, indicated that five suspects who already confessed to playing roles in the attacks had been arrested. One of the two masterminds of the attacks was to be arrested a few days later in Sudan where he took refuge. One is still wanted, even after N25m bounty had been placed on each of their heads. The breakthrough in investigations is indeed remarkable, and the DSS should feel justifiably proud of their achievements. From their interactions with newsmen when they were paraded, the five suspects appeared very convincing in describing the roles they played in the bombings. There is no reason to doubt them or the involvement of the two masterminds.

    Had Ms Ogar, however, limited herself to merely narrating the DSS angle to the bombing case, it would have been an excellent day for the secret service and a great day for Nigeria’s ability to rise up to major challenges, especially of insecurity. But while illustrating the bottlenecks they encountered in the case of one of the masterminds of the attacks, Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, a military deserter, Ms Ogar had said: “Ogwuche is a criminal who was earlier arrested in 2011, but was released on bail following pressures from human right activists who consistently accused the service of violating Ogwuche’s rights by being locked up while under investigations.”

    It was clear Ms Ogar had reservations about suspects’ rights and the involvement of human rights groups when it comes to security matters. Yet, there are provisions in Nigerian laws guiding the arrest and detention of suspects, especially how and why such suspects could be detained for much longer than the law ordinarily permits. Why did the service not avail itself of such provisions? Ms Ogar also went ahead to commit a Freudian slip with her impassioned plea to Nigerians to ‘set aside their beliefs’ (in order words, their opinions or convictions or suspicions) when security and public safety are in focus. But she was being disingenuous. Not only are there provisions that empower the service and other security agencies to detain a suspect for much longer than required by law, those provisions are nonetheless circumscribed by the need to present evidence proving that the suspects if let loose constitute a threat to peace and stability of the society.

    If the DSS had satisfied the provisions, it does not seem they could easily have been forced to release Mr Ogwuche on bail. Ms Ogar uncharitably blames human rights activists, even alarmingly insinuating that the public must have implicit trust in the service to do whatsoever it pleases on security matters. Regrettably, the DSS must be told that even in the face of the gravest threat to the country, the society must still be governed by laws properly enacted and scrupulously adhered to. The alternative is to unwittingly empower the secret service to become a leviathan. This must never be countenanced. Ms Ogar shook with anger and missed a word or two while suggesting that the public should set aside their beliefs. No, the public must never entertain this heresy. Instead, let the secret service and all other law enforcement agencies do their work diligently and present their investigations neat and tidy before a court, either in open or closed sessions, and fulfil the guidelines regarding the arrest and detention of suspects. There must be no shortcuts.

    The public must also remember that in the early years of the Boko Haram revolt, neither the federal government nor the DSS was sure how to treat the sect’s militants. Both the government and the secret service eventually agreed to experiment with a form of rendition used by the Americans in Afghanistan. This was why some suspects were released to either their parents or traditional rulers. It was a dubious process, and this writer and many others condemned it. But the government went ahead nonetheless. If human rights activists fought the prolonged detention of a suspect, it was because the DSS did not satisfy the courts that it needed to keep the suspects for much longer than the about 11 months Mr Ogwuche, for instance, was locked up. Ms Ogar’s suggestion about what the disposition of human rights defenders should be to security matters is fraught with landmines. She gives the impression that the service could whimsically operate above the law. In any case, even if Mr Ogwuchi was admitted to bail in 2012, it did not preclude the service from putting him under close surveillance. If they didn’t do so, they and Mr Ogwuche’s surety, not human rights groups, are to blame. Let the law stand as it is, and let human rights activists not be discouraged from serving as the conscience of the society even in these trying times. It is the DSS that should fine-tune its processes.

  • Nyanya blast: Terror suspect Ogwuche’s father arrested

    The Department of State Security (SSS) on Thursday said a retired Army Colonel, Agene Ogwuche, has been arrested.

    He is the father of the fleeing Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, suspected to be one of the masterminds of the April 14 blasts in Nyanya, Abuja.

    No fewer than 75 persons were killed in the blasts, with over 100 injured.

    The Spokesperson of the DSS, Ms. Marylyn Ogar, who disclosed this in Abuja, said the retired Colonel had secured the son’s bail in 2012, promising to produce the suspect on demand.

    The terror suspect was described as a British born Nigerian from Benue State who was in November 2011, arrested at the Abuja airport on his arrival from the United Kingdom, in connection with terrorism.

    Ogar had stated at a previous briefing that Ogwuche was released on bail to his retired Colonel father in October 2012, following intense pressure from the human rights groups who alleged violation of his human rights.

    The DSS added that the fleeing Ogwuche deserted the Nigerian Army in 2006 after serving in the Intelligence Unit of the Army at the Arakan Barracks, Lagos.

    Ogar stated at Thursday’s briefing that the father was arrested because he failed to produce the son on request by the Federal Government following his suspected involvement in the bloody April 14 blast.

    The Force Public Relations Officer, Mr. Frank Mba, who was also at the briefing, said the retired Army Colonel would be made to answer for his inability to meet the bail bond, which he signed, pledging to produce his son when needed for questioning.

    The Director General of the National Orientation Agency (NOA), Mr. Mike Omeri , who initiated the briefing, said the Federal Government was intensifying efforts to ascertain the veracity of claims by Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima, who said he has information on the girls’ location.

    Shettima reportedly said he had cited the location of the over 200 schoolgirls, abducted from their hostels by the Boko Haram sect on April 14.

    Omeri added that government would not drag issues on the abduction with anybody on the pages of newspapers.

  • Nyanya blast: DSS  parades five suspects

    Nyanya blast: DSS parades five suspects

    The Department of State Security (DSS) yesterday in Abuja paraded five suspects allegedly linked to the April 14 bombing at Nyanya on the outskirts of the Federal Capital Territory in which over 75 persons were killed and more than 100 injured.

    Also yesterday, the DSS placed a N25 million reward on two fleeing suspects, Rufai Abubakar Tsiga and Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, who were alleged to have masterminded the attack.

    Disclosing this at a joint briefing held at the headquarters of the security agency, its spokesperson, Ms. Marilyn Ogar, said Tsiga, assisted by Ogwuche, drove the explosive laden car to the scene of the blast a day to the incident.

    Tsiga was said to have left the car at the Nyanyan bus station and went back to detonate the explosives early in the morning of April 14.

    The DSS spokesperson said Tsiga ran a patent medicine kiosk as a decoy at Utako in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), from where he allegedly recruited other sect members who disguised as his apprentices.

    Ogwuche was described as a British born Nigerian from Benue State who was in November 2011 arrested at the Abuja airport on his arrival from the United Kingdom, in connection with terrorism.

    Ogar, however, said the suspect was released on bail to his father, Col. Agene Ogwuche (rtd), in October 2012, following intense pressure from the human rights community who alleged violation of his human rights.

    The DSS spokesperson added that Ogwuche deserted the Nigerian Army in 2006 after serving in the Intelligence Unit at the Arakan Barracks, Lagos.

    He was said to have absconded when he was posted to the Nigerian Defence Academy, , Kaduna, in 2006. Ogar gave his service number as SVC 95/104.

    Ogwuche is said to be studying Arabic Language at the International University of Africa, Sudan.

    Ogar pledged that “Nigerian security forces shall not rest on their oars until every individual or group of persons involved in the Nyanya bombings are brought to book.”

    The other five suspects in the custody of the DSS who were also paraded are: Ahmad Rufai Abubakar (43); Muhammadu Sani Ishaq (30); Yau Saidu (28); Adamu Yusuf (43); and Anas Isah (22).

    They all confessed to having played various roles in preparations before the bombing of the Abuja bus station.

    Before bringing out the five suspects to be photographed and questioned by reporters, Ogar said the suspects were told the bombing was in retaliation for the killing of a Boko Haram member the week before at the bus station.

    She added that no member of the sect was killed.

    But she revealed that lower level Boko Haram militants were still hiding in Abuja.

    “Terrorist elements are disguising daily by taking up various businesses and menial jobs in Abuja and its environs.  Therefore, security awareness of the public and prompt response to information sharing will continue to play a pivotal role in the war on terror,” said Ogar.

    Boko Haram has killed thousands of people in five years of insurgency, in attacks on churches, mosques, schools, markets, villages and the government.

    Also at yesterday’s briefing were: Director of Defence Information Maj.-Gen. Chris Olukolade; Director of Army Public Relations Brig.-Gen. Olajide Laleye and Force Public Relations Officer Mr. Frank Mba.

  • Govt rejects swap of girls with prisoners

    Govt rejects swap of girls with prisoners

    The Federal Government rejected yesterday conditions set out by Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau for the release of the more than 200 schoolgirls held hostage by the sect.

    The Directorate of  State Security (DSS) also yesterday, insisted that Shekau is dead. The man who has been speaking is another person, it said.

    Asked if the government would reject the suggestion by Shekau in a new video that the girls may be released once Nigeria frees all militant prisoners, Interior Minister Abba Moro told AFP: “Of course. “The issue in question is not about Boko Haram… giving conditions,” he said.

    Shekau made the claim in a video obtained by AFP yesterday, claiming to show about 130 of the 276 girls abducted from their school in Chibok, Borno State, on April 14.

    “We will never release them (the girls) until after you release our brethren,” he said. The militant leader, who made prisoner exchange demands in the past, said some of the teenagers had converted from Christianity to Islam.

    The International Crisis Group said in a report published last month that Boko Haram had written an open letter in 2011 to the Kano State governor, demanding the release of detainees.

    Shekau repeated the demand in a video released last week in which he claimed responsibility for the mass kidnapping that has sparked global condemnation and calls for action.

    Moro described the demand as “unreasonable”.

    Moro said terrorists could not give government conditions on the abducted girls.

    “It is unfortunate that Boko Haram is giving government conditions to release the girls they abducted. This deal can never work. No government will yield to this. No matter the pressure, no government will bow to this.

    “Government is doing everything possible to rescue these girls and we are deploying all we have to record success. No terrorist group can hold government to ransom.”

    The Federal Government is reviewing the video, Director General of the National Orientation Agency (NOA) Mike Omeri, said, also ruling out of negotiation with the sect for now.

    Omeri, who spoke alongside heads of various security agencies said the Federal Government was considering all options to rescue the girls and unite them with their parents.

    “All options are on the table and open; we are interacting with the military and intelligence experts who are already on surveillance in the Northeast. We will adopt all available options to get the girls out but we will not negotiate with the sect.

    Responding to a question on the security agencies’ claim that Shekau had died, DSS spokesperson Ms Marilyn Ogar, said: “ Boko Haram has become a franchise. Anybody can assume and lay claim to any name. What I know is that the original Abubakar Shekau is dead; the person claiming to be the national leader now is not the original Abubakar Shekau.

    “If security sources tell you that somebody is dead, you don’t have to come out and doubt that,” she added.

    Ogar also said no sovereign country can negotiate with terrorists. We are not considering that for now,” she said.

    Also yesterday, a French official said President Goodluck Jonathan had agreed to attend a security summit on Saturday in Paris to focus on the Boko Haram terrorist network.

    France is still awaiting confirmation from leaders of the four countries bordering Nigeria: Benin, Cameroon, Chad and Niger. Representatives of Britain, the EU and the United States will also be invited.

    The official spoke on condition of anonymity because details on the summit were yet to be finalised. French President Francois Hollande proposed the meeting.

    The failure to rescue more than 200 girls who remain captive has attracted international outrage. Experts from the United States, France, Britain, China, Israel and Spain are in Nigeria to help the authorities.

    The presidential fact-finding committee on the abduction of schoolgirls has slated a meeting with security agencies.

    According to a statement by Mr.  Kingsley Osadolor, member/spokesperson for the committee, the “ committee is scheduled to have further interactions with defence and Security agencies, with a view to ascertaining the veracity of speculations making the rounds since the abductionof the girls”.

    Osadolor said:  “The global response to the abduction is a reflection of our common humanity. In response, the officials expressed their enthusiasm in joining the search for, and freedom for the schoolgirls.”

    He also noted that the representatives of Borno State Government, who were unavailable at the Committee’s inauguration last week by President Goodluck Jonathan, attended the committee’s session yesterday.