Tag: Ekiti polls

  • Ekiti polls: Afe Babalola preaches peace at summit

    Conscious of the fact that peace and harmony are essential ingredients for development, security, social and economic justice, a legal luminary and founder of Afe Babalola University Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola (SAN) has advised politicians to play according to the rules in the forthcoming election in Ekiti State.

    Speaking as Chairman at the Ekiti State Development Holden Summit held in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital on Thursday, Aare Babalola said: “Peace is the essence of our existence. It is the freedom to pursue our dream. It is our ability to express ourselves. It is the opportunity to relate with others with understanding, good will and co-operation. It is a cornerstone of our survival and triumph as a people.

    “If peace is such an essential of our existence, why is it not the central theme of our conversations? Why is peace not the central theme of all religious sermons? Why is peace not a central pillar of our political agenda instead of just a hollow political slogan? Why are people herded to support destructive wars aggravated by political leaders?

    If peace is so much essential for our collective well-being and yet so much marginalised, what is the role of every one in making peace the focus of our consciousness? How can we promote peace to alleviate the suffering of millions around the world who are suffering from lack of it?”

    Based on the above, he has strongly appealed to all political actors in Ekiti State to shun all forms of violence and character assassination, even as he urged them to work together for the development of the state.

    He said peace is essential for the Ekiti gubernatorial election slated for Saturday, July 14.

    He said: “Come Saturday July 14, people of Ekiti State will go to the polls to elect their next governor. I want to use this medium to appeal to politicians to focus on the development of the state instead of indulging in personal attack, character assassination, and recruitment of thugs.

    “They should focus on the fact that Ekiti is landlocked, airport locked, railway locked, industry locked, and power locked. These are the critical issues that should dominate their campaign strategies. What should be the concern of politicians is how to develop Ekiti State and the elders should advise them in this regard.

    “It is the duty and responsibility of both the electorate and candidates to assist in doing all we can to make Ekiti a peace-loving state and a toast of its peers throughout the country.”

    Babalola, who recalled how he drafted a memo for the creation of Ekiti State and similarly defended same before the Nbanefo Panel in Akure 21 years ago, lamented that the aim of the founding fathers have not yet been realised.

    “Twenty-One years after its creation, Ekiti State is still landlocked, a development which adversely affects economic development.

    “As we all know, there are no motorable roads, no industries and no infrastructures while the airport approved for the state by the Federal Government on March 13, 2009 was politically frustrated as a result of which the sum of N680 million budgeted for its take off by the Federal Government was never utilised.

    “The airports in Bayelsa, Delta and Gombe states approved at the same time by same Federal Government have been completed or almost completed.”

    Babalola noted that as a result of not playing politics by the rules in Ekiti State, bitter political rivalry, disrespect for elders, backbiting, infighting, accusations and counter-accusations, as well as violence among political actors have become the norm in the stead of peace and harmony, leading to a general state of insecurity.

    Babalola added: “It is a fact that no state can develop without peace. Indeed, security of lives and property were once taken for granted in Ekiti State before its creation and until a few years ago. Before the creation of Ekiti State, the number plate of Ekiti was Western Power (WP). It was common in those days for one to stop if he noticed that any vehicle with registration number

    WP was in distress. We loved one another without measure. All these have been badly affected by party politics.

    “Hitherto, Ekiti was known for respect for elders. The young hardly looked at the senior in the eyes, while lie telling was totally alien to our culture.”

    Criminal activities have also surged, Babalola added, bemoaning the killings, assassination and robbery which have become nearly a daily occurrence.

    Babalola catalogued series of unwholesome activities by men of the underworld from April till date.

    He also recounted the disruption of APC primaries in Ekiti State, describing it as ‘embarrassing’

    “It is unthinkable and unacceptable that hoodlums could disrupt APC primaries in Ado-Ekiti. I find it intolerable that supporters of any political party would chant unprintable names on the candidate of an opposing party. As if that was not enough, there was the recent violent attack on Ikere Road at Ado-Ekiti when former Governor Kayode Fayemi was coming to the state to flag off his campaign.  On that particular day, five people were reportedly seriously wounded from gunshots fired by policemen.

    “I was so disturbed by the incident that the following morning, I had to visit Hon. Michael Opeyemi Bamidele and others who were receiving treatment at Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital and our own multi-system ABUAD hospital,” he said

    Emphasising the urgency to get Ekiti State back on track, Babalola equally urged the summit to concentrate its efforts on ensuring that all federal roads in Ekiti are fixed; the state abandoned airport rejuvenated; many industries established, including passage of rail lines across the state.

    He further challenged the summit to make an enquiry into how much money the Federal Government voted for road maintenance in Ekiti State in the last four years; how much is paid as monthly allocation; government’s inability to develop the Ikogosi Spring into money-generating tourist centre; and the root cause of brain drain in the state.

    Finally, Babalola asked the summit to push for the restructuring of the country in accordance with the 1963 Constitution, albeit with necessary modifications.

    “I believe that the above will provoke enough debate on why Ekiti State is either performing well economically or not. Genuine and unbiased answers to the questions will help us in preparing a blueprint on the development of Ekiti State,” Babalola stated.

  • How we rigged Ekiti polls with $35m, by Aluko

    How we rigged Ekiti polls with $35m, by Aluko

    Contoversy over the June 21,2014 Ekiti governorship election is still raging almost two years after. A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dr.Tope Aluko, who played a key role in the victory of Mr. Ayodele Fayose as governor, is divulging what his party did to compromise the integrity of the poll. He spoke at the weekend on Channels Television.

    On the Strike Force

     

    In fact senator Iyiola was very right. It was not a scheduled meeting. They were just in the middle of Ayo Fayose’s room. The strike teams were a mixture of DSS (Department of State Security), the military and MOPOL (Mobile Police). Yes, that’s about all.

    Aluko presented documents purportedly showing names and ranks of the strike team and the people they were supposed to hit.

    Not as in to kill but to just demoralise them; detain them, so that once you take out the opposition leaders and you take out the cash, they wanted to give their supporters, then that would be all. That was the agreement we had then. There were 44 teams, made up of about 11 per truck (Hilux vans) and they were supposed to have a contact person there. A contact person was somebody in the PDP that was supposed to show them where the opposition leaders. Before that time in May, we had 64 people coming together.

    They brought in 1040 soldiers under the leadership of Brig Momoh and then a strong politician too, who somebody identified as Ubah but not Senator Ubah (Andy), brought in from Enugu another 400 (soldiers). With that, we had more than enough to cage the whole opposition in the state. What we did was to block all the routes leading into the state and to block all the APC-controlled areas.

     

    Developments before

    the election

     

    Let me tell you what happened. There was a small riot in mid-May in Iyin-Ekiti, my home town. And I think Governor Fayemi called in the military from Akure to quell the riot. And it was at that point that we realised that our plans were not going to work out well, because we did not have the control of the military. That was when we petitioned the former GOC so that he would be taken away from Akure and he was replaced him with a more amenable GOC in Brig-Gen. Momoh. That decision was taken at the last security meeting. It was there that the then President told Minimah, the former Defence chief, with others in attendance that Ayo Fayose would stand in for him. He said Áyo Fayose would stand in for me in Ekiti politics.’ He didn’t sy more than that, but of course to all the military men as the C-in-C; that they had to provide an amenable Brigade Commander to join the DSS personnel that were brought in from outside the state. Now, when you look at the strike team, we had 44 teams. In fact, all the van that organised for the 44-member strike team members were actually parked in my place, in my house. I was the party secretary and the chief returning officer, as well as the chairman of security and intelligence and also the co-ordinator of the campaign.

    By Wednesday (June 18, 2014), the strike team members were distributed to the 16 local government areas and each council had an anchorage, who was a key leader in the PDP. All this you can see in the slide.

    The slides showed the residence of some leaders and how the military laid the siege

    Explaining…..Those were the routes that were blocked. They were about 10 and when you looked at those special polling units, we are not talking about all polling units in a ward. It’s either high volume polling units or polling units that were very weak or those that they must operate on. And when you come down, you’ll see that the man that was the contact person is now the current speaker; that’s Pastor Kola Oluwawole. He was PRO (Public Relations Officer) in my own SWC (State Working Committee) and the state PRO then. He was the one that co-ordinated that.  And then when you look at the other people there with their numbers, they were the ones that were manning the routes and taking care of the team. Let’s go now to where we have the team. Let’s go to the residences, we’ll call it the anchorage.

    In some local governments depending on the size, those are the key residences where they were anchored, where their welfare was taken care of. You notice that those people in charge, one is now a senator, one is a commissioner and one is a member of House of Reps, somebody has moved out.

    We had them in their anchorages three days before. They had targets that they were supposed to destroy. They went to houses of APC members and the people who were disgruntled with us. They were in PDP then but we didn’t want to take any chances.  So, they were also visited  as opposition members and they were harassed. At times, they were arrested and kept in special detention camps in primary schools or friendly police stations till Sunday morning. The strike force members operated till Sunday morning. And by Sunday morning when there was no opposition in sight again We told members of the team that they should keep any cash found on the opposition leaders.

     

    On whether INEC

    manipulated the process

     

    Answer: No, no, no no. INEC was not manipulated? INEC was settled. I don’t want to go into the issue of INEC.

     

    On why he won’t

    discuss INEC role

     

    No, because we’re talking about Ekitigate. Okay let me tell you what happened. INEC was the second option. INEC was the second option because by May in Abuja, we had given N1 billion to INEC for the two states, for the two states. And it was not Jega. Jega was not involved. Jega was not involved? It was to ensure that the returning officers from FUTA were our own. And I can give you the names of the two people who coordinated it. One was Oluwawole and the other was Adekanbi. They had to look for amenable returning officers from FUO.

     

    On the integrity

    of lecturers

     

    You are just saying that. They didn’t even know what was happening. The funding came for the primaries. It came from Ifeanyi Ubah who we met at the NNPC Towers in Abuja. He gave us $2 million on behalf of Mr. President. It was in cash and not too clean. $100 bills and he (Ubah) said that they had to retain 300,000 as courier fees for those people in the presidency.

     

    On the implication of

    mentioning peoples names

     

    Because I have to tell the truth and because I was there. I was privy to the process. I was there at the NNNP Towers. I was there with the Rt. Hon. Femi Bamisile. He gave the money in cash, less $300, 0000. And we now took the cash to Prince and princess into his house and he put it in his wardrobe. And he said we should go down to Ekiti for the primaries, to get them ready for the primaries. I was the head of the team, the head of the pro-primaries. That is the funding..(points to slide). You can see that that is the funding, that is Ekiti East and you can see that that is Ayodele Fayose’s signature. Let the slide go down.

     

    On how much was

    spent on the election

     

    It was $35 million and it came in January, not June 17. I was privy to all the arrangements. Obanikoro was just the courier. It came in from the former National Security Adviser Sambo Dasuki. The money was given from the former NSA in cash and by a courier. Because we asked for security and we asked for funds and Mr. President said everything would be made available. We had a meeting on Thursday, Wednesday, or Thursday. I think Wednesday 18th or so. And that is the money given out to the strike team. It was N1 million per van per day and they worked for three days, that is N132 million. And then for those people that blocked the road,  it was N4 million for the period and we’re talking about 16 local governments, making it N64 million.

     

     On the involvement

    of Hon Kareem Abisodun

     

    He was at the meeting thatwas attended by Koli. But, he was more of a personal friend to… If he says he was part of the security meeting, that’s a different thing. He wasn’t at the security meeting but he was at the meeting in Ekiti, in Spotless Hotel. Or Koli had lied about his presence?  If I’m saying he was there and Koli said he was there. I don’t have any issue with Hon Kareem. I’m just telling the truth to the whole world so that we’ll know how to manage our democracy.

     

    Implications of blowing the whistle

     

    Because I was part of it does that mean I shouldn’t have any proper legacy that I’ll leave to my children? Why should I be afraid? Have we not done it?

  • Ayobolu’s Further thoughts on Ekiti polls

    SIR: Segun Ayobolu’s piece in The Nation of July 5, can best be described as an attempt to justify the vilification of the good works of Dr. Kayode Fayemi as Governor of Ekiti State. It is possibly a part of the grand design to prepare grounds for his longstanding friend, Opeyemi Bamidele, who has become a lost sheep of sort, to return to the APC through the back door now that the chips are down.

    It is most surprising that Ayobolu could admit in one breath that he goofed for reacting in his

    column without proper appraisal of the empirical realities and went ahead to condemn what his instinct had told him was right using apparently orchestrated text messages from obscured readers, rumours and outright lies as the main premises of his write up.

    Ayobolu unwittingly exhibited his malicious intent when he said that he (a reputable journalist) did not visit Ekiti State in the last almost four years in spite of the fact that his friend, the governor

    was reportedly making waves in the state. On what basis was he writing previously in celebration of Fayemi?   His reference to the issue of the rumours about a university owned by Fayemi is lazy because severally the governor dismissed this as a non issue when it came up.

    It is unbelievable that a journalist could accuse a governor that utilized outcomes of village square meetings to plan his annual budgets as disconnected from the people. It is on record that Fayemi had absolute participatory governance and executed over 1,200 projects spread across the 132 communities in the state. Many of these projects which are dear to the hearts of the people include palaces, town-halls, health centres and rural roads some of which have been abandoned for over 25 years. How can anybody accuse a government that initiated and completed over 1,200 projects in the 132 communities in the state of being disconnected with the grassroots? The governor’s statement in his concessional speech that the new Sociology of Ekiti will attract the attention of scholars in future is pregnant with meanings for discerning minds and the wise.  Although some mistakes might have been made in these past three years, that would certainly not explain why a sitting governor will lose all the Local Governments and more so that he has been adjudged as having performed very well in office.

    One thing is clear though, posterity will judge the happenings of June 21, gubernatorial election in Ekiti. History scholars will surely have a field day trying to rationalize the victory of PDP over APC in

    spite of the monumental achievements of the incumbent APC governor.

    If indeed the election results reflect the yearnings of the Ekiti people, so let it be.  One can only hope that the in-coming administration improves the lot of Ekiti, our land of honour because this state is greater than individuals, post mortem or not.  It is when you marry another husband that you know the deference.

    •Tayo Ekundayo,

    Commissioner for Information and Civic Orientation,

    Ekiti State.

  • Further thoughts on Ekiti polls

    Further thoughts on Ekiti polls

    The primary vocation of the intellectual is the pursuit and advocacy of truth no matter how distasteful or bitter. Paul Baran, the late American political economist, insisted that the intellectual must ruthlessly criticise everything under the sun with the determination and courage to pursue rational inquiry to wherever it may lead irrespective of the consequences. In a famous lecture at the University of Jos, the late Professor Aaron Gana, the eminent political scientist, linked this to the famous admonition by Jesus Christ that “You shall know the truth and the truth will set you free”. The journalist is no intellectual. The nature of the profession gives little time for the kind of detailed and rigorous research undertaken by the intellectual. Journalists are said to write history in a hurry. Yet, we are no less bound by a commitment to truth as the intellectual. That is why it is said in the profession that while comments are free, facts are sacred.

    Last week, I joined in the effort to make sense out of the June 21 governorship elections in Ekiti State, which saw an incumbent, Dr Kayode Fayemi, perceived to be high-performing losing comprehensively to a populist, theatrical and controversial Ayodele Fayose with a tainted record as an impeached former governor of the state. Like most other commentators, including the famous Professor Niyi Osundare, whose satirical poem, ‘A rice O compatriots, thy stomach’s call obey’ has gone viral on-line, I interpreted the outcome of the election as a vote by the Ekiti electorate for instant and transient material gratification rather than enduring development; an endorsement of crude distribution of food and cash to the people rather than initiating and pursuing projects and programmes to uplift them out of poverty.

    In his thoughtful public ruminations on the Ekiti polls, Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) has raised pertinent questions, which have been misinterpreted as insulting the Ekiti people. Like the Governor, I also wondered if governance should be about distributing money to the poor or empowering them to be self-reliant through development projects. I wondered how an incumbent governor could have lost in his own home town and ward in a credible election. Well, given the overwhelming responses to my column – phone calls, text messages, and emails – mostly from Ekiti indigenes, I am afraid I was dreadfully wrong. I reacted cognitively and logically to the Ekiti polls without a proper appraisal of the empirical realities.

    Yes, the excessive and intimidating militarisation of Ekiti before and during the election was unwarranted. The partisan use of security agents by the Minister of Defence, Musliu Obanikoro and Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan is contemptible and condemnable. The intimidation of APC political leaders, abridgement of the freedom of movement of APC governors and teargasing by mobile police of the Governor Fayemi’s convoy negated the creation of a level paying ground necessary for free and fair elections. Yet, from the feedback I have received, the truth is that Mr Ayodele Fayose would still have won without all of these abuses. Indeed, it appears to me that violence would have broken out if, for any reason, Fayemi had been declared winner. It was that bad.

    Is it possible that Dr Fayemi could credibly have lost in his own home town, Isan-Ekiti? A reader from the town sent me a text message that he voted against the governor because he always insisted he was the governor of the whole of Ekiti State and not of Isan. Thus, they did not enjoy any special privilege from the fact of their son being governor. This may have been ethically right on the part of Fayemi but it was politically suicidal for him at home. Another response to my article was that Fayemi had built an imposing country home in Isan within his first year in office while most of the people remained immersed in poverty. The Fayemi government never successfully refuted the widespread rumour that the First Lady, Bisi Fayemi, allegedly built a higher institution in Ghana during his tenure. Thus, it is not that the people did not see and appreciate the massive infrastructure projects of the Fayemi administration. However, the construction of these projects were perceived as financially empowering a few in Fayemi’s inner circle many of whom were of no significant economic status before his emergence as governor. Thus, the quite natural and understandable insistence of the people that what is now popularly called ‘stomach infrastructure’ must be democratised and not restricted to the governor and his friends.

    A lecturer at the Ado-Ekiti University told me that most of the staff and students of the institution voted against Fayemi. If a Phd holder could not connect with his own academic colleagues, what are we talking about? And at the same time Fayemi was completely disconnected from the grassroots lumpen elements that were swept off their feet by Fayose’s populist antics despite the latter’s well- known flaws. Similarly, a national legislator of the APC from Ekiti State told me of how Fayemi had become inaccessible and alienated from the legislators at both the state and national levels and even many members of his cabinet. I am told that while many of Fayemi’s commissioners and special advisers could hardly boast of one million naira in their bank accounts, those in his inner circle had reportedly become stupendously wealthy. The Chief of Staff, Yemi Adaramodu, reportedly rude, arrogant and snobbish was a key factor in Fayemi’s loss. An APC chieftain in Ado-Ekiti recalled how Fayose and Opeyemi Bamidele reached out to him morally and financially when he lost his mother while his own governor did not even give him a phone call. This illustrates how alienated the Fayemi government was even from his own party that was consequently demotivated from working for his re-election with passion and commitment.

    Otunba Niyi Adebayo reportedly had two commissioners in Fayemi’s government including the commissioner for works; his 22 year old son was Special Adviser on Diaspora Matters (whatever that means) to the governor and Adebayo had five cousins appointed at various levels of the administration. This was in addition to unrefuted reports of the former governor handling several contracts.  Yet, many of those who fervently supported Fayemi intellectually, morally, financially and logistically during his three and a half year struggle to reclaim his mandate, including Asiwaju Bola Tinubu were kept at arms –length by Fayemi. The same Tinubu has stood valiantly by him following his June 21 defeat. Otunba Adebayo who could not even deliver his polling unit to Fayemi has remained thunderously silent while another of Fayemi’s cherished ‘godfathers’, Chief Afe Babalola (SAN), who publicly supported Fayemi before the election has come out after the polls to say that Ekiti cannot afford to be in opposition! It is stunning that a highly respected SAN cannot appreciate the critical, indispensable necessity of opposition for healthy democracy and good governance. That, however, is a matter for another day.

    I hate to write these bitter truths but have no choice but to honestly put out the feed- back generated by last week’s column. Dr. Fayemi is my friend but I deliberately refused to visit Ekiti throughout his tenure. I never requested for, nor was ever offered even a bottle of coke by his government. All I have written in support of his government and re-election have thus been based on principle and the facts as I saw it. But what I can now surmise is that an ordinarily brilliant, humble and unassuming Kayode Fayemi became transformed by power into a haughty, hubristic governor almost contemptuous of his party and people. It is ironical that a student of power like Fayemi turned out to be so inept in its usage and management. There is no way, for instance, that an astute politician would have allowed Opeyemi Bamidele, who played such a key role in his emergence as governor, to become such a bitter opponent.

    The outcome of the June 21 election in Ekiti was a massive rejection of Fayemi’s style of governance and not necessarily of the APC. But the APC is suffering the consequences of condoning and ignoring the excesses of the governor. If Fayemi had got his politics right, a million bags of rice or a battalion of soldiers could not have delivered Ekiti to the PDP. Luckily for the APC, in Osun, Ogbeni Aregbesola is a solid grassroots politician; his lifestyle and attitude have not been perverted by power; he is a fervent and passionate party man; his massive development projects are integrated into the local economy and where he has inevitably had conflicts with interest groups, he has bent over backwards to explain his motives and resolve the issues. The loopholes that facilitated PDP’s victory in Ekiti do not exist in Osun. If the Ekiti elections reflected the will of the people, then it is very good for Nigeria’s democracy. This means that given his appalling non-performance, President Goodluck Jonathan is a very vulnerable incumbent in a credible 2015 election.