Tag: Ekiti

  • Ekiti APC urges improvement on card readers

    Ekiti APC urges improvement on card readers

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to address the non-recognition of fingerprints recorded at last Saturday’s test-running of card readers.

    The party said the call became necessary to enhance the credibility of the general elections.

    Its Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatubosun, said in a statement yesterday that though the verdicts showed that the exercise gave hope for credible polls, there were areas that needed to be amended to remove doubts about the credibility and reliability of the device.

    According to him, these include reported lapses in the functioning of the machines and inability of the device to recognise the fingerprints of some prospective voters, owing to dirty fingers.

    Olatubosun said the exercise demonstrated evidence of INEC’s readiness to conduct fraud-free polls.

    “If the result achieved at the weekend is improved upon, we can safely say that the technology marks the end of over-voting and impersonation,” Olatubosun said.

    Describing the time saved during the exercise as incredible, he said the use of card readers will eliminate spending long hours in the queue while also removing the fears of health issues that might arise from staying long hours in the sun.

    “It is incredible that accreditation took less than a minute instead of about five minutes in past exercises.

    “Apart from eliminating multiple voting, it will encourage voters to vote for the candidate of their choice, without any fear of result manipulation.

    “We praise this innovation by INEC. From what we have seen in the exercise, INEC has demonstrated that it is ready to create a legacy of credible elections in our country.”

    Former Deputy Governor Sikiru Lawal criticised INEC for waiting few weeks before the elections to test-run the card readers.

    Speaking with reporters yesterday, Lawal expressed fears that the March 28 elections might become chaotic as a result of what he called “INEC’s alleged untidy preparations”.

    The former deputy governor, who participated in the mock accreditation exercise at Oloja Ese Polling Unit in Ado-Ekiti Ward 9, said the card reader captured his fingerprints on the seventh attempt.

    He claimed that 10 others of the 64 verified by the machine suffered a similar fate, wondering how INEC would manage the 764 registered voters in the ward  on election day.

  • Jonathan and Ekiti election scandal

    Few people are likely to be surprised that the Jonathan administration has not reacted to the recording released by Sahara Reporters in which a junior defence minister claims that he was mandated by the president” to draft a couple of army officers to facilitate and coordinate a subversion of the  2014 Ekiti governorship elections. Having personalised state security institutions, and having become accustomed to suborning law-enforcement agencies for partisan, often criminal, political assignments, any president overcome with hubris enough to play the strongman can afford to treat the people with contempt. Incidentally, barring a columnist’s comments, as well as brief stories from some newspapers, the public has maintained a funereal silence over this horrifying revelation. Does this seeming lack of interest imply a feeling amongst the populace that the country has, in any case, opted out of the civilised world, owing to the barbarity of Nigerian rulers, and their impunity-hardened proclivity for criminality?

    Or, perhaps Nigerians themselves have become indifferent to their own collective plight because everybody is preoccupied with “claiming” his personal material salvation in accordance with the individualism-ethos of miracle-peddling Pentecostal neo-Christianity? That none of our civil-society associations has so far raised its voice over this affair – NLC, NBA, Roman Catholic Bishops and Guild of Editors – also gives the impression that one and all have taken the Sahara Reporters’ revelation as no more than the latest token of the moral collapse of the Nigerian state.

    Nevertheless, I am personally surprised that Jonathan’s no. 1 attack dog has not been fuming with righteous indignation at what would, if untrue, be outrageous slander of his master’s reputation. This must indeed also be an awkward time for even the urbane artists at white-washing sepulchers. But, what can the smartest geniuses at advertising deep-black as sparkling white (depending on circumstances and inducements) do in this difficult-to-deny involvement of the president in a subversion of the electoral process? For now, these professional equivocators appear to be waiting for it to blow over, seeing their boss, like the proverbial dog fated to be lost, can no longer hear the hunter’s horn.

    In a situation like this concerning the alleged involvement of powerful people in serious crime for which they have not been formally charged, and over which they themselves are keeping silent, perhaps the only way to go is by the law of probabilities. The main issue, then, is what is already known about the abuses to which the Jonathan government has often subjected the security forces, including the military, during national elections.

    All Nigerian rulers, right from Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa, have always considered it part of their prerogative to use the army for partisan political interests, including influencing the conduct of elections. However, in matters of scale, and in the brazenness of the abuse, Jonathan would appear to have been far more daring than his predecessors. It was in the Ekiti elections of June 2014, conducted when the Boko Haram insurgency which began five years earlier was still fiercely raging, that the largest numbers of troops so far were deployed for elections. Yet, the polling was far outside the theatre of the insurrection. Apart from the regular army, the Ekiti elections, as well as the ones in Osun two months later, for the first time in the country’s history, witnessed a number of uniformed, gun-toting masked men. These “soldiers” it was subsequently learnt, were used to pick up opposition party candidates, along with party officials and agents, to be either locked up, or guarded by the uniformed and masked, party thugs for the two or so days the elections lasted. Some of these masked soldiers of spurious provenance also went about the streets of Ekiti and Osun towns, shooting into the air, intimidating the populace, and causing consternation and panic. It is also instructive that during the Ekiti elections, two state governors, who are members of the APC opposition party, were prevented by soldiers from entering the state. A “chieftain” of the ruling party, a professional political thug with obnoxious reputation, from Anambra State, was however escorted by soldiers to Ekiti where local opposition politicians had already been put away to ensure that they could not monitor the process and conduct of the elections either at the polls, or at the collation centres.

    A number of questions are pertinent at this point: Were the soldiers who prevented Governors Rotimi Amaechi and Adams Oshiomhole from entering Ekiti to monitor the elections, and those who escorted Chris Uba to the state not acting under orders? What duties, under the constitution were the police minister and junior defence minister, in Ekiti to perform during ‘the elections? And finally, why were the opposition party men incarcerated during the course of the elections, only to be released without charges immediately after? Whoever can adequately explain away these questions in relation to the mysteries of what actually transpired at the Ekiti governorship elections, can as well cast doubt on the audio, and now even the video, recordings, of the conclave of criminals, haggling over how to rig the elections.

    Short of a personal confession, it is obvious that only a judicial pronouncement can determine whether Jonathan indeed authorised a subversion of the Ekiti governorship polls. I am only, like any citizen is entitled to, expressing dismay at the president and his administration pretending that they are unaware of the grave allegations about their involvement. Equally grave are the implications for the president’s person and office, and for the image of the country and its people. This is as if Richard Nixon and his administration were to keep mum when the Watergate story’s dirty ramifications began to unfold. Even if Jonathan, in his usual self-and-office- compromising attitude, does not “give a damn” about what Nigerians think of his excesses, does he also not care about the standards and values which prevail in the conduct of public affairs in civilised countries, and about the opinions and feelings concerning pariahs that dare defy and defile these international usages? ‘Unfortunately, whether he takes these things into consideration or not, it is the country which ultimately suffers, just like during the regime of Sani Abacha, whose infamy Jonathan seems to be now aiming at surpassing.

    In view of the above, Jonathan should immediately empower the Chief Justice of the Federation to set up an independent panel of inquiry into the Sahara Reporters’ revelations. Should the president fail to do this, the Nigeria Bar Association should proceed to organise the probe.

    While the issue of Nigeria’s image in the international community over the Ekiti governorship elections affair is of the utmost importance, a far more crucial issue is the implications of the scandal for the current situation in Nigeria itself. In one respect, the Sahara Reporters’ revelations could not have come at a more appropriate occasion. Today, Nigeria again seems to be drifting into another crisis of political succession, a situation generated in the main by the ambitions of an incumbent ruler to do what other presidents before him have brazenly gotten away with – namely, to appropriate state powers to manipulate the electoral process to his advantage and that of his party. The eight-year rule of the loathsome moral nihilist, Babangida, was a study, as well as a variation of some sort, in this tragic political chicanery. Nor was the Obasanjo presidency much different. (In this context, I believe it is high time Abdulsalaami Abubakar, came before Nigerians to apologise for the stable-institution-inhibiting, and the pro-one-party dictatorship of a fraudulent constitution that he imposed on the country in 1999).

    Given Jonathan’s constricted and clannish worldview, unredeemed by weak character, he thinks that to fail in his bid for a second term in power would be tantamount to discrimination against him because of his ethnic origin. Hence he does not seem to care whether his schemes for re-election bring the country crashing down over his head. Jonathan should rather see his entitlement to enjoy the prerogative of even appointing the INEC chairman (not to talk of otherwise influencing elections) as comparable to exercising the antiquated divine right of kings. For, when the people decided to terminate such sweeping powers, they chopped off the heads of monarchs who resisted the tide of change. By the way, Jonathan swore to uphold something called the Nigerian constitution. So what does the faith he wears like his trademark hat say about allegiance to this sacred document? Perhaps his crowd of spiritual advisors should remind him.

  • APC wants Ekiti rigging investigated

    APC wants Ekiti rigging investigated

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has called for a thorough investigation, arrest and prosecution of the officials implicated in the recently released audio clip of a meeting where the plan to rig the June 21, 2014 governorship election in Ekiti was hatched.

    Those implicated includes serving and former government officials, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftains and military personnel whose ignoble roles were revealed in the audio clip.

    Those whose voices and names were revealed in the audio recording of the meeting released by Captain Sagir Koli of the 32nd Artillery Brigade in Ekiti State, included the current state governor, Mr. Ayodele Fayose who was at the time the PDP governorship candidate.

    Others are: the Minister for Police Affairs, Mr. Jelili Adesiyan; his predecessor, Navy Captain Caleb Olubolade (retd.); then Minister of State for Defence, Mr. Musiliu Obanikoro; the Commanding Officer in charge of soldiers deployed to provide security for the election, Brig.-Gen. Aliyu Momoh and a PDP stalwart, Senator Iyiola Omisore among others.

    But, the APC protest letter to the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega said it was Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Adoke and Inspector- General of Police (IGP), Mr. Suleiman Abba, that flayed the secret meeting, as against the tenets of democracy and electoral law.

  • Ekiti varsity workers protest unpaid arrears

    Ekiti varsity workers protest unpaid arrears

    Activities at the Ekiti State University (EKSU) have been paralysed by an indefinite strike.

    All workers unions are protesting the non-payment of January and February salaries.

    Lecturers, under the auspices of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), were the first to begin the strike on Monday before being joined by the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) and the Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU).

    The strike has turned the university into a ghost town.

    Commercial drivers are feeling the impact of the strike because of low patronage.

    On the campus yesterday, lecturers’ offices were shut. The university teachers vowed they would not return to the classrooms, until their salaries were paid.

    The EKSU-ASUU Chairman, Prof. Olufayo Oluodo, said the lecturers had to stay away from work because non-payment of their salaries had made life difficult for them.

    Oluodo said: “For now, I am at home and members of the union are also in their homes because we can’t be going to work when we are being owed salaries.

    “Our members have no money to run around. We have not been paid this year.

    “We have made our position known to the university authorities and we have written to the government on the matter.

    “We have met with the deputy governor to resolve the matter and another meeting with government has been slated for tomorrow.”

    SSANU Chairman Kolawole Falade and NASU Chairman Tope Akanni said they were on strike to press home their demand for the payment of their two-month salary arrears.

  • ‘Ekiti has no attorney-general’

    ‘Ekiti has no attorney-general’

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said Ekiti State has no attorney general and commissioner for Justice. It urged the occupier of the office, Owoseni Ajayi, to stop parading himself as such.

    The party urged the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) to ignore Ajayi’s presentation of the defence of allegation of human rights abuses levelled against Governor Ayo Fayose.

    The Ekiti APC, in a statement yesterday by its Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatubosun, maintained that Ajayi’s appearance at the NHRC to defend the Fayose administration amounted to “impersonation and flagrant impunity to trample on the sanctity of the constitution”.

    Olatubosun said Ajayi should have represented Fayose in his private capacity instead of “in borrowed robes of the attorney-general to mislead the rights’ watchdog”.

    The party spokesman reminded the NHRC that Ajayi was “screened” and “ratified” by seven Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) lawmakers in the House of Assembly, which fell short of the constitutionally-required one-third of a legislature with 26 members.

    Olatubosun drew the commission’s attention to the violation of the constitutional provision in Owoseni’s purported screening and confirmation as the attorney-general and commissioner for justice, saying all the processes leading to his purported screening and confirmation were not known to law.

    He said: “We wrote to the attorney-general and minister of Justice about the illegalities involved in his purported confirmation and warned that such illegalities cannot legally produce the state’s chief legal officer.

    “We were explicit in our letter that Section 96(1) of the 1999 Constitution provides that ‘the quorum of a House of Assembly for such exercise shall be one-third of all members of the House.

    “One-third of Ekiti State House of Assembly is nine, but seven PDP members aided by the governor were given security cover to ‘illegally remove’ Speaker Adewale Omirin and replace him with Dele Olugbemi in a brazen breach of the constitution.

    “We also referred to the constitutional provision for the impeachment proceedings against the Speaker.

    “The legal quorum of two-thirds of all members of the House of 26 members is needed for impeachment proceedings against the Speaker, which is 18 members, but seven members illegally impeached the Speaker and imposed a member of their faction  as their speaker, who conducted Owoseni’s confirmation.”

    APC spokesman also drew attention to the breach of Section 192(2) of the 1999 Constitution in the purported confirmation of Owoseni, saying there was no screening session where Owoseni was assessed as capable of holding his purported position.

    Olatubosun said for that flagrant abuse of the constitution, Ekiti State, for now, do not have a commissioner for justice in the person of Owoseni Ajayi and could not  act on behalf of the Ekiti State government.

    Dismissing Fayose’s defence of his alleged right abuse as an afterthought, Olatunbosun said the governor would have made his complaints at NHRC against Fayemi if he was convinced that abuses were committed by his administration.

    “At best, Owoseni is a busy-body and an overzealous supporter of Governor Fayose who, as a legal practitioner, allowed himself to be part of reckless politicians, who are gang-raping the constitution to deny Ekiti people their  rights to have a duly elected speaker.

    “He is an impostor and part of the illegitimate products of human rights violations in Ekiti State.”

  • Ekiti to spend N2b Ecological Fund on dredging

    The Ekiti State government has said the N2 billion Ecological Fund received from the Federal Government will be used to dredge eight waterways in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital.

    Conducting reporters round the project sites yesterday, Special Assistant to Governor Ayo Fayose on Environment Bisi Kolawole said the allegation of diversion of the funds was not true.

    He said the government would use the funds to prevent ecological disaster in Ado-Ekiti, adding that ecological problems in other towns would also receive attention.

    The governor’s aide identified communities to benefit from the second phase as Efon, Ifaki and Ilawe.

    The waterways undergoing dredging include Adere, Ureje, Isinla, Elemi and Omi Olori.

  • APC petitions NBC against abuses on Ekiti stations

    APC petitions NBC against abuses on Ekiti stations

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has petitioned the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) against “acts of unprofessionalism and abuses” in the Broadcasting Service of Ekiti State (BSES).

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatubosun, the party called the NBC’s attention to the poor quality control mechanism arising from poor staffing in the leadership cadre of the television and radio stations.

    “We have discovered that the core professionals who can advise on the quality control mechanism of the two stations have been sidelined in favour of Governor Ayodele Fayose’s cronies, who do not have requisite qualification to hold their positions.

    “For instance, apart from the avalanche of contract staff who were hired on the basis of partisan solidarity, the Acting Director General of BSES, Lere Olayinka, has never practised in any reputable newsroom of any print or electronic media anywhere across the country.

    “At best, he is a political journalist without any basic grounding in media practice and he is often used by politicians to malign innocent opponents.”

    He said Olayinka’s lack of requisite qualification had adverse effects on quality programming and professional touch in the running of the radio and television stations.

    The APC spokesman urged NBC to apply its standard to ensure and promote ethics and professionalism in the sensitive profession of electronic communication at BSES.

    He urged NBC to investigate Olayinka’s qualification, pointing the agency’s attention to various abuses arising from political partisanship and unprofessional conduct at the two stations.

    He listed the alleged directive by Governor Ayo Fayose to ban paid APC adverts and jingles in the stations with Olayinka  turning the stations to his boss’ megaphone to malign senior citizens and political opponents.

    “The stations in one of their news bulletins in November accused the Chief Judge, Mr. Justice Ayodeji Daramola, of collecting N200 million from APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, to influence the judge sitting on Fayose’s eligibility case to rule against him.

    “About the same time, an allegation that the 19 APC House of Assembly members demanded N135million from the governor was also broadcast on the stations. All these were without evidence,” Olatubosun explained.

    He added that in another news bulletin, the chief judge was accused of collecting N20 million from Governor Kayode Fayemi’s administration to prevent Fayose’s inauguration, noting that in January, the stations broadcast the allegation that Fayemi donated N1.5 billion to Buhari/ Osinbajo Campaign Organisation without any proof.

    Olatubosun said: “The stations also accused Fayemi of an attempt to transfer N950 million from a bank in Ghana but which the Ghana Central Bank stopped.

    “These are all lies aimed at denting the image of these decent Ekiti citizens.

    “The BSES is in the habit of copying social media gossips and broadcasting same in the stations’ news bulletins.”

    The APC spokesman also accused Olayinka of unprofessional conduct by approving fabricated stories for the private producers and presenters of a popular Yoruba newspaper review programme, Lati Inu Aka.

  • Ekiti denies APC’s abuse claim

    Ekiti denies APC’s abuse claim

    The Ekiti State government has denied involvement in human rights abuses as alleged by the All Progressives Congress (APC) in a petition to the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC).

    Describing the allegation of human rights violation as “spurious and unfounded”, the Ayo Fayose-led administration accused the APC of “misrepresentation of facts and engineering a smear campaign to achieve political gains”.

    The government, in a protest letter to the NHRC by the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Owoseni Ajayi, said it was the out gone APC-led government that carried out human rights violations during its four-year stint.

    The protest letter was sequel to a petition forwarded to the NHRC by the state chapter of the APC, which accused Fayose of giving official cover to suspected political thugs allegedly wreaking havoc in many parts of the state in the run-up to the general elections.

    The thugs, according to the APC, attacked its members, destroyed their property and vandalised posters, billboards and campaign vehicles, among other allegations.

    The APC also followed up the petition by sending its representatives to the NHRC who were granted audience by the agency’s Executive Secretary, Prof. Bem Angwe, who promised to investigate the complaints.

    Ajayi accused his predecessor, Olawale Fapohunda, of using his position as a commissioner on the NHRC board to orchestrate a campaign of calumny against the Fayose-led government.

    The commissioner argued that contrary to the APC’s claims, infraction of rights allegedly occurred during the tenure of former Governor Kayode Fayemi.

  • Ekiti residents protest blackout

    Residents of Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital and other communities are protesting a power outage that has gone on for over one week.

    They are urging the Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) to save them from the blackout, which has paralysed economic activities.

    The Nation gathered yesterday that a BEDC task force disconnected  communities, such as Ire-Ekiti, Oye-Ekiti and other communities.

    Another community that has suffered is Ikere-Ekiti, which has been thrown into darkness for over one week.

    Calming frayed nerves in her community, the Regent of Ikere-Ekiti, Princess Ayooye Adegboye, urged residents to remain law-abiding while efforts are on to restore power to the town.

    But the Public Relations Officer of Ado-Ekiti Business Unit of BEDC, Ilori Brown, said the blackout in Ikere was caused by a faulty isolator, which he said had been repaired by the company’s engineers.

    On the blackout in other communities, Brown said generation dropped while other places were cut off for non-payment of electricity tariff.

  • Fuel scarcity in Ekiti

    Fuel scarcity in Ekiti

    Fuel scarcity has resurfaced in many parts of Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital. Many filling stations refused to sell the product to buyers, which made few outlets dispensing the commodity to be besieged by motorists, motorcyclists and other consumers.

    The queue at the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Mega Station on Iworoko Road was the longest in the city as hundreds of vehicles parked to buy the commodity.

    Many of the consumers who spoke with our reporter lamented that the situation has affected their businesses.

    An oil magnate, Alhaji Sulaimon Akinbami, said the development was caused by an increase in the price of fuel from the depot.

    “This increment had affected the dealer’s profit and it doesn’t pay us,” he said.

    A motorist, Timothy Ajayi, who queued for fuel at NNPC Mega Station on Iworoko Road, said he had been on queue for over two hours.