Tag: Ekiti

  • Ekiti…stomach infrastructure turns controversial

    Ekiti…stomach infrastructure turns controversial

    MANY waited with bated breath for the Yuletide to come. They expected a Christmas with a difference following assurances from Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose that every family would have a fowl to kill, rice to cook and some money for merriment.

    The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) in the Fountain of Knowledge State had in one his early broadcasts immediately he took the saddle on October 16, 2014, told his army of supporters that the birds were already being reared to meet the December 2014 target.

    Those who heard the promise wondered the possibility of nurturing a poultry bird to maturity within three months. Christmas was just a month and half away from October 16, 2014. The largess was to launch the ‘Stomach Infrastructure’ policy.

    Fayose, shortly after his inauguration at the Oluyemi Kayode Statdium, Ado-Ekiti, spoke of his plan to make ‘Stomach Infrastructure’ one of the cardinal policies of his administration. To him, ‘Physical infrastructure’ without ‘Stomach Infrastructure’ makes no sense.

    As a matter of fact, he promised to create an office of Special Assistant to the Governor on Stomach Infrastructure to effectively drive the policy and ensure that there is food on the table of every Ekiti person.

    Fayose also revealed during his inauguration that he had given directive for the commencement of the rearing of chickens to be distributed to the people of the state during Christmas which was about a month and half away.

    The governor took a step further during his maiden media chat known as “Meet Your Governor”, where he emphasized the importance of his stomach infrastructure policy as he promised to appoint ‘Assistant Governors’ in all the 16 local government areas to. The job of such officers is to take the policy to the grassroots.

    He said: “I will appoint Assistant Governors in all the 16 local government areas because everybody cannot personally reach me in Ado-Ekiti. The local people approach these Assistant Governors for assistance like cash and materials anytime they want to celebrate special occasions like weddings, naming ceremonies, funerals and other functions.

    “The Assistant Governors will be my representatives in the local government areas and they will process requests for assistance for onward transmission to my office.”

    Three months into his administration, the Assistant Governors are yet to be named. No thanks to the shrinking and irregular handouts from the Federation Account to the states.

    The Yuletide might have come and gone but the dusts kicked up by the governor’s goodwill will take more time to settle down as the gesture was viewed differently across the state.

    Offering more explanations on the Stomach Infrastructure mantra of his principal, Fayose’s  Special Assistant on Information, Youths and Sports, Mr. Lanre Ogunsuyi, described the policy as the governor’s immediate intervention to banish hunger from the land.

    Ogunsuyi said: “Ekiti people, who had adopted the 0-1-0 or 0-0-1 feeding formula because they could not afford three square meals, would appreciate what Stomach Infrastructure is all about.

    “What this means is that we are going to return our people to the path of development by first of all ensuring that there is food in their stomach and we will also make sure there is money in their pockets.

    “We are doing this because the people have been so impoverished so much that they cannot pay school fees, their utility bills and so on. So, we are going to revive their economy by making sure that artisans get jobs and workers’ salaries are paid on time. The multiplier effect of this is that the people would be prosperous again.”

    The governor made good his promise when on December 18, last year, he personally gave out rice, chickens and vegetable oil to residents.

    The distribution, which began in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, saw interested members of the public trooping out in large numbers to collect their Christmas package from Mr. Governor.

    Fayose said the gesture confirmed the importance of the people’s welfare to him as a person, adding that his administration would always strive to improve the welfare of the people “who, against all odds, returned me to office with a landslide victory, after eight years.”

    The governor explained that the poor financial status of the state would not deter him from reaching out to them because “I made a covenant with God that I will ensure that the people are liberated from the shackles of poverty.”

    Not left out were uniformed personnel who also went home with their own share of the largess.

    Buy the time the curtain was lowered on the distribution, about 80,000 birds and 100,000 bags of rice had been shared out in a state inhabited by more than two million people.

    Teachers in public schools- though on Christmas vacation – had their own package sent to schools. The head teachers/principals had taken delivery of the consignment for onward distribution.

    Apart from the creation of distribution points in the 16 local government areas, collection centres were also created in the markets to ensure that no section of the society was left out.

    A beneficiary, Mr. Idowu Jewoola, who resides in Ado Ekiti, said he was thrilled receiving the largesse from the governor which he described as a “rare privilege”.

    Jewoola said: “The governor himself handed over to me rice, chicken and money. This is a rare occurrence here and you can see that everyone is happy and appreciative of Fayose.

    The stomach infrastructure train also moved to Ikere-Ekiti, the second largest town in the state where people also turned out in their numbers with the beneficiaries praising the gesture.

    Mrs. Eyitayo Adekola, a resident of Ikere-Ekiti, said the gesture confirmed Fayose as a man in touch with the grassroots.

    Another beneficiary Gabriel Aluko, a student, saw the rice and chicken as extra to the slash of tuition at the state-owned university.

    But the rare gesture has its own share of controversies.

    Besides the fact that some unscrupulous residents took undue advantage of it to get double and triple rations, many returned home from the distribution centres frustrated. Many secondary school teachers said three of them would have to pair to get a chicken.

    At one of the distribution points, Fayose embarrassed a desperate would-be beneficiary. He sent him out of the queue for having the effrontery to queue up for rice after receiving “a handsome financial assistance” from his office few days earlier.

    There were also complaints in some public schools that the number of chickens allocated to them fell short of the number of staff on the payroll.

    The Nation learnt that 17 chickens were allocated to each of the public primary and secondary schools in most parts of the state.

    A teacher, , who pleaded for anonymity  in one of the secondary schools in Ikere-Ekiti, told The Nation that sharing 17 chickens in a school with staff strength of 94 teachers became herculean.

    In some schools, many teachers just did not see the rationale in spending more than what they could use in buying a chicken in their community on transportation for the chickens. Many said they were not impressed with the size of the chickens which they considered as “not big enough”.

    The Nation gathered that in a particular school, many of the chickens died because the intended beneficiaries did not show up and there was nobody to feed them.

    A local government official, said although he got rice and chicken, but that he would have loved that the two-month arrears of salaries being owed council workers were paid.

    “This would empower me to buy myself the best of Christmas gifts,”  the council staff said.

    The gesture also became a bone of contention between the ruling party and the main opposition in the state.

    The APC accused Fayose of throwing overboard the various empowerment programmes initiated and implemented by his predecessor, Dr. Fayemi for stomach infrastructure that has turned Ekiti people to beggars.

    Taking exception to the brickbat, the PDP accused the APC of hypocrisy. It said  leaders of the opposition party also reached out to their supporters at Christmas.

    “It is hypocrisy at its peak to do what you abuse someone else of doing,” PDP Secretary  Tope Aluko said.

    He went on:  “They abuse us for providing immediate succour for our

    people. They described stomach infrastructure as an insult to Ekiti people. They said it does not add value to the people; it diminishes their self-esteem, it diminishes their sense of self-worth and it denigrates what politics ought to be about.

    “After condemning the concept, isn’t it rather too late that the APC people are just realising that poverty should be addressed by providing immediate succour because poverty is poverty; it knows no religion and it has no tribal mark; and it affects everyone of us?”

    The APC State Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatubosun, berated the Fayose administration for treating Ekiti people as beggars.

    In a statement, Olatunbosun said: “The governor has turned Ekiti people to beggars by giving them handouts in form of kwashiorkor-infested chickens not bigger in size than ailing pigeons.”

    He said Ekiti people have now seen the deceit of a man who claimed to be the friend of the common man with his callous attitude to the same people he claimed to love at a time they should be happy.

    Olatunbosun said: “Governor Fayose gave two ‘congos’ of rice and miserable palm oil not up to a  litre – all totaling N700 –  to each worker that the governor had earlier deducted N2,000 from his salary for Christmas gift.

    “This is in contrast to Governor Kayode Fayemi who empowered the people through agriculture, cooperative and employment and apprenticeship schemes involving over two thousand youths, which  helped the people to earn a living and made them happy for four years as against Fayose’s tokenism as Christmas gifts.”

    The APC spokesman said that instead of Fayose to build on these laudable schemes, he had cancelled all the programmes, rendering the youths jobless and cancelled many promotions in the civil service and dismissed many workers for the offences they did not commit.

    He explained: “Fayemi last year paid civil servants 30 per cent of their salary as Christmas bonus. He also paid their leave bonus while their December salary was paid on December 18.

    “In contrast, Fayose has refused to pay civil servants their September salary even though he had collected September allocation from the Federal Government. Civil servants are yet to be paid as at December 22.

    “Last year, apart from the 30 per cent bonus and leave bonus, all offices in MDAs (Ministries, Departments and Agencies) were given gifts but all these have gone under Fayose as workers are now praying for their September salary let alone December salary or xmas or leave bonus.”

    He carpeted Fayose for making civil servants to go through harrowing experiences as many of them could not celebrate Christmas with their salaries “as many of them kept vigils at ATM points in banks till the wee hours of the Christmas day without receiving their pay”.

    His words: “Governor Fayose should ask Ekiti citizens how Fayemi added value to their lives for four years. He didn’t wait till Christmas to pay N10,000 to over 20,000 youths in volunteer services for four years.

    “He didn’t wait till Christmas before he paid N5,000 to 20, 000 elderly people in his social security scheme for four years in addition to feeding them with  both cooked and raw food all year round.

    “Fayemi trained over 500 youths under the Odua/Job Creation Agency Skill Acquisition scheme.

    “Under the Youth in Commercial Agriculture Development scheme, over 600 young farmers have been trained and this generated about 15,000 direct and indirect jobs with the YCAD beneficiaries becoming employers of labour rather than beggars to be given handouts as Fayose is presently doing to Ekiti youths.”

    Olatubosun urged Fayose to pay workers their entitlements and stop treating them like beggars, stressing that even though APC is not in power, each of the 177 wards across the state is receiving no fewer than 20 bags of rice from APC leaders to make the members happy while PDP leaders only take care of their families.

    He concluded: “From what Fayose is doing, he is deliberately encouraging poverty so that people can be subservient to him and we sympathise with Ekiti workers and people who have suddenly been inflicted with miserable conditions by a governor touted to be the friend of the masses.”

    The Stomach Infrastructure however sank deeper into controversy following the controversial transfer of the Mobile Police (MOPOL) Commander in the state, Mr. Gabriel Selenkere.

    Selenkere’s transfer was over his alleged refusal to allow his men line up in public to collect the Christmas largesse.

    The Nation gathered that Selenkere has since been transferred to MOPOL 45 in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The conventional policemen had lined up to collect their share of the gifts but when it was the turn of mobile policemen, Selenkere ordered his men not to collect the gifts in full glare the public which he believed could be implicative.

    His action was reported to have angered top government officials who saw his action as “rude, unfriendly and insolent.”

    A police officer who asked not to be named because he was not authorised to speak on the matter, confirmed Selenkere’s transfer.

    He said: “It is true that he (Selenkere) has been transferred as confirmed by signals for his transfer. The issue of Christmas gifts shared by the government was part of it but you know he has many issues as well bordering on his line of duties.

    “It is true that he ordered MOPOL men not to collect the gifts and ordered them to go back to their bases despite the fact that the conventional police collected.”

    But the Special Assistant to the Governor on Stomach Infrastructure, Mr. Ayo Arowolo Fayose’s said the idea is not all about rice, chicken and vegetable oil alone. He said the government also intends to make micro-credit loans available to citizens of the state to empower them.

    According to him, the first batch of beneficiaries, who are market women, would soon be given micro-credit facilities to assist them in their businesses.

    He explained that this would breathe life into their businesses and stimulate the grassroots economy.

    Will the largesse be a regular bazaar or a one-off affair?  Can the 80,000 birds and 100,000 bags of rice distributed in Decembers 2014 sustain a population of more than two million for a year?  Can stomach infrastructure succeed without committing more resources to agriculture? Only time will tell.

  • 700 council workers face sack in Ekiti, says APC

    700 council workers face sack in Ekiti, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has condemned what it called “the gale of termination of appointments of workers” by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led administration.

    The party accused Governor Ayo Fayose of deceiving civil servants that he is their friend.

    The APC, in a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatunbosun, claimed that not less than 700 local government workers have been pencilled down for sack.

    The statement titled: “Sack of Ekiti Workers, Beginning of Stomach Infrastructure ‘Dividend’”, said Ekiti workers have now realised that they are in for hard times under the PDP government that promised so much but has delivered little.

    It said the sack of 180 civil servants and permanent secretaries “was an evidence of the definition of stomach infrastructure espoused by Fayose’s deceptive administration to dehumanise and celebrate poverty in Ekiti State.”

    The opposition party also berated the leader of the PDP faction in the House of Assembly, Dele Olugbemi’s role in the workers’ dismissal.

    Olatunbosun said the affected workers were duly employed by the House of Assembly Service Commission last April with their conditions of service stated.

    He wondered how such workers could be summarily sacked immediately after the New Year’s interdenominational service without following Civil Service rules.

    The APC spokesman said Olugbemi did not have any powers to sack employees of the House of Assembly Service Commission, even if he were to be the authentic Speaker.

    Olatunbosun said: “How can someone with genuine love of his people behave in a manner suggestive that he is an enemy of the people he professes to love?

    “Fayose had, in a similar manner, reversed the appointments of eight permanent secretaries appointed by former Governor Kayode Fayemi while he also sacked another seven perceived as loyal to the former governor.

    “He had similarly annulled the promotion of about 5,000 civil servants barely three weeks after assuming office.

    “Eight hundred peace corps members and over 300 staff of the State Traffic Management Agency were sacked. He stopped the N10, 000 monthly allowance to about 5,000 unemployed youths working as volunteers.

    “The man who said he is a friend of the vulnerable has also stopped the social security scheme where 20,000 Ekiti elders were paid N5,000 monthly to keep body and soul together.

    “To replace this life-lifting scheme, Fayose chose a seasonal stomach infrastructure scheme that features a handful of Ekiti people queuing up in the scorching sun for two congos of rice, a quarter of a litre of palm oil and a pigeon-sized fowl  for Christmas.

    “He deceived Ekiti people that he won’t live in the new Government House because he can’t be living in a well-lit lodge while the rest Ekiti people live in the dark whereas he and his wife live in the edifice with 24-hour electricity supply while the state is in darkness.”

    Olatunbosun claimed that the governor, instead of empowering Ekiti contractors and artisans as he promised during his campaigns, all the contracts awarded so far were given to foreigners and his brothers.

    But the PDP State Secretary, Tope Aluko, said the workers’ appointment did not undergo due process.

    Aluko accused the opposition of mischief when it knew full well that its (APC) administration engaged the sacked employees “who were without any appointment letters” only to deceive the people in a bid to score political goals.

    “It is unfortunate that the APC, in its shallow mentality, could think that such mysterious employment and appointment could stand in a rational society such as ours in Ekiti State.

    “It is only an irresponsible government that will abandon its unemployed youths for three years before giving out jobs without employment letters or follow any known due process in the employment of people into the Ekiti State public service.”

  • 180 Ekiti Assembly workers sacked

    180 Ekiti Assembly workers sacked

    About 180 civil servants working in the Ekiti State House of Assembly have got a bad New Year gift from the government.

    The workers, who were employed by the administration of Dr. Kayode Fayemi, were sacked on Monday after they had finished the New Year prayer as part of activities to mark the first working day.

    The civil servants were exchanging banters with their colleagues after the prayer when factional Speaker Dele Olugbemi announced their sack.

    Some of the sacked workers, who asked not to be named, alleged that Olugbemi told them that “they were not properly employed by the immediate past administration”.

    The workers, some of whom were weeping, described their sack as unfortunate and appealed to Governor Ayo Fayose to reinstate them.

    One said: “We are not politicians; we are civil servants and we have been loyal to the government and government is a continuum.

    “It is a very bad thing for you to resume work the first working day of the year and be handed a sack letter. What are we going to tell our dependants at home?

    “We have families to feed and take care of. Every government employs civil servants at one time or the other and we believe that the Fayose administration will also employ new workers anytime the state’s finances improve.

    “For us to be sacked summarily because we were employed by Fayemi is very unfair to us and we appeal to the governor to temper justice with mercy.

    “We are Ekiti indigenes and many of us even voted for Fayose. Is this the way they are going to pay us back?

    “We urge the governor to have mercy on us and take us back because many people will be affected by our sack.”

    Olugbemi alleged that the sacked workers were employed by the Fayemi administration after losing the June 21 election.

    He alleged that their employment was to create problems for the then incoming administration.

    The factional speaker alleged that senior officials of the dissolved House of Assembly Service Commission (HASC) and All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftains “illegally used their positions to facilitate the employment of the sacked workers”.

    Olugbemi said their employment was an additional burden on the finances of the Assembly and the government.

    He alleged that some of them are redundant in the Assembly while others were not even coming to work at all.

    The speaker said the sack of the workers was not to witch-hunt them but to “correct an anomaly of the past”.

  • Ekiti PDP, APC set for senatorial contest

    Ekiti PDP, APC set for senatorial contest

    Major political parties in Ekiti State have conducted their ssenatorial primaries. Odunayo Ogunmola examines the intrigues that threw up the candidates, the issues that will shape the polls and the their chances at the election.

    Since the restoration of civil rule in 1999, the Senate has been attractive to politicians because the it is an important institution  in democracy.

    Ekiti has three senatorial districts. They are Ekiti North, Ekiti Central and Ekiti South.

    Ekiti North has five local government areas. These are Moba, Ido/Osi, Ilejemeje, Oye and Ikole.

    There are also five local government areas in Ekiti Central. They are Ado, Irepodun/Ifelodun, Ekiti West, Ijero and Efon.

    Ekiti South, which is believed to be the largest district, in terms of land mass, has six local government areas. They are Ekiti Southwest, Ikere, Ise/Orun, Emure, Gbonyin (known as Ayekire in the constitution) and Ekiti East.

    The ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) have chances of winning the senatorial polls.

    In the last senatorial election held in April 2011, the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) won the three seats. Senator Olubunmi Adetunmbi, a development expert, won in Ekiti North. A lawyer, Chief Anthony Adeniyi was elected in the South.

     Ojudu is not seeking re-election. But, Ajetunmobi and Adeniyi are recontesting.

    The PDP held its senatorial primaries on December 7. The  APC held its primaries on December 8. PDP flag bearers are Mr. Duro Faseyi (Ekiti North), Mrs. Fatimat Rasaki (Ekiti Central) and Mrs. Biodun Olujimi  (Ekiti South).

    Faseyi, who was in the House of Representatives for two terms between 2003 and 2011, defeated Senator Ayo Arise (2007-2011).

    Mrs. Rasaki, also a former member of the House of Representatives (2007-2011), beat Senator Bode Ola (2009-2011) and former General Secretary of the Nigerian Bar Association, Mr. Obafemi Adewale.

    Another former federal legislator and former deputy governor, Mrs. Abiodun Olujimi, defeated Senator Sola Akinyede (2007-2011).

    APC candidates are Adetunmbi (North), Adeniyi (South) and Gbenga Olofin (Central). Adetumbi defeated former Chairman of Fountain Holdings Limited, Chief Olusegun Osinkolu and former Chairman of the Local Government Service Commission Chief Ranti Adebisi.

    In the Central, Olofin, a former senior official of Shell Petroleum Development Company, defeated former House of Assembly Deputy Speaker Hon. Karounwi Oladapo.

    Between 2011 and now, a lot of dramatic events, which may shape the poll, has taken place.

    There was a change of government. Mr. Ayo Fayose, who defeated former Governor Kayode Fayemi, is now in the saddle. The change of baton is a factor that may determine the outcome of the parliamentary elections.

    Many PDP chieftains believe that the ruling party is in a prime position to win, owing to the incumbency factor. But, APC chieftains also believe that the opposition party is popular in the state.

    In 1999, the Alliance for Democracy (AD) won two out of the three senatorial seats and all the six House of Representatives seats. In 2003, the PDP won the governorship election, three senatorial seats and six House of Representatives seats.

    In the 2007 general election, the PDP   won two the senatorial and House of Representatives seats. But, Senator Bode Ola retrieved his stolen mandate from the PDP senator, Femi kila.

    In 2011, the ACN won all the three senatorial seats and the six House of Representatives seats. But, one of the federal lawmakers, Mr. Opeyemi Bamidele later defected to the Labour Party (LP), following intra-party disagreement over his ambition to contest the June 21, 2014 governorship election in the state.

    Thus, the result of previous elections show that incumbency factor has always played a key role in Ekiti politics. The PDP is therefore hoping to reap from its new status in Ekiti.

    All the candidates that emerged at the recent senatorial primary of the party are believed to have been anointed by Governor Fayose.

    Faseyi who won the Ekiti North ticket i, for instance, is a close associate of the governor. He was a beneficiary of the 2003 political tsunami that brought the PDP to power in Ekiti and elsewhere in the Southwest.

    He has been a consistent supporter of Fayose in and out of power. The governor is believed to have rewarded by ensuring that he picks the the Ekiti North ticket.

    Faseyi was the chairman of Afao Day celebration, where funds were raised recently to carry out some projects in Fayose’s hometown.

    But, the PDP still has a lot of work to do, if it hopes to triumph in Ekiti North. Senator Arise who contested in the primary against Faseyi is still aggrieved over the way and manner it was conducted. Arise and his camp are accusing Faseyi of manipulating the delegates list, with the help of the state machinery, to win the poll.

    Arise, who is not in good terms with Fayose, had expressed worries over the turn of events in Ekiti PDP, immediately he Faseyi was declared winner of the contest.

    Arise expressed disappointment about the calibre of candidate his party is fielding for the National Assembly polls, in a situation where the opposition party is fielding formidable candidates. He noted that the PDP may experience protest votes because of the way the candidates emerged.

    “For us, we can say I’m still myself; I’m very much arround. I have a job that I can do. So, we are waiting to see what will happen. But, I can tell you judging from the outcome of the primaries that we have a a big problem on our hands.

    “In this particular senstorial district, I can see strong candidates coming out for elections, so the coming election is not going to be a tea party. We were supposed to present our best candidates. But, it appears that is not the case.

    “All options are on the table. I’m strong because of my supporters. If I say I want to leave and their interest is where they have been with me, then I must have to succumb to their wish. If I say I want to stay and their interest is somewhere else, then…..

    “Everything depends on the governor; if he doesn’t want some of us in the party, I have no problems taking a decision. If he wants us to stay in the party, we also have no problems taking a decision. It is not about junketing from party to another; it is about continuing to say this process must be good for us and our children.

    “When I see people doing the wrong thing I will speak up. But, it does not mean that I will be jumping the gun the next hour. But, let me say this:  nothing is impossible.”

    In a statement released after he was declared winner of the contest, Faseyi denied Arise’s allegation of manipulating the list of delegates, maintaining that the primary  was free and fair.

    He said there was no loser in the primary and that other aspirants should join hands with him to win at the general election.

    He said: “The contest was a healthy, credible, fair and transparent  one.

    “In a contest, one person must win and others must not also be seen as losers, but rather as partners in progress. Hence the need for other aspirants to join hands with  whoever the people use  their votes to elect in order to ensure overall victory”.

    “We are brothers and members of the same PDP family. So, we went to the poll just to play the game and now that the winner has emerged, we must come together again and focuse on how to defeat our opponents at the general election for the benefit of all.

    “The PDP is a big family that can accommodate all and that is why nobody is a failure in any contest under the party. Therefore, all my co-contestants must join hands with me,  so that we can get to the promised land together.”

    The conduct of the senatorial primary in Ekiti Central, where Mrs. Rasaki was declared winner, is also mirred in controversy.

    One of the contestants, Mr. Lati Ajijola, claims he is the winner of the primary, saying he was robbed of victory. Ajijola is accusing a very senior government official and former commissioner of “doing abracadabra” with the figures between the venue of the primary and the party secretariat where the result was tendered.

    The aspirant said he was declared winner at the venue of the primary, having scored the highest number of votes and that he was shocked when  the returning officers later declared Mrs. Rasaki, a fellow indigene of Ado-Ekiti, winner at the state party secretariat.

    The defeat suffered by the former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) scribe, Adewale, is also another factor dividing the PDP in the state. Adewale’s supporters equally claim he was robbed.

    The result did not go down well with delegates from the Ijero axis of the district, where Adewale comes from  particularly. They felt it was the turn of the area to produce a senator.

    The supporters of Adewale, who was Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice and later Commissioner for Works during the Niyi Adebayo administration and Special Adviser on Political Matters during the Segun Oni administration, are pushing for his candidacy because Ijero axis had not produced a senator since 1999.

    Other areas in the senatorial district which had produced senators include Ado/Irepodun-Ifelodun, Ekiti West and Efon.

    What worked against Adewale was Governor Fayose’s alleged wish to have the party produce a senator from Ado-Ekiti to repay the people of the state capital for their support during the governorship election and in deference to the Ewi of Ado-Ekiti, Oba Adeyemo Adejugbe.

    There was no hue and cry over the victory of Mrs. Olujimi in the Ekiti South primary conducted in Ikere-Ekiti. This has helped her to concentrate on the main election.

    This is the first time in the history of the state that a party is fielding two female candidates for the upper chamber of the National Assembly.

    The three candidates, Faseyi, Mrs. Raji Rasaki and Mrs. Olujimi, are all former members of the House of Representatives. It is instructive to mention that Mrs. Olujimi was  Deputy Governor during Governor Fayose’s first coming.

    This means that the three candidates have rich vein of experience in election battles and experience in the parliament to fall back upon in addition to power of incumbency expected to be deployed in their favour.

    If the intra-party squabbles generated by the controversies on primary elections are resolved on time, they stand a good chance of winning in their respective senatorial districts.

    Coming to the APC fold, the party appears to have been badly affected by the loss suffered during the June 21 governorship election. But, its members are not giving up.

    Leaders and members of the party are showcasing the successful conduct of the House of Assembly and National Assembly primaries where popular candidates were picked for the polls.

    Many members of the party believe that the loss of the governorship seat might be a blessing in disguise as candidates who emerged were chosen in free and fair manner, devoid of imposition of candidates that would have happened if the party were still in power in the state.

    While the PDP members are relying on the “Fayose factor” to capture the senatorial seats, the APC members are banking on the “Buhari factor”, which is currently sweeping across the country, to win.

    Despite being out of power in the state, optimism is growing higher by the day in the APC camp because they believe that the Fayose administration  is yet to impress the people of the state. Teachers and civil servants who contributed immensely to the emergence of Fayose are still disenchanted because they are yet to reap bountifully from the new government.

    Assessing the candidates on parade in the APC, Adetunmbi who won the Ekiti North re-election ticket is seen as the best performer from the state in he National Assembly, in terms of contributions on the floor and sponsorship of motions.

    But, whether that will translate to victory on the election day remains to be seen.

     Adetunmbi is a veteran of many election battles, having contested twice for the senatorial seat before eventually realizing his dream in 2011, when he defeated his perennial rival, Arise.

    He has carried out empowerment in the senatorial district and has been a consistent voice that is respected in the Senate.

    Adetunmbi and his opponent in the April poll, Faseyi, are expected to share votes from their federal constituency of origin, Ido/Osi, Moba and Ilejemeje, while the battleground is the remaining federal constituency of Oye/Ikole.

    While Adetunmbi is from Ifaki in Ido/Osi council area, Faseyi is from  Iludun in Ilejemeje council area. Adetunmbi is a strong candidate as attested to by Arise, but he needs to work harder if he hopes to return to the Senate.

    Olofin who emerged as the APC candidate in Ekiti Central is seen as a dark horse who may spring surprise at the main election.

    An indigene of Igede in Irepodun/Ifelodun council area, Olofin holds Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Chemistry and Analytical Chemistry from the University of Ibadan and boasts of experience in public and private sectors.

    In his charter of declaration, Olofin said he sees possibilities where others see challenges and hopes to use lawmaking as an instrument of social change in the polity and the development of his senatorial district.

    He was one of the chieftains of the PDP who defected to the APC alongside former Governor Segun Oni and he is very popular among youths in the council areas making up the senatorial district.

    But, he has a herculean task ahead of him at the general election, as he faces a formidable opponent in Mrs. Rasaki who is backed by power of incumbency.

    Some of the odds facing Olofin include hailing from the same local government area with Fayose who will do everything possible to win the senatorial district for the PDP.

    Apart from this, Olofin’s local government of origin has smaller number of votes, compared to Ado-Ekiti, the hometown of the PDP flag bearer, which has the largest number of votes.

    Ijero local government area is believed to be a PDP stronghold, while pendulum of victory can go anywhere in Efon and Ekiti West.

    On paper, Mrs. Rasaki is the favorite to win, considering the above factors and strong financial base, the element of surprise cannot be ruled out.

    In Ekiti South, Mrs. Olujimi is a very strong candidate.

    Incumbent Senator Adeniyi has a lot of work to do if he overcomes the serious challenge posed by Adu at the inconclusive primary.

    The battle will be interesting if Adu wins the primary as he hails from Omuo-Ekiti, one of the major towns in the senatorial district.

    But, if Adeniyi who hails from Ikere-Ekiti wins, the battle will assume a different dimension because election in the town is very unpredictable and being an indigene cannot guarantee victory.

    The senatorial district is the largest in the state with six local government areas and it stretches from the boundary with Osun State in the western axis to the boundary with Kogi State in the  northeastern flank.

    The senatorial election in Ekiti State promises to be interesting one and the result may alter the present political configuration.

  • Ekiti faults Fayemi’s claim on state’s  treasury

    Ekiti faults Fayemi’s claim on state’s treasury

    Barely forty eight hours after former Governor Kayode Fayemi gave his own account on the state of treasury and other issues in Ekiti State, the incumbent Governor Ayo Fayose administration has accused him (Fayemi) of being economical with the truth.

    Fayemi who spoke at a special programme on Akure-based private radio station, ADABA 88.9 FM said he left a debt profile of N36 billion contrary to Fayose’s claim of N85 billion.

    The ex-governor also disclosed that the new Government House complex was built at the cost of N2.1 billion contrary to Fayose’s allegation that over N3 billion was spent on the building.

    Special Assistant to Fayose on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka in a statement on Sunday accused Fayemi of resorting to falsehood and image laundering which he said cannot bring the ex-governor back on the positive mindset of Ekiti people.

    He said it was funny that Fayemi was embarking on another round of campaign six months after losing the governorship election in all the sixteen local government areas including his council area of origin.

    Accusing Fayemi of lying during his last appearance on the radio programme, Olayinka said the former governor is still in psychological pain of losing the opportunity of occupying the Ayoba Villa maintaining that the building cost N3.3 billion and not N2.1 billion as claimed by Fayemi.

    The governor’s aide said it is not true that the former governor had paid all contractors before he left office including the Ado-Iworoko-Ifaki Road.

    He said, “If Fayemi had paid the contractor handling Ado-Iworoko-Ifaki road as he claimed, why was the troubled spot in front of the State Hospital not fixed? And why didn’t Fayemi, himself arrest the contractor for refusing to move to site?”

    “It is on record that apart from debt of over N86 billion, with which Fayemi mortgaged Ekiti State till year 2020, August and September salaries of workers were left unpaid, four months deductions for workers Cooperative Societies and Union Dues were not remitted while pension and gratuity were not paid.”

    “If Fayemi could admit that Fayose left N3.5 billion in the State treasury in 2006 when the State allocation was less than N2 billion monthly, shouldn’t Fayemi be ashamed of himself that despite that his government received as much as N9 billion as monthly allocation, he left behind over N86 billion debt?

    “The truth is that Fayose left N10.4 billion in the State treasury in 2006. But even by Fayemi’s admission, Fayose left N3.5 billion for his successor while he (Fayemi) left over N86 billion debt for his own successor. Isn’t that shameful?”

    Olayinka claimed that as at the time Fayemi was leaving, Ekiti State Government was indebted to the tune of N86, 013,689,097.

    On the N25 billion bond taken by the Fayemi’s government, Olayinka said; “As at when Fayemi left government, after paying a total sum N15, 221,207,088 (i.e. N14,299,085,088 repaid from the N20bn bond and N922,122,000.09 from the N5bn bond), the State Government was still owing N26.749bn!”

    But the state chapter of the APC fired back saying Fayose’s outburst that Ekiti workers should forget their September salaries has confirmed fears in some quarters that the N1.5 billion September pay has been misapplied.

    In a statement on Sunday by the Publicity Secretary of the APC in the state, Taiwo Olatunbosun, the party expressed shock over Fayose’s position during his media chat on Friday on the basis that it was Fayemi who owed them.

    Olatunbosun described Fayose’s refusal to pay workers salary as “wicked, callous and insensitive” to come from a governor to workers who are the engine room of government policy and programme.

    The APC spokesman said records would show Ekiti people the debts profile of the state during Fayemi’s administration adding that the experience of Ekiti people in Fayose’s hand during Christmas would convince the people who is a liar between the two leaders.

  • Fayemi to Fayose: Stop running government on  falsehood

    Fayemi to Fayose: Stop running government on falsehood

    For the first time since he left office over two months ago, former Governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi has spoken on his four year tenure against the background of allegations against him by the new administration of Governor Ayo Fayose.

    Fayemi refuted many allegations levelled against him by his successor whom he accused of elevating falsehood and deceit as an official policy of his (Fayose’s) administration.

    Speaking on a special programme on Akure, Ondo State-based radio station, ADABA 88.9 FM, Friday evening which was monitored by our correspondent in Ado-Ekiti, Fayemi maintained that the total amount of debt he left behind for his successor was N36 billion contrary to Fayose’s claim of a whopping N85 billion.

    Fayemi also refuted Fayose’s claim that he (Fayose) left N10. 4 billion in the government coffers shortly after he was impeached from office in October 2006.

    He disclosed that available records show that Fayose left N3.5 billion and a lot of contractor obligations behind after his dramatic ouster from power in 2006.

    For the first time, the Fayemi also revealed that actual cost of the new Government House otherwise known as the Ayoba Villa. The edifice, according to him, was built at the cost of N2.1 billion.

    Fayemi said the cost of the Ayoba Villa, which is being presently overlaid with marble by the Fayose administration, was lower than other newly-constructed Government Houses in other states of the federation.

    He also carpeted Fayose for claiming in his monthly media chat earlier in the day that the new Government House is yet to be completed maintaining that “the edifice is not only completed but is also fully furnished”.

    Fayemi also expressed shock at the claim of Fayose and his aides that each of the beds in the Ayoba Villa cost N50 million saying there is no place in the world where a single bed is being sold for that amount.

    He warned Fayose to stop peddling lies and face the serious business of governance instead if reducing governance to comedy which, he noted, is portraying Ekiti in bad light in the comity of states in Nigeria and before the international community.

  • No September salary for now, Fayose tells Ekiti workers

    No September salary for now, Fayose tells Ekiti workers

    Civil servants and teachers in Ekiti State agitating for the payment of their outstanding September salaries got a piece of bad news from the state chief executive on Friday.

    Governor Ayo Fayose told them to forget the payment of the salary at least for now.

    The governor who disclosed his decision while featuring on his monthly media chat, “Meet Your Governor”, said the precarious financial situation of the state would not allow him to pay workers September salaries.

    Fayose also revealed that governors of Jigawa, Adamawa and Katsina States sent rams and cows to him as part of their contributions to his “stomach infrastructure” agenda for Christmas celebrations.

    He explained that he took the step in his desire to make Ekiti people happy and ensure that they do not go hungry during the festive season.

    While urging workers in the state to exercise patient with his administration, Fayose emphasized that the financial position of the state is so bad to the extent that he had reached an agreement with some banks to give the state what he called “financial leeway” for six months to enable him pay salaries.

    The governor explained that the deductions from the allocation of the state from the Bond sourced by the last administration and commercial loans obtained from banks had adversely affected the state finances.

    Fayose pointedly told civil servants, teachers and other government workers to stop complaining and adjust themselves to the prevailing realities maintaining that he would not be deceiving them on issues affecting governance.

    He said, “I became governor on October 16 and that is two months and ten days now and I want to state categorically that I have managed resources of the state very well.

    “Now coming here to tell the people that I will pay September salaries, no, no, I will not say that. The salaries I am paying now, I had interface with banks to give me leeway for six months to be able to arrange myself, “Fayose declared

  • Ekiti PDP, Speaker Omirin bicker over alleged corruption

    Ekiti PDP, Speaker Omirin bicker over alleged corruption

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ekiti State and the Speaker of the House of Assembly, Dr. Adewale Omirin, yesterday engaged in a verbal war over allegations of corruption.

    This followed Omirin’s  interview in a weekend paper in which he claimed that he and other lawmakers collect N200,000 each time they visit Governor Ayo Fayose shortly after his swearing- in.

    The state PDP Chairman, Idowu Faleye, in a statement yesterday, challenged Omirin to explain the purpose of the money collected from the governor when the state was in a “financial mess”.

    The state PDP boss described the Speaker’s action as a “fashion of corruption and indecency”.

    But Omirin lambasted the PDP chairman for , according to him,quoting his interview out of context and making an issue out of nothing.

    The Speaker said he only told the world the truth about what happened on their relationship with Fayose.

    Faleye said anyone should know that “it is only a corruptible mind that collect such amount of money on every visit to the governor and still claim to be honourable”.

    He also criticised Omirin and the All Progressives Congress (APC) caucus in the House of Assembly for the plenary held last Thursday outside the legislative chambers.

    Faleye challenged Omirin to disclose the location and time of the sitting, accusing APC lawmakers of resorting to “machinery of lies and brigade of blackmail”.

    But Omirin said Faleye was speaking out of frustration and failure of the PDP administration to stop a valid sitting held by the majority lawmakers to right the wrongs and illegalities wreaked on Ekiti people by Fayose and his goons.

    In a statement by his media aide, Wole Olujobi, Omirin alleged that the PDP runs a corrupt administration.

    He claimed that he (Omirin) and the APC lawmakers were offered N7 million each to defect to the ruling party.

    The Speaker explained that the refusal of the APC lawmakers to collect the money was the genesis of their stand-off with Fayose.

    Omirin said: “Who is more corrupt between a man who innocently told the public that the governor gave each member N200,000 and the one who gave N7 million to each APC member to defect to his party?

    “What of the man who provided money to security men to protect members for illegal sittings in the House of Assembly?

    “What of the man sending Ekiti State money to upgrade his hotel on the guise that he is not living in the Government House, whereas he has been living in the complex for a long time?

    “Are the Christmas gifts he purchased commensurate with the funds taken from workers in addition to millions taken from government coffers for the same purpose?

    “Have these people told us what they did with the N1.3 billion poultry project money that never produced an egg?”

  • 19 Ekiti APC lawmakers return

    19 Ekiti APC lawmakers return

    The 19 All Progressives Congress (APC) members of the Ekiti State House of Assembly on Thursday held a plenary sitting in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital and suspended factional Speaker Dele Olugbemi and the six lawmakers loyal to him.

    At the sitting,  presided over by the Speaker, Dr. Adewale Omirin, the APC lawmakers also nullified all legislative activities purportedly carried out by the PDP caucus, including the receipt and consideration of the 2015 Appropriation Bill.

    They also resolved to relocate the sittings of the House to the campus of the Ekiti State University (EKSU) citing the “situation of the state” in the last one month and the taking over of the Assembly complex by thugs and miscreants “who have been mobilized to kill and destroy”.

    The lawmakers also also voted in favour of the local government autonomy and constitutional amendment, giving autonomy to the House of Assembly.

    Other constitutional amendments that received the legislative approval of the lawmakers are Section 8 of the Constitution which confers citizenship rights and privileges on Nigerians anywhere they are living in the country.

    They also approved autonomy for the offices of Account General and Auditor General of the state as part of constitution amendment exercise.

    The House resolutions on the autonomy for local governments, autonomy for the House of Assembly, autonomy for the offices of Accountant General and Auditor General were forwarded to the National Assembly as the contributions of the Ekiti legislature to the constitution amendment exercise.

    All the 19 APC legislators were present with the mace of the House at the proceedings.

    Olugbemi and the six lawmakers who are members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had purportedly “impeached” Omirin on November 20 and received the 2015 budget estimate from Governor Ayo Fayose on Monday, December 15.

    The first issue on the Order Paper was the motion to reconvene at a public place within the state capital outside the House of Assembly chambers in view of security breach in and around the Assembly complex. The motion was moved by the Majority Leader, Mr. Churchill Adedipe.

    Adedipe, in his lead debate, said the action is in consonance with Section 101 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) in view of what he called security breach being experienced within the Assembly “whereby seven lawmakers have chosen to disrupt the sittings of the House under the constitutionally recognized leadership”.

    The Majority Leader in moving the motion said the House had resolved to hold its sittings at the Faculty of Science, Ekiti State University to conduct its normal legislative business.

    The Deputy Speaker, Chief Adetunji Orisalade (Ido/Odi 2), seconded the motion.

    The second matter on the Order Paper was the suspension of the seven PDP lawmakers who “impeached” the Speaker and “elected” Olugbemi.

    Adedipe (Irepodun/Ifelodun 1) who also moved the motion said the House had witnessed drama in the last one month with the seven PDP lawmakers, violating the provisions of the 1999 Constitution and the House Standing Order by several illegal actions carried out.

    He argued that the purported impeachment of Omirin, the “election” of Olugbemi and the “change” of leadership portrayed the House in bad light, hence the need to suspend the seven lawmakers to save the integrity of the Assembly.

    The Majority Leader alleged that the seven lawmakers gave false information to the public by accusing the 19 APC legislators of receiving bribes to impeach Fayose from office maintaining that the House has no intention to remove the governor.

    The motion to suspend the PDP legislators was seconded by Mrs. Omowumi Ogunlola (Ijero Constituency). They were suspended for violating Section 96 (1) of the Constitution.

    Those suspended include Olugbemi, (Ikole 2) Mrs. Abeni Olayinka (Ado 2),  Mr. Adeyinka Adeloye (Ikole 1),  Mr. Alexander Adeojo (Ekiti South West 2), Mr. Olowo Ajiboye (Oye 2) Mr. Dele Ajibola (Ekiti East 2) and Mrs. Ayo Olajide-Fatunbi (Moba 2)  for violating Section 96 (1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    The APC legislators also resolved that “the unconstitutional and illegal sittings conducted by the above-named honourable members are hereby declared illegal, null and void and of no effect with an attendant nullification of same forthwith”.

    Adedipe moved that all actions carried out by seven members who did not form a quorum are deemed to be null and void. The motion was seconded by Mr. Seyi Shittu (Ado 1).

    The actions of the seven lawmakers nullified include “the unlawful approval of the dissolution and reconstitution of the caretaker committee members for the 16 local government councils in Ekiti State and the unlawful approval of the list of commissioner nominees and special advisers.

    Also nullified was the unlawful and purported removal of Omirin and Orisalade as Speaker and Deputy Speaker respectively, the unlawful revocation of some laws duly passed by the House and the unlawful receipt of the 2015 Appropriation Bill.

    Adedipe moved a motion referring the seven lawmakers  to the Ethics and Privileges Committee for further disciplinary actions which was seconded by Mrs. Bunmi Oriniowo (Ido/Osi 1).

    The lawmakers, however, passed a vote of confidence in Omirin and the constitutionally recognized leadership of the House.

    The motion was moved by Adedipe and it was seconded by Mr. Yomi Daramola (Ikere 1).

    Adedipe commended members for their steadfastness in the last one month, maintaining that Omirin and Orisalade still remained in their offices.

    Member representing Irepodun/Ifelodun Constituency 2, Mr. Ayodeji Odu, commended the Omirin-led leadership for standing firm in the face of intimidation, saying “any other person calling himself speaker is a usurper”.

    Odu stressed that the Omirin-led leadership is standing on the side of the law, describing the seven lawmakers on the other side as “dishonourable” members for submitting themselves to be used to commit illegal and unconstitutional actions.

    With no other item for discussion on the Order Paper, Adedipe moved the motion for the adjournment of the sitting of the House to the next legislative day which was seconded by Mr. Folorunso Ogundele (Efon Constituency).

  • Ekiti Tribunal to deliver judgment tomorrow

    Ekiti Tribunal to deliver judgment tomorrow

    The Justice Siraju Mohammed-led tribunal has fixed tomorrow for judgment in the petition by the All Progressives Congress (APC) against the outcome of the June 21 governorship election in Ekiti State.

    Justice Mohammed chose December 19 for judgment after lawyers representing parties to the petition  adopted their final written addresses.

    The respondents are the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Governor Ayo Fayose, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), the Chief of Army Staff and the inspector general of police.

    Before adopting his final address, the petitioner’s lawyer, Lateef Fagbemi, reminded the tribunal that contrary to the impression created by the defendants, the petition was predicated on the contention that Fayose was not qualified to contest the election.

    He urged the court to allow the petition and dismiss the responses by the five respondents.

    Lawyers to the respondents, including Yusuf Ali, Onyechi Ikpeazu, Abayomi Sadiku and Abdulkadir Ajana, argued that the petitioner failed to prove its case.

    They also argued that the petitioner was unable to provide evidence to support its petition. They urged the tribunal to dismiss the petition.

    The APC, in the petition, urged the tribunal to “unravel the facts surrounding the election,” contending that it was more of “a mechanical exercise than conventional casting of votes”.

    The party alleged manipulation of the election in favour of the PDP candidate; undue militarisation and the impeachment of Fayose in 2006, as well as Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) cases hanging on the governor-elect.

    It is also the petitioner’s contention that Fayose was not qualified to participate in the election, “aside from the process of the poll’s conduct, which was faulty”.