Tag: Ekiti

  • Ekiti:  Your own airport, coming soon

    Ekiti: Your own airport, coming soon

    If there was a prize for the most robust, sustained and unsparing criticism of Ayo Fayose as governor of Ekiti, as aspirant to that office and as a castaway from it, this column would be the runaway winner.

    It has excoriated him again and again over his ill-conceived Integrated Poultry Project that gulped more than  a billion Naira – double that amount in today’s money – without delivering a single egg.  It has knocked him for his morbidity of thought and expression, for disrobing, in a manner of speaking, his own mother in the public square just to score a cheap political point, for his scattershot approach to governance, for his verbal incontinence, and for a general disposition that borders on megalomania.

    By my reckoning, only General Ibrahim Babangida, the former military president, has figured more often in this space than Fayose as an unedifying subject, if not as an outright villain.

    Seeing that this is yet another piece on Fayose, those who have found my strictures on him most agreeable would sit back, confident that this is going to be another sandbagging for the so and so.  Those who have always found the strictures tiresome and uncharitable, and have communicated their displeasure to me with the forthrightness that becomes Fayose so well,will most likely yawn, shake their heads and turn the page.

    Today, I am not going to follow that beaten path, and it is not just out of a desire to exercise a columnist’s sovereign right not to be too predictable.  I am going to disappoint Fayose’s implacable critics who count me as their patron, and I am going to surprise his teeming admirers who hold me in especial loathing.

    I do so not cavalierly but with great deliberation, on a matter that admits of no equivocation and no prevarication.  The merit of the matter at issue is so transparent that anyone who cannot fathom it and rejoice in it has got to be practically unconscious.

    To come right out it, I am thinking of the international airport that Fayose is set to build in the State capital, Ado-Ekiti.  Construction will start any moment from now, inside sources tell me.

    In their commentary, the usual naysayers —with whom I must today respectfully part company — have exhausted all the entries in the Thesaurus for “undesirable,” but they are not done yet.  These people, mind you, are the elite.  They did not vote for Fayose.  Instead, they slandered him relentlessly.

    Now, having catered adequately to the stomach infrastructure of the adoring masses, Fayose is against his better judgment giving the misguided elite an airport, and instead of praising him for being magnanimous when he could have been vindictive, they are denouncing him.

    Some of them are claiming that the project was in fact conceived by former Governor Segun Oni, and that Fayose merely appropriated it.  Such pettiness!  What really counts is the person giving life and form to what was no more than a dream in Oni’s head.  That person is Fayose.  And he is doing so against all odds – plummeting oil revenues, unpaid salaries and pensions, educational levies and mounting unrest.

    It is heartening that he is not in the least fazed by these pesky developments, nor by the base ingratitude of the elite, aforementioned.  If the elite are too blinded by spite to see that the project is being undertaken in their best interest and that they stand to profit the most from it, well might Fayose say in pained resignation:  So much for all their vaunted book learning.

    The project will go ahead whether they like it or not.

    I can now reveal that the facility will be officially known as Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan International Airport, Ado-Ekiti, with the telegraphic address GEJIA. This gesture is in grateful appreciation of the former president’s role in ensuring Fayose’s return to power eight years after an ignominious exit, and subsequently keeping Ekiti off-limits to other political parties.

    The airport is also being named in Dr Jonathan’s honour because he has promised to employ his new status as an acclaimed and much sought-after international statesman to help mobilise funds and resources that will make the airport second to none in the ECOWAS region if not in Africa.

    Those who think this is going to be another monument to folly are mistaken.  The potential is vast, and it is sure to translate into actuality once the project is completed.  In fact, I can reveal that the aviation community, led by the International Civil Aviation Organisation, has already asked to be identified with it at every stage.

    Consider just a few of the staggering gains that are guaranteed to flow from the project.

    Now, there is no academic specialism so abstruse or recondite that you will not find several scholars of Ekiti extraction at its cutting edge.   For lack of opportunities at home, these scholars are scattered all over the world.  A good many of them would like to give their homeland the benefit of their expertise through weekend seminars and boot camps.

    But they have been deterred by the prospect of being mugged at Lagos airport or along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway and at points in between, or being crushed by unlatched containers falling off rickety trucks.

    A direct flight to Ado-Ekiti  from London, Paris, Geneva, Frankfurt, Moscow, New York, Boston, Bologna, Berlin, Vienna, Washington DC, Los Angeles and other centres of advanced learning where they reside is exactly what these scholars need to help consolidate Ekiti’s place as the Fountain of Knowledge.

    With such a facility in place, the much-garlanded poet and Distinguished Professor of English, Dr Niyi Osundare, could take off from New Orleans in the morning, fly direct to Ado-Ekiti for an evening of poetry reading and return the very next day to his base in time to conduct a post-doctoral seminar on the Poetics and Aesthetics of Chaucer, Aeschylus, Okigbo and Walcott, with nary a hint of stress.

    For foreign-based Ekiti indigenes, a visit home would no longer be an endurance test, with long waits at connecting points.  You just fly direct into Ado-Ekiti, and within an hour, you’ll be home tucking into a hot meal of original pounded yam, not the insipid, synthetic stuff they sell in supermarkets.

    Intrigued by Governor Fayose’s ideology of stomach infrastructure, some of the world’s leading social scientists have been studying that phenomenon, as well as the role of okada riders as agents of political mobilisation and social enforcement, albeit from a distance.  With direct international flights to Ado- Ekiti, they can now converge on the entire state to conduct definitive fieldwork that will take these developments to the next level and place them in the proper epistemological context.

    These scholars can sniff a paradigm shift or a theoretical breakthrough from the end of the earth, and they believe Ekiti is where it is happening.  Hooray to the Fountain.

    Consider also the boom that tourism will experience.  I can already see jetliners from all over the world bringing tourists to the enchanting but under-patronised Ikogosi Springs and other wonders with which the Ekiti landscape is strewn, not forgetting the Idanre Hills close by in Ondo State.

    Europeans and Americans seeking escape from the harsh Northern Hemisphere summer will flock to Ekiti to savour the equable clime of Efon Alaye and Iyin-Ekiti, less than an hour’s ride from the international airport.

    The construction of JEGIA will create and sustain thousands of jobs, transform Ekiti’s economy from rural to global, boost trade and commerce and, in the process, generate so much revenue that the state will have to face the difficult task of figuring out what to do with such sudden affluence.

    The foregoing is only a conspectus of what Ekiti State stands to gain by Fayose’s visionary plan to build an international airport in Ado-Ekiti. It is nothing less than a stroke of genius.

    The usual critics can scoff to their hearts’ content.  On this one, I am solidly behind him.  Let the building commence.  I can hardly wait to fly into the airport direct from Peoria, Illinois, confident that I would be home in Kabba within an hour of clearing my luggage.

  • Robbers attack school in Ekiti

    There was panic in Christ’s Girls’ School, Ado Ekiti, Ekiti State, following a robbery yesterday.

    The robbers were said to have entered the school at 1.30 am and made for the administrative block.

    They carted away an unspecified number of desktop and laptop computers.

    They removed the burglary-proof window before entering.

    No pupil was attacked or raped as being speculated in the town. The incident has been reported to the police.

    A visit to the school later in the day showed that normal activities were going on.

    A senior worker urged reporters to disregard the rumour that some pupils were raped during the raid.

    “They went away with some desktop and laptop computers but none of our pupils was either raped or attacked by the invaders.

    “They did not go to the hostel at all, the incident happened at the admin block, the rumour is not true,” she said.

    The head teacher, simply referred to as Mrs. Ogundipe, was not around to speak on the development.

    She was said to have been summoned by the Commissioner for Education, Jide Egunjobi.

     

  • Ekiti eviction saga: Fayose revokes Fayemi’s sister’s, aide’s house purchase

    Ekiti eviction saga: Fayose revokes Fayemi’s sister’s, aide’s house purchase

    The Ekiti State government has revoked the sale of the house purchased by the Mrs. Bolu Fayemi-Ayodele, the elder sister of former Governor KayodeFayemi, at the Irewolede (Fajuyi) Estate along Ilawe Road, Ado Ekiti, the state capital.

    Mrs. Fayemi-Ayodele who was served with the letter conveying the revocation order on Thursday vowed to challenge the action in the court of law.

    The former governor’s sister received her revocation barely 24 hours after the Corporation in a letter by its lawyer, Br. Awe,  revoked house sale to the Chairman of Irewolede Residents Association, Ayo Orebe.

    Confirming the receipt of letter revoking the sale of the house she purchased on mortgage in 2011 in a telephone chat on yesterday,  Mrs. Fayemi-Ayodele described the action as “politically motivated.”

    She said: “They brought the letter yesterday (Thursday) it was given to me to sign that I received the original copy. The official who brought the letter said he was carrying out the directive given to him and I can’t blame him for that.

    “The house in question is  not a rented house, it’s my personal house which was purchased on a mortgage which still subsists even though I have not completed payment. I am going to court to challenge this latest action because a case is already in court over the last eviction and  if there is any case in  court, parties are not expected to take any action until the case is disposed of.

    “When I read the content of the letter, I told the bearer that all that was written in the letter are fallacies. I know that the action was taken because he (Fayose) believes that I am a sister to the former governor (Fayemi) and he feels that he can do anything he likes. I believe that action was politically motivated.”

  • Ekiti spends N12.5b on primary education

    Ekiti State Government spent over N12.5 billion in educating public primary school pupils during the 2013/2014 academic session.

    The Chairman of the Ekiti State Universal Education Board (SUBEB), Senator Bode Ola, who disclosed this in his office in Ado Ekiti, said the huge investment by the government was to ensure a better future for them.

    Ola disclosed that the money was used to pay teachers’ salaries, provided physical infrastructure, instructional materials, organise training programmes, and monitoring school projects, as well as learning and teaching activities.

    The Ekiti SUBEB chief who said about N70, 000.00 is spent on the education of each primary school child annually stressed the need for parents and guardians contribute their quota to the education of bards.

    He reiterated Governor Ayo Fayose’s commitment to improving the welfare of teachers.

    The Chairman solicited the cooperation of all stakeholders in education including parents and guardians, teachers and pupils urging them to pay their dues to justify the huge amount expended by the government in the education sector.

    Ola emphasised that the children who are in the center of learning must be properly taken care of from the basic level so that a good foundation would be laid for producing good leaders in future.

     

  • Controversy in Ekiti over Olumilua’s ‘arrest’

    •Party scribe: he was invited, not arrested •PDP kicks

    The intra-party crisis rocking the Ekiti State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) took a dramatic dimension yesterday with the arrest of the former governor of old Ondo State, Evangelist Bamidele Olumilua.

    Olumilua was arrested at his Ikere-Ekiti home and whisked to the Police Command Headquarters, Ado Ekiti, the state capital.

    His supporters claimed that he was arrested based on a petition by the APC State Secretary, Paul Omotoso, accusing the ex-governor of holding a “subversive party meeting in his house where he nominated a minister without consulting the party exco”.

    But Omotoso, in a telephone chat with our reporter, denied the arrest, saying “he wasn’t arrested, maybe the police invited him”.

    Repeated calls to Olumilua’s phone were not answered and text messages sent to him were not replied.

    But an interest group in Ekiti APC, the Action Group, condemned the alleged arrest, which it described as “intolerable abuse of phantom power”.

    In a statement by its spokesman, Segun Dipe, the Action Group said Olumilua who it described as an APC member, an elder and a party leader, did not deserve to be treated that way.

    Dipe said: “The offence allegedly committed by Evangelist Olumilua as enumerated in the petition written by Barrister Omotoso are that he organized a “subversive” party meeting in his house and he nominated somebody and a minister without consulting with the party exco.

    “Facts available have revealed that Omotoso was acting on the instruction of a former governor.”

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has condemned Olumilua’s arrest.

    In a statement by its spokesman, Jackson Adebayo, the PDP noted that Olumilua, as an elder statesman, should be accorded due respect and not be involved in the supremacy battle among APC leaders.

    “We are concerned by the arrest of former Governor Olumilua. In as much as it is an APC affair, the PDP-led government in Ekiti State will not fold its arms and watch the state thrown into chaos.”

     

  • Ekiti won’t pay retirees from N9.6b bailout loan

    •Govt to clear arrears of salaries, bonuses

    Ekiti retirees may have to wait longer before getting their gratuities as the state will not pay them from the N9.6 billion Federal Government “bailout funds”.

    The Head of Service, Gbenga Faseluka, broke the news in Ado Ekiti, the state capital, yesterday at a briefing on the  Civil Service Week.

    Faseluka said payment of gratuities would not be  from the N9.6 billion “bailout funds”.

    He said the government would use the bailout funds to clear arrears of August and September 2014 salaries, 2014 and 2015 leave bonuses and pensions.

    Faseluka said: “All arrears of salaries, pensions and leave bonuses will be attended to as soon as we receive the funds. Gratuities may not be attended to immediately.

    “Approvals for the funds have been secured from the State Executive Council and legislative backing received from the House of Assembly to access the funds.”

    He added that the last time retirees received their gratuities was in September 2012, noting that since then, the arrears had accumulated as more officers retired.

    Restating government’s commitment to workers’ welfare, Faseluka said over N200 million was disbursed as car loans to 677 workers while over N192 million was disbursed to 464 workers as housing loans.

    Speaking on lateness to work, Faseluka described it as “unacceptable and not in the interest of the state” warning them to desist from such.

     

  • Ekiti bans manual labour at school hours

    Ekiti State government has outlawed manual labour by pupils of public primary and secondary schools during school hours.

    The academic session starts today.

    In the past, pupils used the first week to cut grasses and clear bushes on the premises, which made many of them to stay away.

    A statement yesterday by the Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Mr. Jide Egunjobi, said academic work was expected to begin on resumption day, adding that “there will be no cutting of grasses, except during break or after school hours.”

    The statement said public schools had been directed to engage in agriculture, noting that holding of inter-house sports must not extend beyond first term.

    Stressing that the government had increased the war against truancy, cult activities, lateness and examination malpractices, the statement said it had directed schools to complete JSS3 and SSS3 syllabuses by the end of second term to ensure revision in third term.

    The commissioner urged stakeholders, including parents, guardians, teachers and pupils to complement government’s efforts at restoring education to its pride of place.

  • Ekiti plans education summit

    Ekiti plans education summit

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose has announced plans for an education summit to enable stakeholders join hands with his administration to restore the lost glory of education in the state.

    Fayose is optimistic the summit, to be chaired by a former Chief Judge and the Oluyin of Iyin Ekiti, Oba John Ademola Ajakaye, would reaffirm the state’s target as the “Fountain of Knowledge” and the ‘torchbearer of education’ in Nigeria.

    At a pre-summit parley with stakeholders at Olaoluwa Muslim Grammar School, Ado Ekiti, Fayose expressed shock at the colossal failure of pupils of public schools in major entrance examinations.

    Stakeholders, who attended the parley, included the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), All Nigeria Conference of Principals of Secondary Schools (ANCOPSS), Conference of Primary School Heads of Nigeria (COPSHON), and National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS).

    Fayose explained that the summit would address basic education, which he described as the foundation, adding that there was the need to get it right from there.

    Fayose disclosed that he had invited prominent individuals from the academia who are indigenes of the state in addition to other experts to present papers and fashion out a blueprint.

    He promised to implement the recommendations of the summit to make his administration formulate policies that would turn around the sector.

    Fayose recalled that he held a similar summit in his first term as governor in 2003, noting that the decision resulted in Ekiti rising from 35th position in the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) to the sevent position before he left office in 2006.

    He said the education sector  has deteriorated to the extent that some undergraduates find it difficult to express themselves in simple  English.

    The governor also lamented a situation in which many parents had abdicated their children’s responsibilities to the government.

    He said there was a time he wanted to assist an applicant to secure a job in a bank but the candidate was rejected because the bank had just come up with a policy not to employ first degree holders which he described as a “common academic certificate.”

    Fayose pledged to give teachers a better welfare package, identifying them as moulders of the future generation and drivers of education policy given their closeness to pupils.

    He urged parents to stop spending money on frivolities and invest more in the education of their children.

     

  • Assembly approves N19.6bn loan for Fayose’s govt

    Assembly approves N19.6bn loan for Fayose’s govt

    Ekiti State House of Assembly on Wednesday unanimously approved N19.6 billion loan facilities for the state government.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the approval followed two different letters written by Governor Ayo Fayose requesting the house consent to access the loans.

    The letters are, “Consideration of the proposal of the State Government to Partake in the Excess Crude Account and Consideration of the Intention of Ekiti State Government to Partake in the Federal Government Bailout Package to pay Backlog of Workers’ Salaries’’.

    A breakdown of the loans showed that the state would access N10 billion from Access Bank on 10 years and 9 per cent repayment arrangement.

    Also, the state government would access N9, 604,430,000 from Skye Bank on 20 years and 9 per cent repayment arrangement.

    The Leader of the house, Mr. Akinyele Olatunji, had appealed to members to give the request accelerated considerations.

    Olatunji described the government intention as a good development, saying that it would better the lives of Ekiti citizenry.

    “Access to the N10 billion Excess Crude Account (ECA) and over N9.6 billion Federal Government bailout loan, respectively is a good development for the state.

    “The loans will enable the present administration provide basic infrastructure and social amenities for its citizens.

    “If the government is able to access these loans the government will be able to execute developmental projects.

    “Apart from the loan being used to pay the backlog of workers’ salaries, it will also enable the government provide some basic social amenities in the state,’’ Olatunji said.

    The views of the leader of the house was corroborated by the trio of Messrs Gboyega Aribisogan (Ikole I), Deputy Speaker, Segun Adewumi (Ekiti West I), and Dele Fajemileyin (Gbonyin).

    They described the decision by the state government to access the loans as the best way out of the current financial situation.

  • Ekiti impounds 77 cars

    Ekiti impounds 77 cars

    •Generates N1m daily on papers’ renewal

    seventy-seven vehicles and hundreds of motorcycles popularly called okada have been impounded by law enforcement agents in Ekiti State.

    The Special Adviser to the Governor on Internally-Generated

    Revenue (IGR), Mr. Ropo Ogunjobi, who spoke in Ado-Ekiti, said the exercise would guarantee safety and security on roads, stressing that it would also ensure that only

    properly-licensed drivers and vehicles plied the roads.

    He said the exercise was executed through the joint efforts of the workers of the Board of Internal Revenue, officials of

    the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), the police and Vehicle

    Inspection Officers (VIOs).

    Hailing the exercise, the

    governor’s aide said it would not only minimise accidents, but would

    boost the IGR.

    Ogunjobi said there had been an increase of up to a million naira daily on IGR since the beginning of the exercise.

    He said the turnout of people for registration and renewal of vehicles’ particulars as well as applications for the renewal of driver’s licences had increased, adding that the

    development would improve the deplorable financial situation caused by the huge debt inherited by the Ayo Fayose administration and the dwindling revenue accruing from the federation account.

    Assuring that impounded vehicles would be released

    as soon as the papers were perfected, Ogunjobi cautioned motorists

    against patronising touts, stressing that payments should be made at

    designated banks, while vehicle papers should be obtained at the Ado-Ekiti,

    Ikere and Ido-Ekiti centres to avoid falling into the hands of fraudsters.