Tag: Faleke

  • I’ll rescue Kogi in 2019, says Faleke

    I’ll rescue Kogi in 2019, says Faleke

    House of Representatives member James Faleke has said he will rescue Kogi State from bad administration in 2019.

    Speaking in Ekirin-Adde, Ijumu Local Government Area, during his birthday celebration, the lawmaker lamented that Kogi has witnessed such bad governance.

    “I can tell you that since the present administration came on board, each local government has collected a minimum of N2.1 billion monthly, between January and December. But unfortunately, our people are still in abject poverty.

    “Unfortunately, our infrastructures are in complete decay; salary has become a mirage. Kogi happens to be the first state where a level-16 civil servant committed suicide; so many of our people have died since this administration came on board,” he noted.

    Faleke said although he belongs to the same party as Governor Yahaya Bello, he would not be quiet about the ‘maladministration’ in Kogi.

    His words: “We are saying the government must change for the better if it wants to continue to be in office, because it is only by the will of the people, and when these people are not happy, it becomes a problem.

    “I have heard Governor Bello compare himself to President Muhammadu Buhari, and I have said it openly, and I am saying it again, that President Buhari, in character, behaviour, in his observance of religious ethics, in his conduct, relationship with people, is the complete opposite of Bello.

    “When the President was the chairman of Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF), he had every opportunity to own petrol stations all over the country, but he did not have one filling station; that is a man of character.

    “Throughout his stay as PTF boss, and as former military Head of State, he only owned a three-bedroom bungalow; he never lived a lavished life. So, if anybody says he is emulating the president, that person must be of good conduct; must behave like the president, in terms of salary payment.

    “When the President came on board, he challenged all the governors to pay salaries. Kogi got N20 billion, as the first tranche but unfortunately, till today, our people are still in abject poverty, and Kogi happens to be a civil service state.

    “Hence, when workers are not paid, traders would not have any business because their businesses depend on workers’ salary to survive.

    “This has a multiplier effect in the negative perspective, but I assure you that change will come. I implore you not to be afraid. We hear they have bought guns for their vigilance members to intimidate people during election, but God who made it possible for those guns to be manufactured will silence them.

    “I tell you on the election day, it will be your ballot paper and voter card; these things will decide your future. If you want the situation to remain the same, the card is in your hand, and if you want to change for the future, the card is also in your hand.”

  • Faleke challenges Governor Bello on true position of Kogi’s finances

    Faleke challenges Governor Bello on true position of Kogi’s finances

    •Let Xmas be merrier for workers

    Why should the wage bill of a state shoot up after the discovery and delisting 5000 names from the payroll as ghost workers? Why should 21 council areas have nothing to show for the 44.7 billion they shared in two years? Why should a state with a monthly wage bill of N3.5 billion be shopping for N30 billion to clear two month’s salary arrears?

    The above, and many more, are the posers thrown at Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello by James Abiodun Faleke, a House of Representatives member and running mate to the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate in the November 21, 2016, Kogi governorship election, the late Prince Abubakar Audu.

    In a letter to the governor entitled: “A passionate appeal for you to alleviate the people’s suffering this xmas”,  Faleke alleged that public servants in the Confluence State were being denied the dividends of good governance, which formed the plank of the APC electioneering campaign in 2015.

    According to the letter, Governor Bello has been economical with the truth on funds accruing to the state from the Federation Account and the application of such revenue.

    For instance, Faleke said it stood logic on its head for a state that was picking a monthly wage bill of N 2.6 billion prior to a verification exercise that detected 5000 ghost workers to be paying N3.5b after the verification.

    The letter reads: “Shortly after you came in, you embarked on a staff verification exercise which you claimed was aimed at weeding out ghost workers from the payroll of government, thereby freeing more funds for social and infrastructural development.

    “You were applauded for taking that positive step aimed at repositioning our state. However, the people’s enthusiasm as to whether the exercise would succeed or not began to shrink when you prolonged the programme to almost two years without paying any of the workers, leaving mass hunger and angst in the land.

    “Some died in the process, while most of the workers went through unimaginable stress and humiliation all in the name of a staff verification exercise that till date has been more of burden than blessing to the state.

    “Under the previous administration before you started your verification exercise, the wage bill was in the region of N2.6 billion per month, excluding local government wages and when you concluded the verification, you gleefully told the world that your administration had successfully discovered over 5000 ghost workers from the workforce and that you would begin to save at least N1.5 billion monthly through the exercise.

    “Surprisingly, Your Excellency, your administration is now claiming your monthly wage bill is around N3.5 billion! So, where is the money recovered from the 5000 ghost workers discovered? If the wage bill under Governor Idris Wada was N2.6 billion, I think your own wage bill should come down to around 1.5 billion naira and not skyrocket to 3.5 billion naira monthly.”

    Describing the verification as a waste of time and resources, the federal lawmaker alleged that the principal and vice principal of the secondary school attended by the state’s finance commissioner, were among those delisted from the wage bill as ghost pensioners by the panel that carried out the verification.

    Faleke alleged: “Your screening committee did not help matters by declaring bonafide workers and pensioners, ghost workers. So, it is even difficult to know the real bonafide workers and the exact number of the state workforce.

    “A critical example is the case of the principal and the vice Principal that taught your Commissioner of Finance, Idris Ashiru, in secondary school. Mr. Isiaka Aina Sule (Principal) and Mr. Christopher Ayo Olubunmi (Vice Principal) were respectively declared ghost pensioners. They are owed 23 months as we speak.”

    He described as unfortunate that a screening on which the governor spent N1 billion of the taxpayers’ money ended up as an exercise in futility.

    Recalling how he and the late Prince Audu dislodged the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration from the Lord Lugard State House in Lokoja, Faleke noted: “It is for these reasons, with very deep pains in my heart and with all sense of responsibility, that I decided to write you this personal letter on the hard times being experienced by the generality of the citizenry of our dear state under your watch.

    “I decided on this noble path as a principal stakeholder, who devoted time, energy, finance and risked my safety to crisscross the nooks and crannies of Kogi with our late leader, Prince Abubakar Audu to campaign; through an aggressive marketing of our program of action to the long suffering people of our dear state.

    “As Your Excellency is very much aware, the people trusted us and gave us their overwhelming mandate, faithfully handling over the reins of government to our dear party – the All Progressives Congress (APC)  – for a complete positive turnaround of the fortunes of the state.”

    On discrepancies in the state finances, Faleke urged the governor to explain why a whopping N30 billion is required to settle unpaid arrears after telling the whole world that his administration was owing only two months of salary arrears.

    Faleke said: “Only recently, your government promised to pay all the workers before the end of the year based on the final release of the Paris refunds but surprisingly, your commissioner for Finance was quoted to have said that the state government needs N30 billion to clear all outstanding salary arrears and pensions.

    “Now could the N30 billion be the value of the said two months arrears your government is claiming to owe workers? What is really happening? Right now, some states have paid December 2017 salaries ahead, while some have approved the 13th month salaries with bonuses. But, in Kogi, the workers are not even sure if they are workers or not. Most of them are owed over 18 months, while pensioners are crying to be paid.”

    Alleging that the 21 local government areas have not justified the more than N45 billion allocated to them in the past two years, the House of Representatives members accused the governor of short-changing the councils.

    He said: “Your Excellency, the local government areas under your appointed administrators have received over N45 billion since you assumed office (See Table 1). Yet, there is nothing to show for it. Though, it is common knowledge that your administration releases an average of N10 million per month to these administrations from their allocations.

    “The question is, what do you do with the rest of the monies meant for these local governments after giving your administrators their usual monthly N10 million handouts from the over N100 million that accrue to each of them as monthly allocations?

    “The local government salaries that are supposed to be paid from those allocations are not paid. And no developmental projects taking place in any of these local governments.”!

    Backing with his allegations with two tables, one showing what accrued to the council areas and the other the earnings of the state from internal and external sources, Faleke claimed the state got over N20 billion from the Federation Account and from Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).

    He said: “It may also interest Your Excellency that your administration has received over N200 billion as at today from Federal Government and Internally Generated Revenue sources respectively (See Table 2).

    “The question is what you have done with such a humongous sum of money in a state where people are daily dying of hunger and committing suicides.”

    Faleke, who warned that the failure of the government to live up to the promises of the APC to people could have grave consequences for the party in the Northcentral state, said: “Are we not playing on the sensibilities of the people as a party?

    “Be informed, Your Excellency, that the image of our party, the APC, in Kogi State  has been destroyed to such an extent that other parties in the state are now being emboldened take over power.”

    He, however, urged the governor to rededicate him to the service of the people, saying: “It is not too late to make amends. You can start from this December by ensuring that workers and pensioners received their dues promptly.

    “Then you can now follow up by abandoning the regime of profligate spending and embracing the noble path of development through aggressive road construction networks across the state, massive infrastructural facilities, provision of funds for the development of our health and educational sectors respectively among others.”

    “That is the way to start cleaning the Augean stable that Kogi has become, unfortunately.”

    According to Faleke, the performance of the governor must have disappointed those who helped him into office after the logjam created by the demise of Prince Audu before his declaration as the winner of the last Kogi governorship poll.

  • Bello plunging Kogi into debt, says Faleke

    Bello plunging Kogi into debt, says Faleke

    •Urges lawmakers to monitor executive

    Member of the House of Representatives James Faleke has accused Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello of plunging the state into debt.

    According to Faleke, the governor borrowed over N35 billion from two banks less than two years after assuming office, saying the profligacy of the governor has plundered the state into a debt that would take between 15 to 20 years to repay.

    He lamented that despite the high indebtedness and huge resources that had accrued to the state under Yayaha’s watch, “there is nothing to show for it”.

    A statement signed by him reads: “My heart bleeds for Kogi. I am constrained to step out once more to raise an alarm over the unmitigated profligacy of Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello, leading the state currently reeling under the weight of some burdensome local bank loans with a repayment plan of more than 15 years.

    “Rather than find ingenuous ways of liquidating the debt bequeathed to him by his predecessor, the governor is raising the state’s debt portfolio. The previous government of Idris Wada owed two or three months’ salary when he left office, and handed over a debt of about N800 million only.

    “The total debt portfolio was about N45 billion, inclusive of pension arrears. With the intervention of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration, Wada requested for N50 billion to enable him clear the salary arrears and another bail out of N10 billion for infrastructural development.

    “This N50 billion was to be used as follows:

    ”           N5 billion for two months’ salary arrears of state workers.

    ”           N45 billion for local government workers and pensioners arrears”.

    “Before the funds were released, Wada had left office. Eventually, N20 billion of the N50 billion was released to Governor Bello, while the N10 billion for infrastructure was also released fully. So, the total bailout to the state was N30 billion

    “Almost simultaneously, Bello’s government got monthly allocations for the state and local government areas with an average of over N5 billion monthly for 18 months running now.

    “Surprisingly, the governor has taken loans of over N35 billion from two commercial banks since his assumption of office.

    “The state has also collected over N14 billion reimbursements from the Federal Government for infrastructure and environmental works done by the state under the previous administrations.

    “On the heels of these is the Paris-London Club loan refund, the first tranche of which was N12 billion and N6 billion as the second tranche released last week.”

    “I have come to the conclusion that posterity would be harsh on critical stakeholders in the state, including me, if we fail to talk about the current free fall into a humongous indebtedness the state is being led to by its current manager.

    “For record purposes, Yahaya Bello to my mind is a very lucky man. He came to office after we spent our resources to defeat an incumbent. Just imagine the enormous resources as enumerated above and what Kogi should have achieved with a purposeful leadership.

    “But alas! What do we get? Many workers (state and local governments) are still being owed a minimum of three months, and some councils a maximum of 17 months arrears, despite the allocations running in excess of N200 billion since 2016.

    “May we ask the House of Assembly, which granted approval for the loans, what the governor has done with it? And since it is an open secret that no single road project has been completed among other things, why are the lawmakers quiet? Kogites demand answers from them as they are supposed to be their representatives.”

  • Akpabio, Obasa, Faleke seek unity, love

    Senate Minority Leader Godswill Akpabio, Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Mudashiru Obasa and Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Customs James Abiodun Faleke yesterday congratulated Islamic faithful and Nigerians on the successful completion of Ramadan fast.

    They urged them never to deviate from lessons learnt during the period.

    Akpabio’s  goodwill message, in a statement by his Special Assistant on Media, Jackson Udom, urged Muslim faithful to close ranks and work for the peace, unity and growth of Nigeria.

    The statement quoted the former governor as saying: “Muslim faithful should not forget the very tenets of the religion, which are love, obedience and perseverance as they celebrate the end of the Ramadan fast.”

    Obasa called on Nigerians not to relent in sharing love among themselves.

    Obasa,in a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Musbau Razak, urged the citizens to continue to work for the country’s unity and peaceful co-existence.

    The Lagos Assembly Speaker urged Nigerians to be vigilant at all times and cooperate with the government at all levels to fight crimes in the society.

    “Ramadan teaches us love and unity and I want to urge us not to relent in sharing the love and unity we have done during the fasting period. We should continue to spread love and peaceful co-existence. This is the essence of Ramadan which we must not neglect,” Obasa said.

    Faleke, who was the deputy governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the last Kogi State governorship election, urged Nigerians to eschew divisive tendencies and embrace love of one another.

    In a   statement issued yesterday to felicitate with Muslims on this year’s Sallah celebration, he saidthe fragile political atmosphere in the country occasioned by primordial agitations and hate speeches would lead to nowhere.

  • Bello killing APC in Kogi, says Faleke

    Bello killing APC in Kogi, says Faleke

    House of Representatives member from Ikeja Constituency Hon. James Faleke was Prince Abubakar Audu’s running mate during the Kogi State governorship election. He spoke with BUNMI OGUNMODEDE and EMMANUEL OLADESU in Lagos on Governor Yahaya Bello’s style of governance and the future of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Confluence State.

    What’s your assessment of the political situation in Kogi State?

    The political situation in Kogi State is very dicey for our party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) because of the various happenings; the claim by civil servants about the non-payment of salaries, the counter-claim of the governor that he has paid all. As at today, tertiary institutions are closed, according to their workers, for non-payment of salaries and arrears. As at today, health institutions are in comatose for lack of salaries to the workers. Unfortunately, Kogi is a civil service state. There are no industries. So, the moment the salaries of those civil servants are not paid, the economy of the state will be in comatose. So, I can clearly tell you that our party has a problem in the state.

    What are the party leaders doing about the Kogi scenario?

    I don’t know. I think that, realising the situation, the national secretariat called a meeting of stakeholders to investigate the true position and make recommendations. So, we have presented a position paper on the way forward. A situation where you work and somebody is taking an advantage of your efforts is a very bad situation for our people. I am not even talking about the governor. He won in the court. There is no problem with that. The governor is the governor, but he has refused to be father of all. If you win in court; I was the one that took him to court, it wasn’t the party members that took him to court. I expected him to take over the party and carry every member along; give them opportunity to serve. They are all well-educated. This governor has appointed as at last count over 200 aides, from commissioners to SSAs and out of the 286, only 43 are original APC members. You can just imagine that the rest are PDP. That’s is the crux of the matter. You engage sole administrators and virtually all your sole administrators, except very few, are original APC members. If our people and party members went to the poll against the PDP members and you now engage those PDP members we opposed at each polling unit, they are now the ones dictating the affairs of the state, you know psychologically, the APC members will not be happy and that’s what exactly is happening. It is not about hatred for the governor. No. I think he needs to do the right thing.

    How do you juxtapose a situation where workers are not paid and Kogi legislators are now on their way for Ghana for training?

    When I saw it, I was surprised. That was because it was least expected. I expected the House of Assembly to be people-sensitive. If your civil servants, the people at home, are not happy, and you are travelling to Ghana, what is there in Ghana that does not exist in Nigeria? One would have expected them to defer such a training in the interest of the people. They had received many resolutions against the non-payment and technical retrenchment of workers. They had passed so many resolutions. The governor has not obeyed one. They are insensitive. I am surprised. I am shocked. Not at this material time that they will go for a jamboree in Ghana. Train about what? We have the legislative training institute in Abuja. They can get trained anywhere within Nigeria. They can even bring in professors, experts to Kogi. When they bring them to Lokoja, those people will lodge in one hotel or the other and the economy will be oiled somehow. But, I think they know better. The people know best.

    Has the governor made any personal overture to you to, at least, effect what can be described as reconciliation?

    Not at all. But, honestly, I am not expecting any personal overture. Since he became governor, he has not called me. I am not expecting any personal overtures from him because I am a democrat. I felt that the decision of the party was wrong. I challenged it. I went to the court to challenge it and so, we move on. That’s part of democracy. It is constitutional. Now, the Supreme Court has said that, if you want to be a running mate, you must participate in the primary, which was not part of our law before. It will be very difficult for our electoral system in this country if you are asking that a governorship candidate must choose someone that competed with him as running mate. That means you are causing chaos from the outset. There will be conflict of interest. I was not expecting any personal overture. What I was expecting from him was that, while I was in court, the governor would have taken over the party from the Audu/Faleke family. I expected him to have given them a lot of privileges so that by the time I finished at the court, I will be the one struggling to be relevant among party members. But, he is the one struggling to be relevant with the party members. Governor Idris Wada owed just three months salaries. We went for elections. We used that three months arrears to campaign against him. Today, civil servants say our governor is owing them over 14 months , some six months. Some have not been paid because of the screening method or other things. If that is the case, our party in a nutshell has a long way to go. It will find it hard to crack in the next elections. No amount of money that can be stolen and used to bribe the people that they will obey. Our people are ordinarily republican. This is the first time they are coming to resist because of the campaign strategy we deployed. Unfortunately, we have not managed our success very well.

    If the governor cannot work with Faleke, Alex Kadiri, Clarence Olafemi and Dino Melaye, who was supporting him before, how would you now describe the style of the governor?

    I think the style of the governor lacks maturity. He lacks maturity in his handling of state affairs. He was not prepared. It was a gift given to him. Unfortunately, because he didn’t work for the gift, he does not know how to go about it. He can’t do it well. We have three senatorial districts. This is the first time I am seeing a sitting governor in Nigeria with less than 10 per cent support from three senatorial districts. We conducted a poll, less than 10 per cent of respondents liked the governor. I want to use this opportunity to ask him to send credible people to go and conduct a poll for him so that he will see whether people like his style or not. He must know that Kogi is a civil service state. At the moment, the civil servants are not happy with him. It is very serious. Unlike Lagos State, which is industrialised, ours is a state where people benefit from the local government system. As at now, the salaries are being owed. You have sole administrators you give N10 million or N5 million per month. The rest is managed by Edward. Edward is the Chief of Staff. Local government administrators and their staff cannot withdraw any money without the approval of the Chief of Staff. That is the situation. All the accounts of each local government have the correspondence domiciled with the Chief of Staff. If a withdrawal is made, the alert goes straight to the Chief of Staff’s phone. And the Chief of Staff will then call you, Mr. Sole Administrator, what’s that money for? That is the type of system that is being run in the state. The governor must wake up to his responsibility. This is the first time you will have a young man as governor. As a young man, I expect him to run the affairs of the state better than this. This is the first time a governor will come in and demolish an entire roundabout. Lokoja is the first capital of Nigeria. We had that roundabout built by the previous government. The present governor got in there and demolished it. He believed that the roundabout had some black power, fetish power in it. And what has he replaced it with? Drums, empty drums. You now use empty drums and put sand and used it for a roundabout in a modern Nigeria. To me, the governor needs to sit down and take responsibility for whatever happens. Nigeria is more enlightened than what he thinks. There were some arguments going on in a certain medium. The number of professor in a particular village in Okunland is more than 30. So, if you have these caliber of men and women scattered all over Nigeria and the world, the governor should have called a summit and say, okay, let’s think about how to develop our state. He should call a summit of intellectuals to discuss the economy, to discuss the way forward. By virtue of the location of our state, we have no reason to be poor. We are the gateway to everywhere. You can’t come to the South without passing through Kogi. You cannot go to the North without passing through Kogi State. This is the unique advantage. Apart from the roads, we have the sea. If you could go out and sign an agreement with NEWAL or the Federal Government and attract World Bank funding, you can develop the seaport. That was part of our programmes. Develop the seaport and Kogi will open up. Every cargo going to the North, going to the East will be diverted to the Lokoja seaport. Onitsha is less than one or two hours to Lokoja. So, you can imagine the opportunities that we have. If we have a very good governor, he should know that Lokoja is so close to Abuja, two hours drive. There is nothing stopping him from seeking an intervention fund from the World Bank or other sources to develop a fast rail system from Lokoja to Abuja and develop a massive housing project whereby people living in Lokoja and working in Abuja will leave by rail and it opens up our economy. Oh my God, what do we have? I want to talk less. I am not happy about it.

    How can insecurity be tackled in Kogi?

    Let me say this. One way or the other, he has put security as one of his key areas. So far, he has provided mobility to the police. But, when the people are hungry, when there is no work, when you are laying off staff technically, you should expect that that fight against insecurity will come back to haunt you. Boko Haram or no Boko Haram, history shows that it started in Kogi. I am not talking about Borno. But, majority of those who had been arrested found their roots to Kogi. So, one will expect him to find a better way of handling it. When you arrest somebody or kidnappers and you go ahead to dismantle their houses and mosques, you are causing more troubles. I think that as good as his intentions, people are hungry. You cannot achieved a totally secured environment when people are hungry. I will advise him to seek more knowledge and work with the people rather than alienating the people. This is the first time we are having a government of a young guy in the state and the best he has achieved is to put gates, barricades all across the GRA and fence off the Government House from the people. Throughout the campaigns, we drove along the GRA. We passed through the fence of the Government House. Today, you dare not do that. Even, those living in the GRA may now have to be taking permission to go in and out because he has fenced everybody off. If you do that, what about those constituents who do no have fences around their houses? You must give this psychology thing to the people, to say that I am with you. This idea of fencing off people is not the best.

    In the light of what you have said, what does the future portends for Kogi and your party?

    The future will be bright. God has a purpose for what has happened. For me, the death of Prince Abubakar Audu is a lesson to me and to everybody. I believe strongly that he will wake up one day and touch the mind of the people. Some people hated him till he died. I am shocked that, up till today, that there is no condolence letter from the Federal Government to the family of the late Prince Abubakar Audu. I am shocked. I think whatever happened in the past in their relationship should not be carried up to the death. That is politics today. nobody knows tomorrow. I want to say to our people at home to believe that God has time for everything.

  • 2017 budget is ready, says Faleke

    2017 budget is ready, says Faleke

    All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain and a member of the House of Representatives, James Faleke, said yesterday that the 2017 budget was ready and would soon be passed by the National Assembly.
    Faleke told reporters at the APC national secretariat that the various committees in the House have completed their work on the budget and submitted their report, adding that the delay in the passage of the budget was because the National Assembly wants to do a thorough work on the document.
    He said: “The budget process takes some time. Unlike what we had before, where you talk about budget padding or no padding, what the National Assembly tried to do this time is to do the needful once and for all with the budget details being submitted. The budget is ready, only to be considered on the floor probably this week, as all committees have finished their work.
    “It is not about delay but doing things right. If we hurriedly do it and get things wrong, Nigerians will condemn us. It is about doing things right
    “It is true that the party will be two years old by May 29 and I can tell you sincerely that the country has moved forward  from what we used to have. Don’t forget that during the last regime, things had almost collapsed and an economy that has collapsed is not easy to reform overnight and I think that what the President has done in the last two years is to have taken time to reform the economy, which is now yielding fruits.
    “I think if the price of crude oil had not dropped, maybe things would have been better off by now. In terms of security, we have done a lot, in terms of reorganising our income, especially as regards what the Federal Government gets in terms of revenue, I’m sure you will agree that we have done a lot.
    “In terms of blocking loopholes and fighting corruption, you know that we have done a lot. You cannot imagine how much has been recovered from individuals. If that system had continued till now, this country would have collapsed and I want to give kudos to the President for having done that.
    “There are still areas for improvement. Nigerians should just be patient and see the last two years of this government.”
    Faleke, however, refused to speak on the crisis rocking the party in Kogi State.

  • People’re suffering under Bello, says Faleke

    People’re suffering under Bello, says Faleke

    All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship aspirant in Kogi State, James Faleke, has passed a vote of no confidence in Governor Yahaya Bello. According to him, the people are dying of hunger because of Bello’s leadership style.
    Faleke, who led a group, comprising former ministers, former ambassadors, former National Assembly members and other stakeholders from the state to the office of the Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo, said state stopped working since Bello assumed office.
    He addressed state house correspondents at the end of the closed door meeting with Osinbajo.
    Faleke said Bello’s unsavory actions were inimical to the future of the APC in the state.
    He said: “We came to let the Federal Government know what is happening in Kogi as regards the party’s fortune – how it continues to dwindle daily, the people’s welfare and their relationship with the government.
    “We have come to let the presidency know so that when elections come and the party loses, no one will be blamed. We want the Federal Government to intervene to find a way forward.
    “The governor should recognise those who work for the party’s success. It is one thing to be victorious in court and another to carry the people along. I urge the governor to carry the people along.
    “This is the fifth time he is setting up a committee to review staff strength, with so many screenings every day. People are dying; you ask people to come from the 21 councils to Lokoja to present their documents, some of them are dying in accidents.
    “If he is not sure, he should set up a better frame rather than this recurrent approach. He condemned all reports sent to him, though he set them up. Now, another committee has been set up for the same purpose.
    “We get calls every day from workers and pupils that their parents have not been paid for months. So, we want him to stop this because this is not the only way to stop ghost workers and it shouldn’t be the last. I’m not against eradication of ghost workers, but it shouldn’t be done to the detriment of the people,” Faleke said.
    He said the delegation was satisfied with Osinbajo’s response.

  • Faleke deserves ministerial slot

    SIR, The past days have witnessed political frenzy and a renewal of disharmony in the APC family in Kogi State, as a result of the jostling for the vacant ministerial slot for the state to which a national leader of the party was said to have nominated and endorsed Hon. James Abiodun Faleke. APC in the state was thrown into chaos following the nomination of the incumbent governor Alhaji Yahaya Bello to carry the party’s flag due to the unfortunate and untimely demise of Prince Abubakar Audu. But for the resolve of all parties involved to peacefully pursue and channel their grievances through the law court, the state would have been thrown into a theatre of bloodshed.

    Although some have argued that the West Senatorial District of the state have had a fair share in terms of federal appointments, having produced the most number of ministers in the history of the state, hence the need for other senatorial districts  to be considered. In as much as this line of argument is genuine, selection of a minister to fill in the vacant slot at the federal executive council should take into cognizance of the prevailing political configuration in the state. The Central Senatorial District currently holds the position of governor and the east occupies the seat of deputy governor; it would only be fair for the next minister to come from the west, given that the late minister, James Eneojo Ocholi hails from the East Senatorial District.

    Unity and reconciliation has eluded the state’s chapter of APC since the last gubernatorial election with the split of the party into the Yahaya Bello sympathizers and the Audu/Faleke group. The choice of Faleke who is the leader of that group as replacement for Ocholi wouldn’t be a bad idea. If anything, a ministerial appointment for the Audu/Faleke group would only open the door for a genuine and lasting reconciliation in the state’s chapter of the party. The governor, Alhaji Yahaya Bello hasn’t been able to do much in running an all-inclusive government by practically extending an olive branch to the Audu/Faleke group and making policies and programmes that could enhance peace, unity and pacifying the aggrieved within the party.

    The need for President Muhammadu Buhari to dowse political tension in the confluence state by accepting the choice of Faleke therefore becomes inevitable and a step in the right direction, if stability and harmony is to be restored in the Kogi  branch of APC ahead of 2019 elections.

     

     

    • Hussain Obaro,

    Ilorin, Kwara State.

  • I’m unaware of APC reconciliation in Kogi, says Faleke

    I’m unaware of APC reconciliation in Kogi, says Faleke

    Hopes of reconciliation in the Kogi State All Progressives Congress (APC) dimmed yesterday as the party’s deputy governorship candidate in the November 21, 2015, election, James Faleke, said there could be no reconciliation without justice.
    Faleke said he never reconciled with the leadership of the state.
    He spoke in Ogonicha, Ofu Local Government, at the one-year remembrance for the late governorship candidate, Prince Abubakar Audu.
    According to him, the logjam in the Kogi APC cannot be easily resolved considering the manner the national leadership handled the issue after Audu’s death.
    His words: “There can never be any reconciliation in a situation where somebody works and someone else collects the salary. Reconciliation can only happen if the salary is returned; that is the only reconciliation.
    “We are prepared to go hungry for the next four years, but I can tell you that God sparing our lives, the song will change surely.
    On the crisis rocking the state’s APC, Faleke said: “Every right-thinking person knows that it was a fallout of how the national secretariat handled the crisis after Audu’s death.”
    He noted that the development affected the state party and its fortune nosedived.
    “The architects of the crisis in Kogi State started the imminent downfall of our party. The way and manner the issue of Kogi was handled was least expected of a political party. I have heard that one of the cabals said APC was just a gathering of some people, not yet a political party.
    “I want to say that as far as what happened in Kogi State is concerned, and how it is affecting the party, I am sure those in government can confirm that all is not well within the party. This is because when you work and some people reap the fruits of your labour, they will know that all cannot be well and that is why they are not getting their feet right.
    “It is one year after Audu’s death and nothing seems to be moving, it has taken the state more than seven to eight months to screen and pay salaries, people have died on queue waiting for verification and those that had been screened have not been paid since January.
    “You can imagine that certainly things are bad, we know how much we spend to maintain our people.
    “This party was formed by us, we contributed to it, it is not an animal farm, it belongs to everybody and until they realise that, this party will not move forward. If our people get paid, if our people are empowered and entrenched, I am sure the songs will change, but as it is now, it is a bad song.”

  • Faleke: political treachery robbed us of victory

    Faleke: political treachery robbed us of victory

    Deputy Governorship candidate of All Progressives Congress (APC) in last November’s election in Kogi State and member of the House of Representatives, James Faleke (Ikeja), has identified “treacherous politics by insiders” as the major factor preventing the Audu/Faleke group from taking over government.

    Addressing the crowd who welcomed him home at Ekinrin Adde after the Supreme Court judgment, which affirmed Yahaya Bello as governor, Faleke said the conspiracy to deny the Audu/Faleke Political Organisation its right to assume power would not have been possible but for the support of some insiders, who collaborated with the APC national leadership.

    His words: “It is unfortunate that we lost our right to Lugard House owing to high level treachery, both at the state and national level. It is a common saying in Yorubaland that the enemies without would always find it hard to defeat you without the support of the enemies within.

    “Shortly after news filtered in that Prince Abubakar Audu, our leader died, the hawks from the three senatorial districts moved in by putting pressure on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) not to declare the results.

    “Though we lost the battle to reclaim our mandate at the Supreme Court, we have not lost the minds and support of the people who voted for the Audu/Faleke ticket.

    He described the role played by the party’s national leadership as “unfortunate and unbecoming”.

    The lawmaker lauded the people for displaying restraint in the face of the injustice meted out to them and urged them to continue to be law abiding.

    He denied reports that he was heading back to Lagos to play politics, saying he was back home to contribute his quota to the development of the state.

    State Chairman of the APC, among several others, urged party supporters to be positive despite the political setback. He hoped that the party’s national secretariat would intervene to building a stronger and more united party in the state.