Tag: Fayemi

  • EKSU VC Aina praises Fayemi

    EKSU VC Aina praises Fayemi

    The Vice-Chancellor, Ekiti State University (EKSU), Ado-Ekiti, Prof Patrick Oladipo Aina, has reassured stakeholders that the institution will continue to strive to rank among the best universities.

    He spoke while reviewing his administration’s activities in the last two years.

    Aina said the institution has recorded tremendous accomplishments, which were made possible through the support of the workers and the commitment of the Visitor to the university, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, who he said provided adequate funds.

    The VC said Fayemi was the first governor to give a capital grant of N300 million to the varsity, beside increasing its monthly subvention.

    He added that the government supported the varsity’s autonomy, which he led to a congenial working environment and completion of the Medical Library, medical students’ hostel, and the Biochemistry and Pharmacology buildings.

    Aina further said for the first time, the university recorded full accreditation of all courses presented to the National Universities Commission (NUC) while it was rated 19th on the webometric ranking of Nigerian universities and 198th in Africa.

    The VC described as unprecedented, the recent achievement of the students of EKSU Faculty of Law, who were the best performing students at the last year’s Final Bar Part Two examination of the Nigerian Law School.

    The EKSU candidates recorded 95.1 per cent pass, which was the best among graduates of 35 universities who took the examination.

    He said a five-year strategic plan was under way to build a vibrant academic culture, which includes collaborating with renowned institutions around the world.

    “The university has also repackaged its linkage programmes with top universities, including Federal University of Santa Maria, Brazil; University of Kwazulu Natal, South Africa; Texas Southern University Houston, Texas, United States, University Wollongong, Australia and University of Nottingham, United Kingdom,” he said.

    The VC said his administration has also invested in international training for members of staff.

    He described the co-operation of his principal officers as unique and commended the workers for their loyalty.

    He also said that new programmes have been introduced to enhance EKSU’s global competitiveness. These include Theatre and Media Arts, Architecture, Peace and Conflict Studies, Gender and Development and Forensic Science in collaboration with Gujarat Forensic Sciences University, India.

    On physical infrastructure, the university will soon take delivery of structures for the School of Postgraduate Studies, Entrepreneurship Centre, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Faculty of Education.

    “A public private arrangement has been concluded with private investors for the construction of Campus Students hostels and Staff residential buildings,” the Vice-Chancellor added.

     

  • Fayemi warns politicians against violence

    Fayemi warns politicians against violence

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi yesterday led top government officials, civil servants and other stakeholders in a thanksgiving service to mark the first working day in 2014.

    For about three hours, the congregation, coordinated by clerics from both the Christian and Islamic faith, sang, danced and prayed for peace and prosperity in the new year.

    In attendance were the governor’s wife, Erelu Bisi, Deputy Governor Prof. Modupe Adelabu and over 40 traditional rulers.

    Fayemi, who read the first lesson of the service, urged the people to work towards the peaceful conduct of the governorship poll.

    Describing 2014 as a “year of crucial decision” for Ekiti people, he urged governorship aspirants and their supporters to pursue their ambitions in consonance with the law, without resort to lies, blackmail, violence, chaos and anarchy.

    Fayemi said the choice of who becomes governor must be left to the people, “who are wise enough to know what is good for them and who is fit to be their leader”.

    He said God had been good to the state in the last three years, adding that Ekiti has remained peaceful.

    Fayemi urged traditional rulers and religious leaders to join him in preaching peace.

    He said: “I encourage political office seekers and their supporters to pursue their ambition in accordance with the law. Let them inform and convince the people of their agenda on how to make Ekiti better. We do not need to lie, embellish or exaggerate.

    “The assumption that we are wiser than our people is not correct. When I went round the state recently and held Town Hall meetings with the people, they praised us for what we have done and drew our attention to the areas we need to improve on.

    “They asserted their rights and that is what we politicians cannot take away from them. I urge traditional rulers and religious leaders to ensure that we sustain the peace we enjoy in this state”.

    Fayemi assured the people that governance will not be neglected because of the governorship poll.

    His tenure ends on October 15.

    “Politics will not stop governance because this administration has a mandate and it will only expire on October 15, 2014. Our prayer is that our term will be renewed beyond that time but pending that, we have a job to do. “Whatever promise we make to you, it will be fulfilled by the grace of God because our word shall remain our bond”, he added.

  • Work for a better nation, Fayemi urges Nigerians

    Work for a better nation, Fayemi urges Nigerians

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi yesterday urged Nigerians to pray for a better future as the country marks its centenary anniversary this year.

    In his New Year message, he urged Ekiti people to pray and work towards the peaceful conduct of the governorship election.

    Fayemi assured them that his administration would continue to lead responsibly and protect the people’s interests.

    He said: “Nigeria’s centennial coincides with a new phase of our struggle for the soul of our great nation. 2013 was a very historic year in the political space; 2014 promises to be even more eventful. I urge us all as a people whose destiny is connected inextricably with our great country to keep praying as we support the agitation for the restoration of true federalism and the entrenchment of equity and justice in our polity.

    “I remind us all that a nation, in spite of its complex institutions and structures, boils down to the family unit comprising individuals. Indeed, the fate of Nigeria is in your hands and dependent on the choices and decisions each of us make daily. We cannot be collectively complaining of corruption bedeviling the nation when in our individual lives, we cut corners and devise ways to undermine laws and the institutions that enforce these laws.

    “Therefore, as Nigeria clocks 100 years, I urge us all to rededicate our lives to practicing the ethos of honour and integrity that Ekiti people are known for in our individual lives, families and communities. By the grace of God and the righteousness of our people, Nigeria will overcome its current travails and be exalted in the comity of nations.”

    On the governorship poll, Fayemi said: “2014 is a year of crucial decision in our state. Our still young republic grapples with the legacy of militarism, its violent imprint on our politics and a generational perception of political competition as a form of warfare. It is unfortunate that politics is not widely seen as a contest of ideas for hearts and minds, but a desperate means to get to power by all means possible.

    “I seize this opportunity to remind all and sundry, particularly those interested in contesting the upcoming election, that the quality of power is defined by the nature of its pursuit. When we mortgage our consciences and values in the pursuit of power, no matter how dignified or admirable our intentions, it costs us bits of our humanity and deprives governance of the moral authority that is its true foundation.

    “We should refrain from inciting our people to violence and other negative tendencies. Ultimately, an anarchic approach in which the contestants for power deploy all means, fair or foul, to win, de-legitimises and de-humanises politics. We cannot afford to lose the grounds we have gained in establishing peace and tranquility in Ekiti over the last few years.

    “I urge our people to join us in appealing to every aspirant not to make their liberty a bondage for Ekiti people. We should all focus on issue-based campaigns, while we sell our candidacy to our people.

    I urge all our people to demand of every contestant what he/she can do differently from what my administration has done for you. It is a fact that we have touched all communities in our development drive and these facts – these tangibles – are what we will be campaigning with, not lies or violence.

    “Ekiti people have a duty to sieve through all promises, all statements, all lies to arrive at the truth and make the best decision that would further galvanise our state on the already begun journey to lasting development and progress.

    “Our government shall continue to provide the required leadership and strive to meet its obligations to all in the face of depleting resources. We also seek the cooperation of all and sundry to join the task of sustaining our modest achievements so far. We are holding the candle for our people to find the pathway to prosperity.

    “I am a firm believer in the sanctity of life and on no occasion will I tolerate the attempt by desperate politicians and agents of reactionary tendencies to import violence into the state and subsequently turn around to blame such on the government.

    “I urge all stakeholders, the people, political elites, traditional institutions, security agencies, etc, to put in all efforts to ensure Ekiti records a free and fair election that would be a model to other states and a reflection of the honourable people that we are.”

  • Excitement as Fayemi takes governance round Ekiti

    Excitement as Fayemi takes governance round Ekiti

    It was an eye-opening trip. Major towns in Ekiti State were not spared. But more importantly, its outcome was roundly adjudged an exemplary lesson in people-centred governance. With infectious glee, the host residents were profuse in accolades, especially head-swelling panegyrics, for their “Action Governor” – Dr Kayode Fayemi. Reason: For sharing leadership baton with them.

    The foundation of the inspiring development was laid when, weeks back, the governor shared a whopping N300 million among over 82 towns for various developmental projects voluntarily initiated by each of the communities. It took place ceremoniously at Oye-Ekiti. Shortly after, a huge money was again distributed to the communities to consolidate the initiative.

    “This is a rare occurrence in the annals of governance. Rather than government dictating to the communities, it allowed them to think out projects that they felt would be of benefit to them and gave them funds to execute them under good supervision. It is a positive novelty that must be emulated,” said Hon Femi Ajibare, an Ikere-born executive assistant to the governor.

    The tumultuous welcome accorded Fayemi and his entourage at Ikere and other neighbouring towns, including Ise and Emure, which benefitted from the gesture, perhaps spoke volumes for its popularity.

    At Ikere, Commissioner for Integration and Intergovernmental Affairs, Hon Funminiyi Afuye, a “son of the soil,” played the dual role of a co-host and co-visitor.

    Fayemi inaugurated some projects, including 10 units of lock-up shops at Afao–Ikere; two new health centres at Kajola, two new halls at the palace of the town’s monarch and a newly constructed skills acquisition centre at the School for the Blind.

    Fayemi visited the Ogoga of Ikere, Oba Adegoke Adegboye, who presented the community’s pains. But he praised Fayemi for the various projects in the town, adding that his people wanted the Ikere-Akure Road dualised. He also wants Ikere-Ilawe, Ikere-Ijan, and Ikere-Ijare roads rehabilitated, among other demands.

    In each of the communities, numbering over six scores, traditional rulers led their subjects – young and old – to receive him in what passed for carnivals. Market men and women, including farmers and artisans, were not left out of the revelry.

    As in the other towns, he visited with top officials in his administration, who defied the biting sun of the day, Fayemi took all the towns in Oye Local Government Area by pleasant storm. He stepped his feet on the 14 communities that make up the council area – Ayegbaju, Isan, Ilemesho, Ayede, Itaji, Oloje, Imojo, Oye, Ire, Ilupeju, Itapa, Osin, Omu and Ijelu.

    Orisunmibare, a rustic settlement that is bereft of notable elements of civilisation like electricity and good road was not left out. The residents beamed with hope at the sight of their governor who, before departing, vowed to turn their fortunes around before long.

    After the interactions kicked-off at Ilasa in Ekiti East Local Government Area on November 1, they were rounded off in Ado Local Government Area with the refrain: “Fayemi carries the people along in the governance of the state.”

    The governor made it clear that he had put his hands on the plough “to do development for and with the people.” He added that his administration was committed without measure, to spreading development to every nook and cranny of the state, explaining that he decided to meet the people in their own communities to see how much impact his administration has made on them so far, inspect ongoing projects and find out from the people, their other needs.

    In Ekiti East Local Government Area, he visited Ilasa, Ikun-Oba, Araromi-Oke, Eda-Ile, Kota-Ekiti, Omuo-Oke, Ayegunle-Ahan, Isinbode and Omuo-Ekiti. Each of the communities presented their priority needs for inclusion in the 2014 Budget.

    As usual, the governor inaugurated many projects and commissioned some. He commissioned a civic centre at Ikun-Oba, a block of quarters at Eda-Ile and opened a viewing centre at Araromi-Oke, where he inspected some self-help projects under construction.

    At Omuo-Oke, his hosts demanded why the trailer park promised them was still in the pipeline. But the governor informed that the ongoing review of the design for the park caused the delay and assured that the contractor handling the project would soon make them smile, even as he would give the community more roads.

    It was also a carnival at the towns and villages in Irepodun/Ifelodun Local Government Area. Fayemi was praised for his administration’s developmental strides.

    It was the same encouraging outing at Igbemo, Orun, Afao, Are, Obo, Iworoko, Esure, Iropora, Awo, Eyio, Igede and Iyin. The Onigede of Igede, 80-year-old Oba Emmanuel Aladesuru, was full of prayers for Fayemi and other members of his cabinet.

    The Alare of Are, Oba Boluwade Adebiyi, said “there is no single town, village or community that can claim not to have been touched by Fayemi’s government.”

    Praise songs welcomed the governor to Afao. Chief Deji Fasuan, who spoke for his people, said the town had reaped the fruits of the Fayemi-led administration’s community empowerment initiatives.  At Awo-Ekiti, the National President of Awo Development Union, Mr. Yemi Odetayo, was profound in appreciation for Fayemi for his accomplishments in the town as including the 16-kilometre Awo-Iyin Road, construction of information centre, a block of classrooms and the payment of social security allowances to elderly members of the community, among others. So it was at Iyin, another major town.

    Radiating humility and awe as he sank into a seat amidst the town’s rulers in the presence of ecstatic residents, Fayemi watched as he was being praised for his landmark imprints on the life of Osin community.

    The town’s hall, which his administration recently renovated was the venue of the meeting. It was filled to capacity – songs, songs everywhere!

    Oba Philip Oyediran, who led his subjects in profuse encomiums on the governor, likened his administration’s services to the people to those witnessed in the days of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

    However, the community played the proverbial Oliver Twist, demanding potable water and urgent rehabilitation of the road linking the town to Ire, a neighbouring community.

    It was the same story in Itapa. Fayemi got resounding commendation for the “radical reconstruction” of the town’s decrepit health centre, and his readiness to give its monarch’s palace a new look.

    Its traditional ruler, the Owatapa, Oba David Makanjuola, said Fayemi achievements so far did not surprise him. The monarch, who holds a Ph.D in International Relations, recalled that Fayemi was implacably neck-deep in political activism outside the shores of Nigeria during the late Abacha’s inglorious era.

    He noted amid nods of affirmation by his teeming subjects that the governor’s people-oriented programmes had brightened people’s faces.

    “Governor Fayemi won’t vacate the Government House until October 16, 2018!” An impressed resident thundered from the crowd that received the governor with hearty songs. But they gave the governor a challenge: He must waste no time to complete the reconstruction of Itapa-Ijelu Road.

    Fayemi’s stop-over at Isan, his hometown, seemingly took the grain off the saying that a prophet does not enjoy much reverence in his home. It was songs galore at the premises of St. Martin’s Catholic Nursery and Primary School, where he was hosted.

    The traditional ruler of the town, Oba Sunday Ajiboye, a legal practitioner with impressive academic qualifications, might have looked forward to that day. He was the cynosure of all eyes in his royal element. He donned his Sunday best.

    For him, it was a moment to express how much he cherishes the responsible son he has in Fayemi with an outpour of royal blessings on him in local dialect.

    “The very day the Shea butter encounters the sun, that same day it melts. Whoever hurls ashes would have same float back to him. Anyone born of a woman that thinks ill of you (Fayemi) won’t hatch his ploy before meeting his waterloo. You have done so much for Ekiti and we must protect you. Like God did to those rebellious children at Babel, confusion will hit the camp of all your enemies. On our part, we will keep protecting you as we are solidly behind you,” Oba Ajiboye, who likened the governor to the unshakable Rock of Gibraltar, affirmed amid rousing chant of “amen.”

    In all the communities, the governor thanked the people for playing their parts in the governance of the state through the communal initiatives because according to him, the people are the focal point of his administration.

    Not a few, especially in the opposing political camps, were of the insinuation that he might have begun his re-election strategies under the canopy of the visit. But the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Olayinka Oyebode laughed it off, stating that Fayemi had developed a habit of holding meetings with the communities to feel their pulse.

    Oyebode explained: “The tour is to enable the governor inspect ongoing projects, commission completed projects and get the input of the various communities into the 2014 Budget. At such meetings, the communities would present their lists of priority projects for inclusion in the 2014 Budget. The tour of communities and the town hall meetings have become an annual event for the governor since the maiden edition in November 2011. He is running an open administration.

    “Oftentimes, the governor has reiterated that his plans are to “do government with the people, not do government to the people.” To him, it is inappropriate for a governor to just sit down in his cozy office in state capital and assume that he knows all the needs of the people even when the people’s needs actually differ from his perception.

    The governor, Oyebode quoted, once said: “This reason for the annual town hall meetings is to enable the communities have direct input in the budget preparations, so that the budget would in reality be owned by the people and serve their needs.”

     

  • Fayemi’s urban renewal takes Ekiti to 21st century

    Fayemi’s urban renewal takes Ekiti to 21st century

    The urban renewal efforts of Governor Kayode Fayemi-led administration in Ekiti State have peaked faster than many thought possible just two years ago. Sulaiman Salaw-udeen examines the effects on the residents

    The view across Ado-Ekiti, capital of Ekiti state and other towns in the state, far beyond being genial, is lately even inviting. Structures belonging to banks and other corporate outfits which verge major roads and streets now impress a stamp of newness and health on a capital which might finally have caught up with modernity earlier than imaginable only two years previously.

    Passing through the roads and streets day or night either walking or by other means is no longer stressful, courtesy of the much advanced road rehabilitation and urban renewal programmes of the administration of Dr. Kayode Fayemi which turned three recently.

    Either as one moves into the capital from the entry points of Iyin-Ekiti, Iworoko-Ekiti, Ijan-Ekiti/Federal Poly axis, Ikere-Ekiti and Ilawe-Ekiti, or out of the capital, the traveller is greeted by and enjoys dark, shiny, smooth tar and much widened and often dualised lanes all of which have gained additional beauty through concrete drainage system for the channeling of waste water and flood during rains.

    Even within the township, main roads including Police Headquartres-Basiri-Fajuyi road, Fajuyi-Adebayo road, Fajuyi-Okesa-Okeyinmi-Old Garrage road, Bank road, NTA road, Old Garrage-Ijigbo-Ajilosun road are now also well-paved, double-carriage and widened.

    So far, according to findings, 736,715km of a total of 1,334 kilometres of both federal and state roads have been completed while an additional 500 kilometres are ongoing across every nooks and crannies of the 16 local government areas of the state since the inception of the administration.

    Further, the streets are illuminated with bright lights as apparent in the nights when driving without the headlights may not pose much danger; functional traffic lights supported by the ubiquitous and ever-vigilant State Traffic Control Officers decree a regime of sanity in vehicular operations in daytime. The (road) medians which house the street light poles are lately going green with cultivated grasses.

    As mobility devices glide with ease through the streets and highways, traffic hold-ups have also gone in areas such as Old Garrage/Post Office/Oja’ba, Okeyinmi and Ojumoshe junctions and Fajuyi/Okesa roundabouts through access roads rehabilitated/created about the town. The urban renewal/beautification exercise of the Fajuyi area itself has lent supporting allure to the corporate appearance of the whole environment.

    Also, heaps of fresh and decomposing refuse which used to take strategic positions within the metropolis have equally gone, thanks to the vibrant Ekiti Waste Management Agency which today does not just clear the refuse but has been converting same into forms usable for other attainments.

    With street lights on major roads, night time commercial activities are now familiar development with consequent improvement on nightlife specifically around Fajuyi-Adebayo areas while incidences of attacks of hoodlums who often applied the darkness about the town to unleash their art have reportedly also waned.

    Shops and kiosks where locals access staples and other items of need which remain a common sight still are now well recessed from the road, allowing more freedom to other official operations which might occasionally become necessary, including the much advanced laying of cyber-optic cables.

    Presence of government in one regard or another is seen all over the town more often nowadays with sights of refuse/waste collection trucks and their officials in action; the erection or repair of this or that street light or faulty road portion. The likelihood of such encounters has become so much as to be trite.

    Commenting on this development, the Commissioner for Information and Civic Orientation, Mr. Tayo Ekundayo said: “What used to be the order was open and blunt official negligence and abdication of duties. On all indicators of the existence of governance in the state, you would find the repositories of peoples’ questionable mandate than ever in bed and sleeping.”

    According to Ekundayo, unease and sleeplessness befall such a head that must wear the crown of governance. “As a responsible administration that we have today in the state, there is no rest time. And that is why you have the smoothness and progress on all fronts in the state.

    “The roads that Fayemi has built have a minimum survival period of nothing less than ten years but should anything go wrong with any of it anywhere and anytime, you would see our officials there for the amends. This is how we understand administration”, Ekundayo said.

    Clarifying further, the commissioner said “the current administration of Governor Kayode Fayemi runs an 8 Point Development Agenda. None among all the 8 can be said to suffer. Everything is success and more success and more success. If we have been resting, half what we have achieved would not have been possible.

    “Recall that the governor just concluded the celebration of his third year in office. Though celebrations we call it, it was actually an opportunity to do more work. Several projects were commissioned while another phase of the social security scheme was flagged off with the addition of 5,000 qualified elderly individuals into the bulk of twenty thousand.

    “New projects were launched during the programmes across agriculture, health, empowerment and others. The third anniversary celebrations have been concluded but the governor, as we are talking has started and completed a tour of the entire 132 communities in the state as part of Village Square/Town Hall meetings to access community people’s contribution towards the 2014 budget. The result of this will soon come for people to see in the structuring of the 2014 budget.

    “You really cannot avail much if you are the holidaying type as a leader. I dare say unease lies the head that wears a crown and the reward for good work is more work for the people”, the Commissioner said.

    How it used to be

    But someone who has not been in the state for at least one and half years might not be aware of what the residents, especially vehicle owners and commercial cab operators had gone through.

    Itinerant businessmen and other categories of visitors coming into the capital might then have wondered “where the capital really was in the capital, Ado-Ekiti” as they battled a view which awed sensibilities in its unbecoming grandeur and a movement that must tax patience.

    Difficulties of both vehicular and pedestrian operations had generally been sanctioned by potholes and craters which had overtaken significant sections of the often too tiny stretches of the major and access roads, worsened by shops, kiosks, business complexes and even residential buildings built up to the last margins of the roads. These particularly made driving a most unattractive and troubling burden.

    The commercial vehicle operators who, in trying to outsmart other road users while rushing possibly to meet ‘delivery targets,’ only worsened situations. Heaps of debris of collapsed structures and assorted construction machines which laid here and there at the peak of the urban beautification exercise only choked up the already tiny spaces the worse.

    Residents, especially in the more expansive settings of Ado and Ikere Ekiti, constrained by lack of waste disposal points had also then chosen city centres as their dump sites. Mounted at major junctions were mountainous heaps of often decayed garbage of assorted wastes from houses and community markets which, lying unattended days, would issue offensive smells and foul breath.

    Further, arising from the darkness which usually enveloped the town soon as night fell owing to lack of state-aided illumination/lighting, sights of vehicles, including commercial taxis, plying the roads were scanty, while roadside traders and hawkers were a rarity, leaving the needy at such periods at the mercy of luck!

    Owing to largely absent and occasionally blocked drains, floods must come onto the roads during rains again, dragging along and depositing at critical sections all manner of debris. The consequence had often been an unsightly view of a capital reeling under multiple failures of a best forgotten past.

    Moving from the capital then into the hinterland, especially towards Iworoko-Ifaki, Ajilosun-Ikere and Fedpoly-Ijan-Iluomoba, the road user must meet worse challenges. The hell holes which had then worsened into craters and gullies over time would keep dragging the unfortunate machine and its occupants from one end of the road to another in an infernal ding-dong, forcing them to commit hours into a journey of minutes!

    For those lucky to avoid head-on collisions arising from often compelled needs to dodge undesirable sections of the roads, the machines must sure be returned to the artisan for urgent salvage.

    Abandoned along the roads at the time were scores of vehicles the deaths of which had been aided by such harrowing tales. Today, all inter-township roads are free and unclogged and sights of abandoned/disused vehicles along the highways are a rarity.

    But the infrastructural reversals in Ekiti have meant more than these. They have also involved the entire overhauling of the secondary schools through Operation Renovate all (182) Secondary Schools (ORASE) and Operation Renovation all (120) General Hospitals (ORAHE) across the 16 local government areas of the state.

    Generally, since inception in October 2010, the current administration has commissioned well over a thousand projects which include several rural and urban electrification projects and infrastructural monuments. Among the latter is a giant edifice named ‘The Civic Centre’ which is one of what the administration has described as ‘legacy projects’.

    Also at the far right and atop a noticeable Ayoba Hill about Okesa junction in Ado-Ekiti is the new ‘Governor’s Lodge Complex’, now standing sturdy on the Hill.  The State Pavilion located at the far end of the Bank Road is expected to serve as a good icing on the cake of the very many infrastructural accomplishments of the administration. Both are in Ado-Ekiti and at very advanced completion stages.

    Others on the ‘legacy projects’ list, aside some of the new roads within the metropolis, according to the findings, are The New Governor’s Office, Ire Burnt Bricks Factory in Ire-Ekiti, completed and now servicing the interested public; Ikogosi Warm Springs Resort in Ikogosi-Ekiti, equally completed and already attracting commendation and patronage from within and outside the state.

    Infrastructural facilities like electricity distribution supports for communities, upgrading of water provision facilities in Ado-Ekiti and other towns across the state and the laying of cyber-optic cables in Ado-Ekiti, have all been receiving generous and consistent attention as well from the administration.

    Specifically, the laying of the cyber cables was the culmination of several previous efforts at enhancing the information and communication awareness of residents of the state, especially, secondary school students and their teachers, with the distribution of nearly 35,000 net-book, solar-powered laptop computers. Most of the students who are now ICT aware and even the teachers were interacting with the computer for the first time in their whole lives!

    The combined effect of  all the efforts as listed here has transformed not only the entire view of the state, especially the capital, but even the ease of transacting businesses, from governance to education, the civil and public service, banking, relaxation/tourism and other areas of life.

    Presenting a bill in respect of next year’s appropriation, the governor said in terms of infrastructural development in the state: “our goal is to establish optimum communities that will improve the lives of citizens and attract investment. Our target is to ensure that every part of the state is accessible by motorable roads by the end of our first term in October 2014.”

    Although, relatively, the achievement in the area of water supply and distribution in the state has been lower compared with other areas, the state government has committed a sizeable chunk of its total earnings into reversing the sector.

    Governor Fayemi admitted this during the bill presentation saying, “In concrete terms, we have invested over N1.2 billion in water production in the last three years with over 157.3 kilometres of water pipe laid in 2011 alone. We are also making water dams in the state functional so as to increase water supply and coverage by 80 per cent while using the PPP to increase generation and distribution of electricity.

    “Three water schemes were completed and commissioned in Efon-Alaaye, Okemesi and Ido-Ile while two other schemes in Ipole-Iloro and Erinjiyan-Ekiti are nearing completion. About 4.0 billion cubic metres of water has been produced and distributed to the various communities in the state in the last two years”, Governor Fayemi said.

    According to other sources, efforts have been mounted to institute fundamental changes through a multi-sectoral approach which by the middle of next year will take concrete shapes especially in the capital of Ado, Ikere and Ikole.

    The challenge of urbanisation

    The infrastructural developments particularly in Ado-Ekiti have introduced challenges though. Perhaps the most visible lately is the sheer increase in population as often attested in the number of commercial motorcycle operators whose penchant for over-speeding and sundry road misdemeanours have been attracting attention.

    Crude estimates now put the number of commercial motorcycles operating in Ado-Ekiti alone at nearly a hundred thousand which people argue is more than double the number of commercial taxis plying inter and intra-township roads.

    The concern however is not the figure which most consider intimidating and potentially dangerous but the fact that the riders defy road regulations with gleeful abandon, a development which has made them more susceptible to accidents. Even while over-speeding, most would not wear crash helmets, which puts them at double jeopardy in accident situations.

    According to the State Sector Commander, Federal Roads Safety Corps, Engr. Ringdom Kumven, “efforts have lately been mounted through a Thursday radio programme owing to observed recalcitrance of the operators of commercial motorcycles.”

    “You will notice that most of those who ride the motorcycles are not trained and neither are they mature enough to pick up that trade. Pressed of necessity, the young boys just reach for the motorcycles as a last resort, driving with all manner of condemnable recklessness”, Kumven said.

    The programme which, according to him, was in consequence of frequent motorcycle accidents some of which claim lives was mounted to offer channels of discussions on how to maintain safety on major roads.

    The effect of urbanisation on properties have however been unprecedented and mind-blowing. While the cost of obtaining shops has more than doubled in the last two years, that of renting a modest residential apartment has become more unfriendly. While it has become harder to secure houses in urban Ado, the needy are having to seek solution in adjoining suburban settlements of Ikere and Ilawe.

    A properties dealer who craved anonymity noted: “The cost either of buying a landed property or renting an apartment or shop can never go down again. Generally and all times, cost of properties don’t go down. There may be occasional lags, but prices soon return to normal.

    “What I can advise people to do is to get their own portion of land and build their houses. It is the solution to the ever rising costs of obtaining through rent a residential accommodation. Government is also set to assist the residents through the recently commenced 5,000 housing units project. If they can construct that number of units, it will assist quite a number of residents, especially the civil servants.

  • Ekiti council workers to get minimum wage arrears

    Ekiti council workers to get minimum wage arrears

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi has assured local government workers that arrears of the N19,300 minimum wage will be cleared this month.

    Speaking at an interactive session with council workers in Gbonyin, Oye, Ikole, Emure and Ekiti-East local government areas on Wednesday and in Ekiti West, Efon and Ijero-Ekiti councils yesterday, the governor said machinery had been set in motion to pay the arrears.

    He said the arrears were owed because workers delayed in embracing the biometric data capture system, through which the government pays salary.

    Fayemi said a committee had been set up to look into how much the government owes council workers as promotion and minimum wage arrears.

    He said his administration would continue to pay salary promptly and improve workers’ welfare.

    Chairman of the Local Government Service Commission (LGSC) Chief Ranti Adebisi said over 3,000 council workers had been promoted, adding that a review of the sack of some workers by the previous administration was ongoing.

    He said many of the council workers redeployed to the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB), who were on grade levels 4 and 5, were promoted to Grade Level 7 because of their professional certificates in Education.

    The workers, who opened up to Fayemi on issues bothering them, hailed the governor for acceding to their demands.

  • Merger: Nigeria’s democracy getting better – Atiku

    Merger: Nigeria’s democracy getting better – Atiku

    Former Vice-President, Atiku Abubakar, said on Friday in Ado Ekiti that Nigeria is becoming a better democratic entity.

    Responding to the latest merger of the five erstwhile Peoples Democratic Party governors who joined the All Progressives Congress (APC), Atiku maintained that the development was a confirmation of development in the country’s fledgling democracy.

    The former vice president, who reaffirmed his support for two-party democracy, said, “I have always spoken in support of efforts geared towards making Nigeria a two-party state which I think is the best for the country.”

    Abubakar spoke during a visit to the Ekiti State Governor, Kayode Fayemi, in his office in the state capital.

    He said, “I welcome the merger. It is good for democracy. I have always supported two-party system.

    “We are eventually moving towards two-party system. In this country, we need two strong parties not one big party with other very small ones. In that case, we would not have true democracy.”

    The former vice president, however, refused to disclose which of the two parties he belonged to and the nature of his participation in next year’s presidential election.

    Atiku said: “I belong to democracy. Even during military rule, I stood and fought for democracy. I am a true democrat and I still stand for democracy.”

     

  • It’s time for celebration, reflection, says Fayemi

    It’s time for celebration, reflection, says Fayemi

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi spoke this morning on the passage of the icon Nelson Mandela.

    He said: “The passing of Nelson Mandela after his prolonged hospitalisation should not be a cause for sadness on any account. We extend our deepest sympathies to his family and offer our prayers to them and the people of South Africa. But we also recognise that his passing at the ripe old age of 95 is a fitting crown to the rich full life that Madiba lived, playing a starring role in what is surely the 20th century’s most compelling odyssey of human freedom from tyranny.

    “Rather than mourning, Mandela’s transition into glory should be an occasion for celebration and reflection. Firstly, we celebrate the final consummation of a life well spent. The phrase “a life well spent” which is commonly used in obituaries has become an overworked cliché but in the case of Madiba it is not a cliché at all. It is more than worthily applied to describe a man who expended his energies in the service of humanity, risking everything including his life to actualize the ideal of freedom. It is this exemplary life that we have much cause to celebrate.

    Even, as we revel in the honour and blessing of having lived to witness the life and times of one of history’s most iconic political figures, we must also ponder his luminous legacy. His death closes an epic story of the triumph of the human spirit over injustice and tyranny.

    “Born into a country characterised by apartheid and racial hate, where the black majority was ruled by a white supremacist minority, Mandela discovered his cause and his life’s mission early enough. As the liberation movement’s most prominent militant leader, Mandela had been effective as a shadowy and elusive figure orchestrating sabotage attacks on government facilities and showcasing the ability of a long-oppressed people to fight for their freedom.

    “But as a prisoner, he became the symbol of apartheid’s oppressive inhumanity. It was Mandela’s face that readily came to mind when people the world over thought and talked about South Africa. His imprisonment helped to mobilise global public opinion and a campaign for international sanctions against South Africa, as well as near universal censure and isolation of the apartheid regime. It was this suffocating and strangulating isolation of South Africa as a pariah state and mounting unrest on the streets that finally compelled reformist elements within the establishment to renegotiate South Africa’s destiny. When Mandela was finally released from prison in 1990, after nearly three decades in the custody of the apartheid state, he emerged as a figure of unparalleled moral authority.

    “Mandela successfully negotiated constitutional black majority rule – achieving one of the core aims of the ANC. In so doing, he had to navigate a turbulent period of transition during which chronic violence between Xhosas and Zulus, and between white right wing extremists and black zealots threatened to degenerate into civil war. Remarkably, Mandela emerged from prison preaching forgiveness and reconciliation as the only path to a new and sustainable South Africa. He understood that even as white domination had proven repressive and unjust, so too would black domination prove to be unsustainable. He insisted on the democratic and multi-racial vision enshrined in the freedom charter, the guiding document of the liberation movement.

    “He wisely charted a course between the two extremes of black anger and lust for vengeance on one hand as well as white fear and resistance to change on the other. The challenge of doing so was immense because white extremists and black extremists were threatening to unleash death and destruction. Many watchers felt that a racial civil war between whites and blacks and even war between ANC cadres and the Zulu Inkatha Freedom Party were inevitable. Mandela’s conciliatory posture helped to defuse those tensions and shepherd the nation through a transition process that culminated in his election as the first democratically elected president of the country. This is how South Africa was transformed from an apartheid state to a multi-racial democracy – the rainbow country.

    “It must be said that the work of liberating South Africa was not Mandela’s alone and he has never claimed any such messianic mantle for himself. His iconic status as a pivotal figure in the odyssey of South African liberation is un-impeachable. But he belonged to a very distinguished cast of leaders that included freedom fighters like Oliver Tambo, Walter Sisulu and Govan Mbeki. And these heroic freedom fighters were themselves the second generation of the struggle ordained by the founders of the African National Congress. They were heirs to Albert Luthuli, John Dube, Sol Plaatje and other heroic patriots. Together these patriots forged a political tradition of such resilience that it altered the course of South Africa’s history.

    “This is an important point because the idea of Mandela can be easily reduced to championing the emergence of rare superhuman political saints. This is not the leadership lesson that we should be taking away from Mandela’s odyssey. Mandela was the product of an already established revolutionary tradition. Side by side with his cohorts, great liberation fighters like Tambo and Sisulu, he was comfortable. There was a remarkable absence of personality clashes; egos were submerged in the cause of the greater good of securing a free South Africa. There was little or none of the jostling for leadership that often characterizes liberation movements on the cusp of attaining power.

    “This is something we must ponder as we reflect upon the state of leadership in our country. Our challenge is not to produce one messianic leader but to create a tradition of patriotic leadership and raise a corps of leaders bound by a common ethos as was the case with South Africa. As James Freeman Clark said, “A politician thinks of the next election, a statesman, of the next generation.” Leadership is a continuum and for our leadership to truly stand the test of time it must be driven by a trans-generational perspective. We must build up those who will take our exertions for a better society to higher levels. I am convinced that through carefully and consciously developed formal and informal programmes of leadership development, we can build a cadre of young Nigerians who are committed to social transformation and genuinely want to work for change.    “This entails a shift away from the idea of the “leader as messiah” – the notion that all it takes to transform our society is the miraculous emergence of one extraordinarily endowed leader. We simply cannot afford to reduce leadership to political Messianism. Mandela, despite his own leadership gifts and his track record, did not think of himself as being indispensable. He relinquished presidential power willingly and gracefully and ceded the limelight to the younger Thabo Mbeki. And when he left office, he wisely refrained from being an overbearing post-presidential presence and let his younger successor fully take up the reins of leadership. In so doing, he was setting an example – that the older generation must give way to the younger and allow their nations move forward.

    “Mandela’s willingness to leave power stands in stark contrast to a number of situations in Africa where erstwhile liberation fighters having assumed power have simply found it impossible to relinquish the presidency. Many have become sit-tight despots. Mo Ibrahim set up his annual leadership prize partly to motivate African leaders to give up power and leave the stage willingly. There have been years when no leader was nominated because they track record in office simply did not match the criteria for nomination. This is a pungent commentary on the state of leadership on the continent. Mandela stands as a shimmering example of what real leadership looks like.

    “Tributes often read like hagiographies. To be sure, Mandela was not perfect. He made mistakes. Many South Africans feel that the ANC while earning black majority rule did not pay sufficient attention to addressing racially-based economic equality. As a result some of the development indices in the country are actually worse now than they were before Mandela became president. There is much work to be done in the areas of housing, education and employment.

    “However, the pursuit of freedom is not accomplished in one generation. Mandela and his generation fought for political liberation. Another generation must now rise up and take up the bottom and begin the battle against inequality and poverty. Fortunately, in Mandela they have the most illustrious of examples to draw from and emulate.”

    Adieu, Madiba.

  • Fayemi: An activist in Government House

    Fayemi: An activist in Government House

    When Seun Akioye was invited to a dinner by the Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, he was worried about putting on fine manners, wearing the appropriate costume and other etiquettes usually associated with such events. But, as he found out, the governor is not only an excellent host, he is also a pleasant and easy to please gentleman.

    The thoughts that dominated my mind as the bus sped towards Government House in Ado-Ekiti, where I will join about 20 other civil society leaders for a dinner with the governor of Ekiti State were not about the promise of the fine foods and hospitality but about the possible hostile reception from the governors’ protocol. I was worried that I was not properly dressed for dinner; worried about the long protocol, the mean looking policemen armed with AK-47 rifles and barking out orders. I was concerned about security aides giving multiple instructions just to find faults with your presentation and finally I was apprehensive that the long protocol would eventually deny me the chance of the dinner with the governor.

    It was the 6th National Consultation on the Environment organised by Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), which was held in Ado-Ekiti from November 28-29, 2013.

    The conference with the theme: “Our Forests, Our Life” was a radical approach to the issues of deforestation and land grabbing by multinational corporations. ERA/FoEN had insisted the communities must resist taking over of the existing forests through the introduction of the United Nation’s Reducing Emission from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) programmes.

    On the evening of Thursday, 28th November, Governor Fayemi invited the civil society leaders to an interactive dinner at Government House. The activists were led by Godwin Uyi Ojo, the Executive Director, ERA/FoEN; Akinbode Oluwafemi, its Corporate Accountability Director; Leslie Adogame; Professor Margaret Okorodudu-Fubara of the Faculty of Law, Obafemi Awolowo University and other leading civil society activists.

    But on arrival at the Government House, I was shocked at how little protocol was attached to activities in the official residence of the governor. He lives simply, making do with what was only necessary. As soon as the protocol was informed of our arrival, we were ushered inside. The governor surrounded himself with no airs and the officials put on none of those pompous attitudes which journalists detest. There were no endless array of state-of-the-art vehicles in the garage. I saw no “mean looking” policeman at all. After moving through two rooms, we went into the dining hall where the governor and those who arrived early were seated.

    While I had been worried about the right attire for the occasion, I discovered the governor was dressed with the greatest simplicity. He wore a stripped white and black polo shirt and black trousers. He wore black comfortable shoes and, for the first time, I saw him without his glasses and cap. He looked different.

    Living simple

    The dining room of the Ekiti Government House bears none of those bourgeoisie ornaments. It was a simple room with modest furnishing. At the centre of the room is a long dining table which could sit approximately 15 guests. We were more than 20 so makeshift arrangements were made for us with two other tables placed by the sides. The governor sat at the head of the centre table, directly behind him, a large picture of Jesus sitting at the last dinner hung beautifully on the wall. Directly under that picture was the Nigerian Coat of Arms.

    At the other end was a glass cabinet filled with exquisite China porcelain. By the side of the cabinet was a small television set from which a local soap opera was blaring out. From all indications, the television has not been connected to one of those pay-per-view channels. The fridge was in the other corner and the door to the kitchen was by it. When the fridge was opened, I was shocked to find it was not filled with assorted drinks and wines but with soft drinks, fruit wines and plenty of water.

    The buffet table was by the side of the dining table. There were about five servers, all males, wearing white apron with the inscription: “ Ekiti State, Ile Iyi, Ile Eye.” They were eager to please and quickly offered their services if the guest had any problems. There was rice (varieties) and pounded yam and efo with assorted meat. I checked the plate of the governor and saw he had taken jollof rice and fish. The governor ate normally but with relish. At first, everyone dined in silence until Ojo began to discuss salient issues on politics, that was when I discovered one of the ways to get the best out of the governor is at dinners.

    Fayemi didn’t want to be the centre of attention, so he gave ample time to his guests to express themselves. He spoke politics and development issues with Ojo and Ekiti State issues with Akinbode who is an indigene. It didn’t take long however for him to know Akinbode is a Lagos/Ekiti man.

    The Fayemi outside is the same at dinner. He spoke and laughed freely, sometimes using his hands for emphasis. In the midst of the chatter, Ojo suddenly asked: “Governor, what will you say is your greatest achievement?”

    “My greatest achievement” Fayemi repeated.

    For a few seconds he seemed to be in a state of philosophical reflection, I searched his eyes to penetrate his thoughts while considering some of the laudable projects he had done executed wondering which one would be his greatest achievement. When he spoke, he shocked all of us. “ The social security is very popular, but I would say it is the value re-orientation, that is more important to me. But, in political terms, you can’t see or feel value, it is intangible, you can only see the results that value has generated in terms of changes in attitude and the infrastructural renewal.

    “Before we came on board, a lot of damage was done to the system. We have also done a lot in infrastructure renewal in the communities. It is sad that we have to start rebuilding infrastructure, but our public schools have improved, I am always happy when I remember that the pass rate in our public schools have improved from 20 to 70 percent.”

    Akinbode nodded in agreement and Fayemi continued: “I can tell you that we have recovered from the years of the locust; we have stability now and we just need to build on that.”

    “Please continue in that line,” Ojo admonished. This drew laughter from the hardcore civil society activists and Fayemi got the message.

    “Do we have a choice?” the governor asked. There were several murmurs from those who sat at the other tables, it was not clear what the argument was about but there was silence when Fayemi began to speak, this time with more seriousness.

    An activist in politics

    “The problem with coming from the civil society is that you have many monitors who are waiting to see if you will abandon the ideals you fought for on the other side.” This drew another round of laughter and the governor turned to Tunde Akanni, one of the old breeds at the Civil Liberty Organisation (CLO), now a lecturer of journalism at the Lagos State University.

    “These are things that have become permanent in your life just like the religious doctrines and teachings that you were brought up with. They are internalised, so it is very difficult, even in partisan politics to abandon the ideals because there are many comrades here with me. How can I convince people like Wale Adeoye that Ekiti State will not have Freedom of Information Bill?

    “The issue with the civil society is that no matter how bad politics is, a man with that background will still be better because, outside of politics, you have several other groups that you are answerable to. They are monitoring you so, you cannot afford to disappoint.”

    The guests appreciated this frank admission from the governor but, before the euphoria could die down, Ojo told the governor on behalf of his colleagues that the civil society would continue to monitor progress in Ekiti State.

    The governor smiled.

    Akinbode spoke about security in the state. “ Many people are talking about the Peace Corps.”

    “ I know my Peace Corps are very popular for several reasons,” the governor interrupted, explaining the different sections of the initiative and the duties and responsibilities of each. But Akinbode was not giving up.

    “You have been accused of promoting state police.”

    The governor laughed. It was clear he had been asked the same question many times. “I don’t want to talk about state police because it is like you don’t want a federal police. But I do, it’s just that I know there is a limitation to what the federal police can achieve. There is no developed country in the world where you have a single police unit. It is just not practicable.”

    By this time, everyone had joined in the conversation and after about 10 minutes, the meeting had been divided into mini-groups with some arguing animatedly with each other. Betty Abba, the gender-focal person for ERA/FoEN, cleared her throat and indicated she wanted to ask a question. All eyes fell on her as she expressed her concerns about the recent merger of the All Progressive Congress (APC) and some governors of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). She wanted to know if this will not taint the progressives.

    A pin drop silence descended on the room after this question with everyone unsure how the governor – who is also the chairman of the APC governors – would escape this tricky issue.

    At this time, the servers went round pouring wine into the glasses of those who wanted, a few accepted, I declined and the governor took Fanta.

    When Fayemi spoke, he thanked Abba for asking that question and began to talk about how compromises are important in politics. He said the challenge with civil society is the generalisation that everything government is bad. He called attention to the fact that most of the ‘rebel governors’ were the shining stars of PDP. He said many of them have progressive credentials and they will not have any challenges imbibing the clear democratic markers of the APC.

    “We have a primary responsibility to rescue this country first, and when we are in that kind of situation, you have to look for like minds and work together to save the country. We have no choice in APC but to set clear markers in our party manifesto so that we can win the trust of the people. The governors who just came in have distinguished themselves in their states. So there is no problem at all about the merger, it is for the best of the country.”

    There was heartfelt applause after this speech and someone asked if the governor thought he has won the heart of the Ekiti people.

    “If you go around asking about me, people will say yes, he’s a good man, he’s building roads and infrastructure. Things are moving but he doesn’t share money,” the governor said amid laughter.

    This is what he called stomach infrastructure. He said he has been able to eliminate the distribution of the commonwealth of the people to certain interests at the expense of the masses.

    “I don’t have money to dash to people and that’s not very popular. But I share money in a different way, you don’t have to know me to get your share or do baba rere, two fingers in the air before you get your share. The social security safety net is part of it and that is why they call me Oko Arugbo,” the governor said.

    Ojo wanted to know what Oko Arugbo meant, he must have given it more seriousness than intended. The governor gladly explained. The governor also chided his colleagues: “ We need to stop this puritanistic approach that everything government is bad and everything civil society is good. We should partner and not build Chinese walls between us.”

    It is amazing how much the governor still know about the civil society, who has moved on and what another is currently doing. It was apparent he had kept a tab on them, monitoring their activities. He told them: “You need to focus on local resource generation because when you rely on funding from outside donors, you only do what they want you to do and not necessarily what is good for your country. Let your campaign be issue based and partner with the government for development.”

    The dinner ended at 9:pm and the activists took the time to take photographs with the governor who, despite his tight schedule the following morning, was humble enough to accede to every request.

     

  • Fayemi receives ERA’s livelihood award.

    The Ekiti State governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi is the winner of this year’s Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) Premiere Award for Social Security, Livelihoods and Environmental Protection award.

    Presenting the award to governor Fayemi in Ado- Ekiti during the 6th Annual National Consultation on the Environment (NEC) conference titled: Our Forest, Our Life, ERA/FoEN Executive Director, Dr. Godwin Uyi Ojo, said in considering the governor for the award, the organization noted and considered D governor Fayemi’s sustained efforts to provide support for vulnerable groups in a nation without security and insurance for the poor.

    He said Fayemi has blazed the trail in social security delievery through his innovative scheme whereby elderly citizens of the state receives a monthly stipend. According to Ojo, this social security safety net aligns with ERA/FoEN’s commitment towards the establishment of a nationwide social security scheme called the National Basic Income Scheme (NaBIS).

    The NaBIS according to him is a social security scheme whereby about N10, 000 is to be paid monthly to all Nigerians who are unemployed. The scheme is designed to uphold human dignity, reduce poverty, unlock creative potentials for the generation of employment opportunities and reduce prevalence of crime in the society.

    “We found in the comrade governor, some level of fulfillment of these aspirations in his empowerment of Community Development Associations (CDA’s) and his innovative monthly social security stipends to the elderly senior citizens. This premiere award of recognition goes to the governor for his sustained effort to provide social security for vulnerable groups in the state,” Ojo said.

    In his response, Fayemi dedicated the award to the elderly in the state while expressing his willingness to work with civil society organizations in launching NaBIS on a national scale.

    “I dedicate this award to the elderly people in Ekiti. I give them just N5, 000 a month and whenever I engage with the elderly they tell me that many of them still have at least N1, 000 remaining at the end of the month. The elderly also have a contributory scheme within themselves from the little they receive from the government,” Fayemi said.

    Earlier in his keynote address, governor Fayemi called on civil society organizations to collaborate with the government in ensuring the sustainability of Nigerian forests. The governor lamented that civil societies often neglect the aspect of governance in their campaigns saying the two have to go together.

    “I believe government should be involved in the campaign for the protection of the environment. As civil society groups, we should not isolate the government. When we pursue our environmental activities as activists, we should remember the government angle, we cannot push it over,” he said.

    In his opening speech, ERA director Ojo said the topic of this year’s conference is apt because of the great impact that unchecked industrialization processes have led to forest degradation and negatively impacted the communities.

    Ojo said deforestation is nearing crisis level in Nigeria. He estimated that Nigeria has an annual deforestation rate of 3.5 percent and is ranked among countries with the highest level of deforestation of pristine forests in the world.

    According to statistics, between 2000n and 2005, Nigeria lost 409,700 hectares of forests annually and between 1990 and 2000 another 55.7 percent of primary forests were lost to deforestation.  Nigeria currently has below 9.6 million hectares of forest reserves as against 60 million hectares of forests and woodlands credited to the country in 1887.

    Ojo cautioned against false solution to deforestation like the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) which he said is to rob communities of their lands and exacerbate climate change. He said the impact of the loss of forests and biodiversity is replete across Nigeria especially in the 11 frontline states in northern Nigeria.

    He also lamented the indiscriminate logging which is profound in many communities in Ekiti state. “In Irele-Ekiti, which hitherto boasted of huge tress and forest cover, the reverse in now the case as indiscriminate logging and other unsustainable forest practices caused by unregulated charcoal production has severely degraded the forests and forced some plant species and animals into extinction.”

    Ojo called on Nigerians to collectively salvage the forest in order to preserve life forms, biodiversity and food sources for the present and future generations. “ERA/FoEN’s advocacy strategy is to reject and resist all forms of false solutions that will open up the forests to marketization, speculation, hedge funds and carbon stocks.”