Tag: Fayose

  • PDP governors will support party to regain power – Fayose

    PDP governors will support party to regain power – Fayose

    Chairman of PDP Governors Forum, Mr Ayo Fayose, on Saturday assured that the governors would continue to align with the ideals of the party and support it to regain power.

    Fayose gave the assurance at the party’s special national convention in Abuja.

    He said that the party would, as it had just done, overcome other challenges that may arise and win the general elections in 2019.

    He urged members of the party and supporters to not only work towards, but should begin to congratulate themselves because “re-occupying Aso Rock in 2019 is certain’’.

    He said that from 2019, he would be attending to the needs of Nigerians from the Presidential Villa, recalling that he had indicated interest in the presidency of the country.

    “The crowd here in the convention arena is a testimony of what is happening in Nigeria; the party is now a religion and a belief that we are going back to `our villa’.

    “I am going there; I don’t know how many of you will be ready to go there.

    “PDP will take Nigeria out of one chance and give it plenty chances.

    “We made a mistake but our ability to correct is the one that is important; we fell and we are bound to rise, so, it is time to arise and shine and let your light be seen be men,’’ he said.

    Fayose added that Nigeria would be liberated from poverty that had set into national life since PDP left office.

    Speaking to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) at the sidelines, former Minister of Special Duties and Intergovernmental Affairs, Alhaji Kabiru Turaki, said that the success of the convention was “a happy one for the party’’.

    “Today, we are happy that PDP is united and Nigerians are happy that PDP is on the march again.

    “Now it is very clear that indeed, PDP is set to regain power in this country and bring hope and good things to Nigerians.’’

    Turaki said that PDP would take away prevailing hunger, poverty, despondency, quarrel and insecurity and bring back prosperity and good times to Nigerians. (NAN)

  • ‘Let Fayose learn from performing governors’

    A former member of the House of Representatives, Bamidele Faparusi, has advised Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose to learn from other performing governors on how best to boost the state’s revenue.

    Faparusi spoke in Birnin-Kebbi, Kebbi State capital, when Acting President Yemi Osinbajo inaugurated a N10 billion Rice Mill in the state.

    The former lawmaker hailed the administration of Kebbi State Governor Atiku Bagudu for its achievements.

    He noted that such could have been easily achieved by Fayose if he had shifted attention to rice production where the state has comparative advantage with its long standing Igbemo rice.

    The governorship aspirant appealed to Fayose to place high premium on how to improve the people’s  standard of living by stopping the distribution of  ‘’highly debasing sachets of rice to people as if they were beggars”.

    In a statement in Ado-Ekiti the Chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), regretted how the PDP-led government “upgraded begging to a statecraft” in Ekiti, a state known as Fountain of Knowledge.

    He said what Governor Bagudu did in rice production in Kebbi launched the state to  global reckoning and confirmed that the governor was prepared to serve and deliver to the citizens.

    “Nigerians were aware of the comparative advantage Ekiti has in rice production. The local Igbemo rice has become a household delicacy the people sought after because of its nutritional values.

     

     

  • Army versus Fayose

    Army warns Fayose”, screamed the Nigerian Tribune front page lead headline of August 4.

    Since 1999, that would appear the first time a newspaper would report a seeming headlong clash between the military and any democratic institution.

    After coming a sad cropper under Sani Abacha, necessitating a scramble back to the barracks, the Nigerian military had worn its “submission to civil authorities” like a cloak of garish colours — and just as well.

    From the coup hero, interventionist swagger, that ended the 1st Republic, it had staggered, through several phases, to its professional ruin.

    The early years of innocence came under Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi and Yakubu Gowon.   The mirage of the military as the messiah was raised, albeit controversially, under Murtala Mohammed.  But it was also dashed under Olusegun Obasanjo, his successor after a failed coup, who birthed the Shehu Shagari civilian interregnum.

    Muhammadu Buhari, with Babatunde Idiagbon, boasted the franchise of the military as harsh dictatorship, without the civil pretences of the years of innocence, epitomized by Gen. Gowon.

    But the first steps to eternal disgrace would come during the wayward power years of Ibrahim Babangida, when a hitherto collective junta morphed into a lone, reckless risk taker.

    That, of course, would fire the final institutional burial, in the grave of politics and misgovernment, under the stark Abacha.

    But Abdulsalami Abubakar, the last of the military rulers, would play the army tortoise, leading the soldiers back to the barracks, but not before they had earned utter disgrace!

    Still, the army, at the return to democracy, would endure more institutional buffeting — and rightly so — with elected President Obasanjo purging it of the so-called “political soldiers”.

    Though that entailed severe institutional blood-letting, it was widely acclaimed in the polity — imperative to keep the military re-focused to its core defence duty, from the fatal distraction of politics.

    So, if the military always trumpeted its “subordination to civil authorities”, as imposed by the Constitution, it knew where it was coming from.

    Not so, Peter Ayodele Fayose, second-term Ekiti governor who, with his indecorous conduct, would pass as Nigeria’s most indelicate governor.

    Ironically, the crude Fayose is a creation of Obasanjo’s sweet-and-sour public persona, just as the “civil” military, as constituted today.

    Obasanjo purged the military of political soldiers.  But he also inspired the rise of Fayose, with his PDP’s garrison-like take-over of the South West in 2003, after drawing electoral blanks in 1999.

    Indeed, the earliest manifestation of Fayose, as the most virulent strain of gubernatorial unreason that Nigeria ever knew, started when he put second-term Lagos governor, Bola Tinubu, with other esteemed guests, under virtual house arrest.

    That was in the Iyin Ekiti country of home of the late Gen. Adeyinka Adebayo.  Tinubu and co were there for a social event.  It was 2003.

    That was clear outlawry.   A sitting governor, by the 1999 Constitution, is free from arrest or any form of restriction.  Yet, because it was against the opposition, the Obasanjo presidency, which controlled lawful coercion, looked elsewhere.

    Today however, Fayose, Obasanjo’s Frankenstein, anti-opposition monster of yore, is busy pouncing on and running his mouth on the old man.  Indeed, what goes around comes around!

    Though Fayose exited in a blaze of odium in his first coming (2003-2006), he has, in his second coming, broken every basic etiquette of polite society; driving his high office to the sewers.

    His morbid electioneering newspaper advert, predicted the “death” in office, of the then APC presidential candidate Buhari, should he win; simply because President Umaru Yar’Adua died in office, and the trio of Abacha, Murtala and Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa, all northern leaders, also did.  That was well and truly shocking.

    In his high morbid fever, though, he conveniently forgot President Shehu Shagari, from the same political geography, didn’t only survive his tenure, he is today alive and well.

    Still, if Fayose’s sewer manners could be excused by his crude verbal spits, it was even more shocking that news media that claim to be epitome of decency, for whatever windfall, could stain their front pages with such lunacy.

    Now Fayose, with Femi Fani-Kayode, are caught in their own warp of malice, on the Buhari health question.  The more they pine, to fulfil an evil prophesy, the more the Almighty Himself appears to decree they labour in vain.  Problem is, they seem too consumed by hate to listen!

    It is this penchant to bristle and bustle; and yammer whatever absurdity off the subconscious, that has pushed Fayose to his latest, if needless, military controversy.

    Though not many appear to notice it now, that flippancy has ruptured the delicate protocol between the civil authorities and the military; prompting the military to tell Fayose to go smash his head against the Olosunta rock in Ikere-Ekiti, instead of dabbling into defence matters he knew nothing about.

    “Governor Ayodele Fayose should stop politicizing the military and military op(eration)s; seek other avenues for your relevance,” the army riposted in a brutal putdown.  That portrayed the governor as an idle busybody.

    That the army, which should be seen and seldom be heard in a democracy, should treat a governor with such contempt, should normally alarm anyone.

    But no one appears alarmed in Fayose’s case.  That is indicative of how low he has crashed his high office.

    In his usual garrulous manner, Fayose had alleged, mimicking Transparency International (TI), widespread corruption in the anti-corruption war.

    “The fight against Boko Haram,” Fayose claimed by a release by Lere Olayinka, his media factotum, “has become a cash cow for some top military officers and corrupt politicians in the Buhari government, with the creation of fake defence contracts and laundering the proceeds abroad in the UK, US and elsewhere.”

    But the snag is the TI charge is so open-ended you couldn’t say it was referring to the present, or the Jonathan military command!  Besides, must an elected governor run his mouth over hazy defence matters?

    Sadly, indecorum ruptures the order of things faster that most would admit.  When the Murtala regime barked “with immediate effect”, it elicited thunderous cheers.  But that military impunity, creeping then, but entrenched before long, not only ruined the military themselves, but also smashed state institutions.

    A military-elected governor confrontation, which the flippant Fayose has sparked, cannot be good for our democracy.  Indeed, it is a dangerous call, which should alarm everyone.

    That is why Fayose must cease blighting his high office, while the military too should resist any provocation to play in the Fayose sewers.

    Nigerians should honour and respect the military for their supreme chore to die, so the rest of us can live.  But the military too should live by the democratic code of total subordination to civil authority.

     

  • I will declare my presidential ambition October 1 – Fayose

    I will declare my presidential ambition October 1 – Fayose

    Kashamu barred from PDP

    Ekiti State Governor, Ayo Fayose, said on Monday he would declare his 2019 presidential ambition on October 1.

    The governor stated this during the meeting of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) South West leaders held in Ibadan, Oyo State.

    He said: “It is my right to be President of Nigeria as a citizen of this country. I am educated and I have experience in politics. I am vast in public administration. The people want me. I will vie for the presidency under whatever circumstance. I will contest and I will prioritize the interest of the people.

    “In fact, I will declare my ambition for the office of the President on October 1.

    “We voted for APC and Muhammadu Buhari to give us good governance. They failed to give us good governance. So we will drive them out of power. The people want a person that will give them good governance. The people want comfort. Nigerians are hungry and are suffering and they don’t want to suffer again. We have to send them packing come 2019.”

    He also expressed dismay at the Federal Government’s refusal allow him visit President Buhari in London, saying “the ruling party knew that he would come back to tell Nigerians the true state of the President’s health.”

    Meanwhile, PDP leaders and stakeholders in South West have stopped all associations with Senator Buruji Kashamu.

    Kashamu represents Ogun East Senatorial District.

    He is also the former Chairman, National Mobilization Committee of the party.

    The PDP southwest leaders said they have cut ties with the senator.

    They also directed the leadership of the party in Ogun State to stop all dealings and meetings with Kashamu and his agents until further notice.

    The meeting, which took place at the Civic Centre in Ibadan, was attended by PDP leaders in Oyo, Osun, Ogun, Ondo, Ekiti and Lagos.

    Those in attendance were – former Deputy National Chairman, South, Chief Bode George; former governor of Ogun State, Otunba Gbenga Daniel; former deputy governor of Osun State, Sen. Iyiola Omisore; Dr. Saka Balogun; Sen. Olufemi Lanlehin; Elder Wole Oyelese, a former Southwest Zonal Chairman, Alh. Tajudeen Oladipo and Fayose.

    Others were – former Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan, Sen. Hosea Agboola, Sen. Ayo Adeseun, Barr. Lowo Obisesan, Babatunde Oduyoye, Lekan Opadokun and Engr. Femi Babalola.

    The leaders, who condemned Kashamu’s anti-party activities, also called for disciplinary actions against him for his roles in the party’s defeat in Ogun, Ondo and Edo States.

    The Zonal Chairman, Dr. Eddy Olafeso, expressed joy at the Supreme Court’s verdict which confirmed Ahmed Markafi as authentic leader of the PDP, assuring that the party’s strength was back in the region.

    He commended PDP leaders in the region for their support.

    Fayose, who also spoke on the issue, said the party would win elections soon.

    He stated: “All people that are destabilizing the peace in PDP, we must sanction them. Nobody is greater that this party. If you call yourself a leader and you are waging war against it, definitely you are an enemy of the party.

    “So, our meeting resolved that we don’t want him again in our party. We are not ready to have anything to do with him again. We have directed all the states to stay clear from him.”

  • Understanding Fayose’s Obsession With The Military

    Even primary school pupils in Nigeria tease themselves with the name of the Governor of Ekiti state, Mr. Ayodele Fayose, as a dippy, brainless soul, whose heart is unrepentantly steeped in evil. In Ekiti state where a rigged election conferred on him the noble task of state leadership, he administers a democratic state like a tyrant or dictator.

    His cursed tongue spares nobody with the senseless verbal offensives. Fayose, the shoemaker cum politician, also claims he is a pastor, but commandeers the power of God Almighty over life and death, by insanely predicting the death of President Muhammadu Buhari. His professed religiosity of the criminal ilk, hardly place him on a pedestal to discern good from evil.

    Same emergency jurist invites thugs to invade courts, the temple of justice; he arms thugs to protect suspected criminal elements to evade justice like former Aviation minister Femi Fani Kayode (FFK) or his wife, or Apostle Johnson Suleiman of Omega Ministries Inc.

    Only acquiescent to violence, he would tyrannically storm the Ekiti State House of Assembly and chase lawmakers into exile. He cannot pay Ekiti civil servants despite monthly federal allocations to the state and three tranches of bailout funds from the Presidency amounting to billions of naira. While Ekiti state is steadily ebbing towards extinction on the development among Southwestern states, Fayose’s indices of personal growth and development have kept appreciating to the skies.

    Like his boss, former President Goodluck Jonathan, corruption is mere stealing, so the Governor has neither conscience nor limit to embezzlement of public funds. That’s why he dipped his hands into the $2.1 billion Arms Procurement Fund, which is scandalously referred to as the Dasukigate.

    Fayose hates any decent conduct or Nigerian, but infinitely loves crooks and roguery. That’s why even in the Dasukigate arms procurement scandal, Mr. Musliu Obanikoro was his ally and comrade in thievery. But the poor soul has confessed to sins and is returning his loot, while seeking the face of God in penitence. But such decency is not part of the religious, parental or leadership orientation of Governor Fayose.

    As a Pastor, he has murderous instincts that run riot like a hungry lion which breaks loose from its cage. Only God Almighty has the accurate statistics of Ekiti state civil servants who have died silently from the fangs of hunger because the Governor embezzled their salary.

    No one can disclose the number of Nigerians Fayose murdered in cold blood through Boko Haram insurgents by diverting and embezzling funds voted to procure arms to battle insurgency in the Northeast. No data still, on the number of Ekiti people he used a compromising military to murder in the last guber ballot that dashed him “victory.” A man in his dilemma would certainly be tormented by the spirit of the innocent dead.

    To comment on the weird and extremely inhuman aberrations of Fayose is like wasting precious time. But sometimes, it becomes imperious because he is a man trapped by hallucinatory prophesies. He is constantly in trance and dreams “really big dreams.” Not too long ago, he bemused Nigerians again by mouthing a prophesy to the effect that God has revealed of crowning him President of Nigeria in 2019.

    But Nigeria is not a country in devils kingdom and his ardent acolytes like Fayose have no chance to rule it. Imagine, Fayose as President of Nigeria! God Almighty does not hate Nigerians to the extent of enthroning a debauch and devil like Fayose as the leader of Nigeria. And readers’ comments that followed the story indicated the extent Fayose is isolated even by members of his own family. One simply said “God forbid.”

    Surely, Governor Fayose knows that his political sunset is lurking in the corner, as Ekiti people are warming up for the governorship polls in 2018. Fayose knows even the devil he worships garbed with the garments of a Pastor would not save him from the rage of Ekiti people in closing his political chapter. He is truly the devil’s incarnate who has devoted his energies and time to prove these past years. Little surprise former President Obasanjo chased him out of Government House.

    Frightened by this inevitable possibility, Fayose is stiff scared, like a little child cast in the den of lions. If Fayose lost his mind before, he has now buried his heart completely, with just months to the termination of his political journey. He has intensified his odious attacks on personalities and institutions like a dog in the early stage of madness.

    Fayose’s latest victim is the present leadership of the Nigerian military. Fayose dared opened his fouled mouth to cast aspersions on the Nigerian military which is battling the counter-insurgency war. Nigerians do not need an empty head like Fayose to tell them whether Boko Haram insurgency has been defeated or degraded. Referencing corruption in the present military leadership by a character like Fayose is the most amusing angle to it. May Fayose be counseled to begin to cultivate peace for his soul by returning the billions he allegedly looted from the Dasukigate meant for procurement of arms for insurgency in the Northeast.

    To make reference to Transparency International (TI) report on corruption in defence procurement contracts illustrates the extent Governor Fayose is uninformed and shamefully and poorly exposed, even to information in public domain. TI’s Nigeria’s Country Representative in Nigeria, Mr. Auwal Rafsanjani refuted the report from his organization and lucidly stated that the fraudulent defence contracts were under the regime of Fayose unpopular boss, former President Jonathan. And Rafsanjani regretted the error in time placement of the report. This was done on a live television program and the records are there for a Fayose who talks before thinking to peruse maybe sometimes in prison after his tenure.

    Therefore, to twist the facts today only demonstrates Fayose’s incurable madness and ignorance. Facts are sacred, but lies are retold several times without impact. What Fayose cannot twist is that the current military leadership has not awarded arms contracts to political chieftains of his opposition political party, the PDP and the Christian Association of Nigeria’s (CAN) President.

    In the past, CAN leadership airlifted dollars out of the country in the guise of buying arms, but ended up purchasing repainted or refurbished arms at Wuse market in Abuja to fight Boko Haram. Bulk of the money developed wings. If Fayose’s retentive memory is this poor, it is these clan of defence procurement contractors, the Transparency International report alluded as clarified by Rafsanjani.
    However, Fayose’s baseless vituperations on the Nigerian military is understandable because he sees in them decent and professional soldiers not susceptible to his dubious influence to rig him back to power next year. Fayose dreads a military leadership that would not assist him and his clan of politicians to snatch ballot boxes like what happened in the last governorship elections that gave the polluted and regrettably victory to him as Governor of Ekiti state.

    Now sitting on a throne not designed for him, Fayose is equally confused as all doors have closed against him. This is no doubt a haunting reality as Fayose who brags as a “General” in the act of election- rigging, which earned him the title of “Generalismo of Ekiti” politics is in serious trouble.

    But the chips are down for Tyrant Fayose, as there is no hiding place for him. His abhorring failure to deliver on his campaign promises to Ekiti is giving him sleepless nights. But it’s too late in the day to make amends, having wasted productive years, chasing shadows, perfecting the mastery of the art of abuses and looting or embezzlement of public funds.

    His phobia on the exposure of his sins after the expiration of his wasted tenure is a pain in the neck. He should start thinking of his journey to the jungle to preside over wild animals, that is self-exile or be prepared to cool his heels in a jail somewhere.

    Fayose is a potential candidate for jail, once he is stripped of immunity. Nonetheless, the Governor has a chance to negotiate his soft landing by at least, redeeming himself in one area that is too glaring. So, as the Ekiti state dictator prepares to face another governorship election in the state, he should endeavor to return Ekiti state’s monies he allegedly looted and pay Ekiti workers their months of owed salaries and entitlements. With this done, at least, Ekiti people would not place a curse on his soul in addition to sending him to the political doom.

    Okanga writes from Agila, Benue State.‎

  • Fayose seeks partnership to boost healthcare

    Fayose seeks partnership to boost healthcare

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose yesterday called on corporate bodies and well meaning individuals country to support his administration’s efforts at providing quality health care services for his people.

    Fayose spoke in Ado-Ekiti at the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital, where a telecommunications company, MTN, provided surgery and glasses for people with sight problems and other challenges.

    The governor said his administration had taken steps to uplift healthcare services.

    He said his efforts led to the accreditation of courses at the College of Medicine, then School of Nursing, among others.

    “When we came on board, we took steps to get programmes in the College of Medicine and the School of Nursing accredited as we know the importance of producing quality doctors and nurses,

    “The School of Nursing recorded 100 per cent success in its final examinations. We have also given out glasses to people and embarked on free health schemes across our rural area.

    “Health is wealth and we are ready to take it to a higher level in the state,” he said.

    The governor commended leader of the team, Prince Julius Adelusi-Adeluyi, for considering the state.

    Adelusi-Adeluyi, a pharmacist and one-time secretary of Health, in Chief Earnest Shonekan’s Interim Government, described Fayose as an unusual governor.

    He said though Fayose was also known for doing unusual things, he helped to take the state to greater heights.

  • OBJ, Fayose and  the Libyan idol

    OBJ, Fayose and the Libyan idol

    A humour bag of arguably inexhaustible depth, former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, would make even the most consummate stand-up comic feel inadequate on a good day. From improvising the risqué to trafficking the folksy, his creativity, as he himself once famously put it in one such fit of self-deprecating humour, is fed by a certain native resourcefulness, being “Omo ma lo le gbesi” (scion of he who is prodigiously adroit at tackling single-handed any public loud-mouth without help from home). “Wait and get”, for short.

    The reason it is therefore rather surprising, if not troubling, that the witty general has kept a studied silence to the avalanche of weighty revelations by Ayo Fayose, the feisty Ekiti governor, in the current edition of wave-making The Interview. Since release last Thursday, Fayose’s wide-ranging expose on his one-time political godfather has been widely reproduced by all leading national dailies with massive rebroadcast in the social media.

    At this writing, five uneasy days had passed without as much as a whimper from Ota. More and more, the ensuing silence conveys an eloquence not even a thousand words can possibly describe.

    Whatever happened to the fabled facility of “Wait and get”?

    Hell hath no fury than a woman scorned, Shakespeare tells us.

    Now, with Fayose, we now know no venom is as lethal as an estranged godson on rampage. For all his unalloyed loyalty and submission to be used for dirty jobs, he regrets Obasanjo eventually betrayed him by orchestrating his kangaroo impeachment in October 2006.

    Of course as a former OBJ enforcer, the “Oshoko” of Ekiti was an insider. What seems to complicate matters is that he did not just squeal; he named living witnesses in the series of infamies OBJ perpetrated as Nigeria’s civilian emperor, particularly between 2004 and 2006.

    The revelations surely stink. The image of Obasanjo revealed is pathetic indeed. They include how public funds were used to bribe lawmakers to support Third Term Agenda which OBJ has in the last decade fought tooth and nail to deny. Going down memory lane, for instance, Fayose recalled that the day the bill was shot down at the National Assembly, OBJ dozed off in bitterness as they rode together from Akure airport to Ado Ekiti. Midway, he recalled, OBJ jerked up from slumber, muttering, “Ah, (Ken) Nnamani (then Senate president) will not leave in one piece”.

    We are also told how Umar Yar’Adua initially refused to accept being drafted as PDP’s presidential candidate on the ground that his health was too fragile to withstand the rigour of presidential office. But OBJ, according to Fayose, insisted on foisting him on the nation in the cold calculation that infirmity would pre-dispose the Katsina political prince to being manipulated while the Ota farmer continued as Nigeria’s de facto monarch.

    Again, at this writing, none of the political actors Fayose “implicated” in the plot that drafted Yar’Adua including Senate President Bukola Saraki and Senator Goje has denied.

    Perhaps the most jaw-dropping of all Fayose’s revelations is the claim that OBJ physically knelt down before Libyan strongman, Moummar Ghaddafi (presumably in January 2006) with a view to enlisting his support for the extension of his chairmanship of African Union.

    Again, to be sure, Fayose named then Attorney General (Bayo Ojo, SAN) as part of the secret mission to Tripoli.

    His recall of the comportment of a kneeling and “desperate” OBJ before Ghadaffi after being frisked thoroughly at four gates in a most un-dignifying manner should fill any self-respecting Nigerian with shame: “It was such a pathetic scenario, so shameful. Obasanjo was speaking rapidly like a parrot… I never knew Obasanjo (could) be that humble. He was on one knee till the end of the conversation.”

    Put together, the picture Fayose painted is inconsistent with OBJ’s holier-than-thou posturing over the years, this affectation of statesmanship and sagacity.

    Good enough, according to reports, the general is already pre-scheduled to, this Sunday (August 6), mount the podium at Archbishop Vining Memorial Church Cathedral, Ikeja, Lagos to deliver a lecture entitled: “God in my life”.

    Without taking anything away from the message he might wish to communicate, it would certainly be therapeutic for an apprehensive nation if OBJ first came clean that day on what really transpired in Libya. In case he confirms visiting Ghadaffi, then the other critical question: did he actually bow before the Libyan idol?

    To begin with, from the cultural perspective, I can almost bet many would be heart-broken in Yoruba land at the suggestion at all that OBJ, whose estimated birthday is March 5, 1938, would openly kneel before younger Ghaddafi born in 1942. Again, Libya is a tiny country with a population of less than 7 million compared to Nigeria’s 180m!

    So, this is one grave allegation OBJ cannot just wish away.

    Otherwise, the nation will collapse under the shame. Russia’s literary immortal, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, once attempted to speak to that sinking condition. One of the telltales signs exhibited by a declining society, according to the late Nobel laureate, is the scarcity of true statesmen.

    Philosopher Khalil Gibran put it more starkly with this lamentation: pity the nation whose heroes or statesmen are either impostors or conmen.

     

    Ochinawata @ 60: The untold stories

    It was a big surprise the poor widow least anticipated. Since the sudden passing of her loving husband, the celebrated journalist/columnist, there was one reality Madam Pini Jason had no doubt come to accept: the elasticity of man’s care and the fickleness of solidarity when the chips are down. As she must have observed from the diminishing number of her late husband’s friends still standing by the family as time began to roll by.

    Her highly respected journalist husband died in 2013 of complications arising from a surgery. But not a few associates would attest that, even before then, he never really fully recovered from the shock from a bitter experience in 2011.

    So, Madam Jason’s emotions could then be imagined last year at the third memorial of her husband having his former boss, Chief Ikedi Ohakim, among the few of her late husband’s closest associates that showed up at the family compound in Mbaise, Imo State.

    At the end of the modest ceremony, the immediate past Imo governor came over and slipped something into her hand: key to a brand new car!

    For the widow, the significance of the car gift could not have been lost. It obviously counted more not because of the promise of comfort to her family, but the comforting feeling that someone still remembered the dependants Pini left behind. Surely, greater is he who kept our back when we are no longer in a position to repay than he who abides showily in our presence.

    By that gesture, Ohakim only acted true to his character: fierce loyalty to friendship.

    I knew him long before he became governor in 2007. His attitude towards me never changed throughout his four years at Douglas House. We grew even closer after he left office in 2011.

    Four other qualities, in my view, define the quintessential Ohakim: community spirit, love of ideas, courage of conviction and grace under duress.

    He was barely 25 years old when he helped a cluster of communities in his native Mbano in Okigwe broker lasting peace after decades of bitter conflict. For that, the clan elders came together and decorated him as the “Ochinawata” (the boy king).

    Politically, his defining moment would be PDP governorship primaries of January 2007 when moneybags took over the arena. Unwilling – well, maybe unable – to match others cash for cash, Ohakim sensationally announced his withdrawal from the race and then resignation from PDP in protest. He decamped to PPA. As a parting shot, he left a scalding statement: by selling the party ticket to the highest bidder, party leaders were setting Imo PDP on the irreversible path to perdiction.

    That turned out quite prophetic barely three months afterward. Before the election, the moneybags had only succeeded in cancelling each other out in an orgy of legal warfare, eventuating in the national leadership controversially announcing withdrawal from the governorship polls in Imo altogether.

    So, Ohakim became the “consensus candidate”. The stone the builders had rejected became the cornerstone.

    With his instinctive taste for politics of ideas, little wonder that Ohakim was soon able to assembly a team dominated by professionals to drive his vision for Imo among whom were Pini Jason and Dr. Ethebelt Okere saddled with the task of framing and driving his public communication.

    Like every mortal, Ohakim no doubt made his own mistakes and stacked up powerful enemies along the way. But one thing even his most implacable political foes cannot deny was his passion to make Imo better. It is perhaps a measure of his tenacity that Owerri was adjudged the “cleanest city in Nigeria” by the Federal Ministry of Environment within eighteen months that Ohakim’s bold “Clean & Green Initiative” was floated.

    A city once defined by filth and foul smell transformed overnight.

    The ultimate test of the strength of Ohakim’s character however came in the heat of the gritty battle for Imo’s political soul in April 2011. As the collation of results of the April 26 polls peaked, a tie began to crystalize. But that of critical Ohaji-Egbema was still being expected. Ohakim’s Situation Room remained confident, buoyed by the figures already telegraphed by their field agents there.

    Suddenly, the magic began. The returning officer bearing the tally indicating wide-margin victory for Ohakim was waylaid few streets to the collation center by some gunmen and whisked to a popular hotel in Onitsha, Anambra State.

    Sensing a plot to deny them victory, the hardliners in Ohakim’s camp pushed for war, unwilling to go down without a fight, counting on the power of incumbency and “federal might” as a PDP state. But, faced with possible loss of his crown, “Ochinawata” never lost his character. He considered it beneath him to sanction his supporters to go out on streets and engage Okorocha’s “forces” (euphemism for the battalions of rough necks) imported into Imo. He could not understand the desperation for power if the real intention was service.

    Eventually, he lost the polls, but not his values.

    “Ochinawata” turns 60 Friday, August 4. Happy birthday in advance to my big brother, my friend.

  • Ojudu to Fayose: stop playing God on Buhari’s health

    Ojudu to Fayose: stop playing God on Buhari’s health

    Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Babafemi Ojudu, has advised Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose to key into empowerment programmes of the Federal Government to better the lot of his people.

    Ojudu warned Fayose to stop playing God on the health of President Muhammadu Buhari “through doomsday predictions that the nation’s No. 1 citizen will die and unfounded allegation that he is on a life support machine.”

    The presidential aide said the All Progressives Congress (APC) would return to power in 2018, to give good governance.

    Ojudu who addressed reporters during a media breakfast in his Ado-Ekiti residence on Sunday, identified such empowerment programmes as School Feeding Programme, Rice Outgrowers Scheme, Cocoa Farm Renewal Scheme, Emergency Relief Fund, among others, which other states enjoy.

    He claimed Fayose has not shown interest in the schemes, which will benefit Ekiti residents, but rather turned himself into an “opposition leader.”

    The presidential adviser noted that Fayose is embarrassing his people by mocking Buhari’s health challenges, warning him to “stop playing God on the President’s health.”

    Ojudu said: “A governor is supposed to govern and provide good governance for the people who elected him and not to be wishing the President dead. It is not the duty of a governor to be telling Nigerians the President will soon die, that he is on life support.

    “If the governor (Fayose) wishes the President dead, it is not reasonable; when the governor abuses the President everyday, that is not the way we are brought up in Yoruba land where we always wish a sick person quick recovery.

    “Why will somebody arrogate the power of God to himself? Nobody knows who will die tomorrow and why do our governor always wish the President dead? Are you his doctor, are you his God? Why will somebody arrogate God’s power to himself, that individual is not a normal human being and that is insanity.”

    Ojudu stressed that Buhari has been transparent on his health, and transmits power to the Vice President anytime he travels on medical vacation, a scenario different from the late President Umaru Yar’Adua’s administration.

  • Ekiti 2018: Fayose grooms ex-commissioner as successor

    Ekiti 2018: Fayose grooms ex-commissioner as successor

    Indications have emerged that Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose is grooming former Commissioner for Works and Transport, Kayode Oso, to take over when his tenure expires on October 15, 2018.

    Oso, an indigene of Ado-Ekiti, served as Fayose’s Chief of Staff and later Commissioner for Works and Transport during his first tenure, which ended abruptly with impeachment on October 16, 2006.

    He narrowly escaped arrest while following his boss for an overseas trip at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos in July 2006 when the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) arrested some aides of the governor for alleged N1.4 billion poultry scam at the time.

    After Fayose’s dramatic comeback to power on October 16 2014, Oso was reappointed Commissioner for Works and Transport but quit on April 6, 2016 under controversial circumstances.

    The administration claimed Oso resigned on “health grounds” while Oso travelled to London shortly before returning towards the end of the year.

    The ex-commissioner holds chairmanship of key committees coordinating many activities in the Ado-Ekiti Government House.

    One of the committees holds regular interface with interest

    groups like artisans, labour unions, market women, students, youths and ethnic nationalities, serving as Fayose’s contact person.

    Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) governorship aspirants include former Minister of State for Works and spokesperson of the National Caretaker Committee, Prince Dayo Adeyeye; former High Commissioner to Canada, Chief Dare Bejide, and former Deputy Governor, Chief Abiodun Aluko.

    They declined to drop their ambition for Fayose or his protégé.

     

  • Paris Club refund for workers’  welfare, says Fayose

    Paris Club refund for workers’ welfare, says Fayose

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose has said his administration decided to commit the state’s share of the Paris Club refund for workers’ salaries and emoluments because of his belief in giving priority to the people’s welfare.

    Fayose, who spoke yesterday in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, at a meeting with labour leaders and other stakeholders, said workers and other categories of residents deserved the best and that he was ready to give them.

    The governor noted that though the N4.7 billion to the state and the 16 local government areas fell short of expectations, his colleagues were hopeful that the Federal Government would pay the balance of the refund soon.

    He said: “I was the first to announce the receipt of the money. After consulting with union leaders, it was agreed that a bigger house be called. At the end of the day, we got N4.7 billion and the state is to get N2.9 billion and the 16 local government areas to share N1.8 billion.

    “In the first refund, we got N8.8 billion, which was shared with the state getting N5.4 billion and the local governments getting N3.4 billion.

    “I know the agitation by teachers, especially at primary school level. But the reality is that we just have to make do with what we have and hope for the best. Allocations coming to local government areas are handled by members of Joint Allocation and Appropriation Committee, of which I am not a member.

    “All observations about how to disburse the money are to be directed to members of the committee; they will decide on the areas of priority. We are going to give members of the committees at state and local government levels some time to deliberate and come back on how to disburse the funds.”

    Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) President Bummi Ajimoko said he was happy that the governor was carrying along labour leaders on how to utilise the money.