Tag: Fayose

  • Knocks for Fayose over China ‘letter’

    Knocks for Fayose over China ‘letter’

    •Odigie-Oyegun, lawyers, others slam governor

    There were more knocks yesterday for Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose  over his “protest” letter to Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    President Muhammadu Buhari last week visited the People’s Republic of China.

    He negotiated a loan and a currency swap deal with the Chinese as part of efforts to revive the economy.

    On April 12, Fayose travelled to China to urge the authorities to refuse the facility being requested by the Federal Government.

    He said “all Nigerians, irrespective of their political and religious affiliations are against any applications for new foreign loans”.

    This, the governor said, was on the grounds that servicing the current debt burden costs over 25 per cent of the country’s annual budget.

    All Progressives Congress National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun berated Fayose for his criticism.

    He noted that the President won the election based on his personal credentials, coupled with international recognition and respect.

    Odigie-Oyegun, who spoke in Benin City, the Edo State capital, said the country was being confronted by retrogressive forces and economic saboteurs.

    His words: “I hope Fayose did not really do what we were told he did. I don’t think he is capable of descending into this low depth but if he did I feel sorry for him.

    “Nigerians should ask him what he was doing in China. Anyway, we are not bothered, the President is not bothered.

    ‘’Most people do not recognise the  economy’s sorry state and the fact that it was run aground.

    “This contributed in no small measure towards the crash of crude oil from N120 per barrel to a miserable N30 to N40 per barrel in the international market.

    “Is there anyone who cannot recognise the fact that Nigeria has almost become a paralysed state?

    “We do not have respect all over the world and the reality is that every sector was grounded but APC won the election based on Buhari’s personal credibility.”

    Odigie-Oyegun  went on: “In a situation where the world has become a global village, the President has taken his prestige and time around the world to polish our image.

    “The countries he has visited are critical to peace in Nigeria or to our economic speedy revival.

    “The truth is that Mr. President is getting the world to respect and know the new Nigeria and to be ready to help to revive the economy.

    ‘’ Everything he has done, including the foreign tours, is to gather all the support that is necessary to make a dramatic impact on the condition of Nigeria as quickly as possible.’’

    Chairmen of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Lagos State and other lawyers also condemned the governor’s action.

    A former Chairman of Ikeja Branch,Onyekachi Ubani, described the letter as of no consequence, since negotiations had  been concluded.

    “The letter is similar to a situation of bringing a motion for a court injunction for a completed act.

    “This letter is a mere irritation, especially coming from a governor.

    “ I will urge Nigerians to regard his letter as nothing, but a mere irritation.

    The Ikeja Branch Chairman , Yinka Farobi, described the letter as “over stepping of one’s boundaries”.

    “Fayose was elected  governor and not as president.

    “His letter is clearly out of the purview of his powers and I seriously condemn it,” he said.

    The Ikorodu Branch Chairman, Dotun Adetunji, described the letter as a show of rascality.

    He noted that although “there is a provision for immunity for a sitting governor, there must also be a limit on the activities of a leader”.

    “There are 36 states and of these, only one governor has the courage to write to a foreign authority.

    “In my mind, such action is really reprehensible and should be discouraged.”

    A lawyer, Spurgeon Ataene, said: “If the loan being sought by the Federal Government is to revamp the  economy, then we should not have a problem with that.

    “The only thing we should demand from the government is that the loan should be used for the purpose for which it was obtained in the first place.

    “To that extent, all Nigerians must be watchdogs and at all times demand that the benefit of the loan must trickle down to the masses.”

    Another lawyer, Ola Ogunbiyi, said Fayose’s action fell short of the status of his exalted office.

    “Fayose is a `security risk’ working against national interest. I think he has too much freedom and should be cautioned.”

    A former APC senatorial candidate for Edo Central District, Dr. Francis Inegbeniki, said the governor’s latest stunt has given him out as someone in need of medical attention.

    Inegbeniki said it was very important for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)  leadership to call Fayose to order as his actions and statements are embarrassing the country.

    “In Nigeria, we have one President, therefore it is an insult for a non-performing and lazy governor like Fayose to have written such a letter.  Only a rebel does that to his country,” he said.

  • Fayose seeks stoppage of $2b loan to Nigeria by China

    Fayose seeks stoppage of $2b loan to Nigeria by China

    Can a state governor stop a foreign country from granting a loan to his home country?

    This is the latest drama playing out in Ekiti State where Governor Ayo Fayose has written to the Chinese Government seeking the stoppage of the $2 billion loan being sought by the Federal Government.

    President Buhari’s visit to China this week was to discuss the development of the country’s infrastructure, including a $2 billion loan for railway projects.

    But Fayose said in his letter to President Xi Jinping of China: “The government of China should be mindful of the fact that Nigerians, irrespective of their political and religious affiliations, are totally opposed to increment of the country’s debt burden, which is being serviced with 25 per cent of the Federal Government annual budget.”

    In the letter dated April 12, with reference number: EK/GOV/28/10, addressed to President Jinping and delivered by Fayose’s Chief of Staff, Dipo Anisulowo, in Abuja yesterday, through the Chinese Ambassador to Nigeria, Gu Xiaojie, the governor alleged that some of the projects for which the loan was being sought were not captured in the controversial 2016 budget, which has been sent to President Buhari by the National Assembly for his assent.

    Anisulowo, who was accompanied by House of Assembly members, said Fayose, who is in China, will also deliver a copy of the letter directly to the Chinese President.

    The letter reads: “I write as one of the major stakeholders in the project Nigeria, and a governor of one of the federating units making up Nigeria, to draw your attention to report that the Federal Government is on the verge of obtaining a $2 billion loan from the Export-Import Bank of China.

    “This $2 billion loan is part of the N1.84 trillion the Federal Government has proposed to borrow to finance the 2016 budget, which is yet to be signed by President Muhammadu Buhari, owing to unending controversies between the Executive and Legislative arms of government.

    “According to reports, Nigeria desires to raise about $5 billion abroad to cover part of its 2016 budget deficit. This is projected to hit N3 trillion ($15 billion) due to heavy infrastructure spending at a time when the slump in global oil prices has slashed the country’s export revenues.

    “While conceding that all nations, especially developing ones, need support to be able to grow because no nation is an island, I am constrained to inform you that if the future of Nigeria must be protected, the country does not need any loan at this time.

    “The government of China should be mindful of the fact that Nigerians, irrespective of their political and religious affiliations, are totally opposed to increment of the country’s debt burden, which is already being serviced with 25 per cent of the Federal Government annual budget.

    “It will interest the government of China to know that some of the projects for which the loan is being sought are not captured in the controversial 2016 budget, which has been sent to the President by the National Assembly for his assent.

    “For instance, the Lagos –Calabar Rail project was not included in the budget proposal the President presented to the National Assembly and it was not included in the Appropriation Bill passed by the Na

  • Fayose in China to shop for investors

    Fayose in China to shop for investors

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose is in China to attract investment to the “Fountain of Knowledge.”

    Fayose is in the city of Guangzhou where he is billed to attend the 119th China Import and Export Fair, otherwise known as the Canton Fair, holding from April 14 to 19.

    A statement yesterday from the Governor’s Office said the governor is in China as part of efforts to boost agriculture and improve technological expertise of artisans in Ekiti.

    The trip to China is also aimed at seeking partnership with prospective Chinese investors and technical experts without committing the state to any loan.

    Fayose is expected to hold talks with prospective investors in mechanised farming, experts in skill acquisition, particularly training in the area of perfect finishing in building construction as well as experts in auto-repair modern technologies.

    The Canton Fair, which debuted in 1957, is held biannually in Guangzhou every spring and autumn,  attracts various types of business activities, such as economic and technical cooperations and exchanges.

    The governor will also take advantage of the Canton Fair to hold talks with technical experts on training and technological exchange programmes for artisans in the state as part of his plan to get technical support for the proposed artisan village to be built in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital.

  • APC slams Fayose’s opposition  to electoral crimes  tribunal

    APC slams Fayose’s opposition to electoral crimes tribunal

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has slammed Governor Ayo Fayose for his opposition to the establishment of Electoral Crimes Tribunal to punish individuals, who participate in violence and electoral malpractices.

    Last week,  the governor criticised the proposal by the Independent National Election Commission (INEC) to establish election crimes tribunal to try individuals involved in fraudulent practices and violence during elections.

    INEC’s call followed cases of violence resulting in killings during elections, saying that the establishment of election crimes court would curb the trend.

    Fayose objected to the proposal, saying that it was a ploy by the Federal Government to appoint cronies into such courts to manipulate the judges to give favourable judgment to the ruling party.

    The governor also alleged that the Federal Government would manipulate the federal institutions, such as the police, army, DSS and INEC officials to implicate members of the opposition in such election crimes courts.

    Reacting to his reported outburst, the APC said the governor was afraid of his own shadow by the way the federal institutions he listed were manipulated to help him win the June 21, 2014 governorship election.

    Olatunbosun said: “We are not surprised that Fayose is afraid of election crimes court because he knows how he emerged as the governor. He is afraid to face the court because he can never win any election without committing fraud and attacking the opposition.”

     

  • TUC boss to sue Fayose over sack

    TUC boss to sue Fayose over sack

    •Says, I was denied fair hearing

    Chairman of Trade Union Congress (TUC) in Ekiti State, Mr. Kolawole Olaiya, has vowed to challenge his compulsory retirement from Civil Service and demotion by the state government in Court.

    Olaiya, a lawyer, in a protest letter to Governor Ayo Fayose, claimed that his right to fair hearing was flagrantly breached by an Administrative Panel of Inquiry on the ‘Involvement of Public Servants in Partisan Politics’ set up by the state government.

    In the letter dated April 1 and received by the Office of the Head of Service on April 6, Olaiya revealed that he was queried over an interview he granted The Nation on September 1, 2015 on the receipt of bailout funds from the Federal Government, which was followed by a letter of strong warning before the panel passed its verdict.

    According to a copy of the protest letter exclusively obtained by The Nation, Olaiya clarified that he would not plead with the state government to rescind his demotion from Principal Grade Level 12 to the post of State Counsel Grade Level 12 and subsequent compulsory retirement on the demoted rank.

    His resolve, he says, was based on his unshaken faith in the Judiciary to reverse the action.

    Olaiya was accused by the Fayose government of allegedly participating in a Labour-organised rally to drum support for former Governor Kayode Fayemi on Saturday, June 14, 2014 at the Oluyemi Kayode Stadium, Ado Ekiti, the state capital, in the run-up to the June 21, 2014 governorship poll.

    Maintaining that such a rally was not the first of its kind, the TUC boss recalled that Labour had also held a solidarity rally for Fayose in 2003 in the heat of the certificate saga that erupted during his first stint in office.

    Condemning the alleged ill treatment of civil servants in the state that are allegedly being owed backlog of salary arrears, Olaiya expressed shock that the governor, citing the lean purse of the state as responsible for this development, has however been spending several millions of state funds to sponsor “negative and inciting publications” against President Muhammadu Buhari and the federal government.

  • Credibility crisis over Fayose/Aluko ‘reconciliation’

    Credibility crisis over Fayose/Aluko ‘reconciliation’

    The last may not have been heard on the matter between Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose and his erstwhile ally and confidant, Dr. Temitope Aluko. Nigerians were shocked to see the duo together on television on Monday, after their purported reconciliation, where the latter reportedly pleaded for forgiveness. Less than 24 hours later, Aluko recanted, saying the media appearance was stage-managed to give the impression that his disagreement with Fayose was over. Correspondent ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA examines the latest drama in the Fayose/Aluko saga and its implications. 

    Two months after he made a startling revelation about how the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) used the military to rig the June 21, 2014 governorship election that brought Governor Ayodele Fayose in for a second term in Ekiti State, Dr. Temitope Aluko shocked Nigerians with Monday’s purported reconciliation with the man he vilified, pilloried and attacked as a felon.

    Not a few Nigerians were surprised that Aluko, former Secretary of the PDP in Ekiti, could make such a 360 degree turnaround. The general feeling was one of shock and disbelief, when the news went viral on the internet that the former university lecturer had gone crawling back to Fayose. Like his earth-shaking exposé on the alleged rigging, a bemused nation received Aluko’s reported return to Fayose “under the cover of darkness” with glee and contempt.

    Aluko’s outburst live on national television had been generally regarded as the confession of a penitent heart. After carrying out some investigations, the army had retired some of its officers implicated in the sage. It was also on the strength of Aluko’s revelations that some Ekiti State Government officials, including the Commissioner for Finance, Toyin Ojo; House of Assembly member Afolabi Akanni and former Special Adviser on Revenue Matters, Ropo Ogunjobi, were arrested by the Department of State Services (DSS).

    According to sources, the infamous Ekiti election drama was facilitated by the former factional Speaker of the House of Assembly, Dele Olugbemi. Both Fayose and Aluko were said to have “settled their differences” at the posh Eko Hotel in Lagos and subsequently spoke to reporters after holding the closed-door meeting. A video recording of the Lagos reconciliation meeting made the rounds on social media on Monday, showing both Fayose and Aluko addressing reporters, with the latter saying he is back to the political family he deserted few months ago.

    But, just as the Nigerian public was beginning to digest the import of the ‘reconciliation’, Aluko, in response to a press statement attributed to Fayose’s Special Assistant on Public Communication and New Media, Lere Olayinka, made another u-turn, claiming that the so-called reconciliation was stage-managed by the Fayose camp.

    Aluko said: “I did not collect any money from Fayose, I was invited to a meeting by well-meaning Nigerians and I felt it was imperative to honour such a meeting, but I was surprised to see reporters around.

    “I did not beg Fayose. he approached me and it was out of courtesy that I honoured Ekiti leaders who wanted peace to reign in Ekiti, contrary to the lies being spread by the mouthpiece of Ekiti State Governor, Lere Olayinka, that the former scribe of Ekiti PDP, Dr. Temitope Aluko has requested for the forgiveness of Governor Ayo Fayose for his past misdeeds.

    “Dr Tope Aluko has come forward in strong terms to rubbish the hypocrisy of Lere Olayinka with his distortion of facts about the reconciliation process describing the spread of lies about his ‘repentance’ over his controversial position on Ekitigate as calculated.

    “He condemned Governor Ayo Fayose and his paid agents as cowards who only wanted sympathy through the back door describing their pranks as “the joke of the century”.

    “I knew Fayose, he is a chameleon and I also knew that he must have devised all these arrangements to further assassinate my character and that was why I was meticulous by not speaking with the Press.

    “Like I said yesterday (Monday), I won’t dignify that boy called Lere Layinka and I won’t join issues with him but the public should know that it was peace they claim they wanted and now that they have indicated their insincerity, it therefore means the battle continues until there shall be a victor and a vanquished.”

    In the statement, Olayinka said Aluko’s reconciliation with Fayose is a vindication of his (Olayinka’s) claims that the former secretary of the party has no integrity. Olayinka, who claimed he was speaking in his personal capacity and not as a spokesperson to the governor, said: “Being the person that faced Aluko on television interviews where he told all the lies that he told against Governor Fayose and the people of Ekiti State, I am constrained to make my position known on this new development.

    “Even though Governor Fayose, being someone with large heart may not be too happy that I am making this statement, but as one of the major dramatis personae in the whole saga, my conscience won’t allow me to just keep silent after all the pains and confusion caused by Aluko.

    “I did say on Channels Television that giving the right situation or after Aluko must have concluded his scamming of the APC and its gullible leaders, he will return to Governor Fayose and recant everything that he had said.

    “Today, I have been vindicated because Aluko has done just that and I wonder how he will feel when he comes face to face with the people that he has destroyed. I wonder how he will feel when he comes face to face with those fine military officers that he went to Kaduna to lie against and made them to lose their jobs.

    “Also, I wonder how those who funded him will be feeling now, having failed to listen when I was consistently saying that they were being duped. I wonder how the Department of State Services (DSS) men who took Aluko’s lies and acted on them by invading the State House of Assembly will feel now that they have integrity problem because of what he (Aluko) made them to do.

    “However, I salute my boss, Governor Fayose, for once again displaying his statesmanship because only a statesman with a large heart can hold the hands of someone like TKO Aluko after all that he did to pull down his government.”

    Against this background, people are reading different meanings to the issue. Those who sympathise with Aluko, cite last week Wednesday’s (March 30) press conference in Ado Ekiti, where he declared that Fayose was afraid of his shadows over his revelations. On that day, Aluko’s supporters and government’s loyalists led by one of Fayose’s aide and a former local government chairman almost clashed at the Old Governor’s Office. Fayose’s supporters had stormed the venue of the press conference when they got wind of Aluko’s presence, but fortunately he had left the place.

    Before Aluko recanted, the Ekiti PDP had reacted, dismissing the his purported reconciliation with the governor as a non-issue. In a press statement, the party rejected the idea of Aluko returning to the fold. According to its Publicity Secretary, Jackson Adebayo, the party said Aluko is not wanted in its fold and that whatever transpired between him and Fayose was a personal and would not alter the decision to expel him expulsion from the party.

    Adebayo said: “As far as the PDP in Ekiti State was concerned, Aluko has been expelled and he remained expelled. After collaborating with the APC to cause the confusion in the state, I can say it categorically that Aluko is not welcomed in the PDP in Ekiti State.

    “Perhaps, he is targeting the next convention of the party so that he can perpetrate another treacherous act, but I can tell Nigerians, especially our teeming members and supporters in Ekiti State that even though we respect our leader, Governor Fayose and we trust his judgment, a treacherous man like TKO Aluko is not welcomed in the PDP.”

    The latest development on the issue has however thrown many observers off-balance. Many observers in Ekiti believe that the latest twist in the tale is part of a grand design by Fayose to ‘finish’ Aluko politically. Others say the whole episode has put a question mark on Aluko’s credibility. But, one thing is certain: Nigerians would hear more on this matter in the days to come.

    Aluko and Fayose parted ways after the latter failed to appoint former as the Chief of Staff as previously agreed. Rather, Fayose appointed the former Director-General of his campaign organisation, Dipo Anisulowo, as his Chief of Staff. But, Aluko would have none of that; he accused the governor of abusing the party constitution by allegedly taking many decisions without carrying the State Working Committee (SWC) along.

    The crisis between the two dramatic personae continued to fester with subsequent steps taken by the wily governor. Analysts are of the view that Fayose capitalised on the first opportunity that came along after the election to consolidate his hold on the party structure in the state. For instance, with the elevation of the former state Chairman, Makanjuola Ogundipe, to party’s Chairman in the Southwest, the state chapter was expected to fill the vacancy. Fayose did not beat about the bush, but utilised the chance to put one of his followers, Idowu Faleye, on the saddle, as the acting Chairman.

    But, Aluko and other SWC members saw it an imposition. In May last year, Aluko and other SWC members loyal to him ‘forced’ Faleye to tender his resignation and appointed former Vice Chairman (Ekiti North), Tunde Olatunde, as the acting Chairman, a move which embarrassed Fayose.

    In the midst of the leadership crisis, the tenancy of the state party secretariat expired and a dude cheque was issued to the owner of the building, Ropo Adesanya, who is a former chairman of the state chapter. Angered by the fact that the cheque bounced when he went to cash the money, Adesanya, who had since defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC), dragged the PDP to an Ado Ekiti Chief Magistrate’s Court where the case is still pending.

    Fayose later restored Faleye to his post and engineered the suspension of Aluko and three other SWC members; Olatunde, Mrs. Busola Oyebode (Women Leader) and Tunji Olanrewaju (Auditor). A disciplinary committee was later set up which recommended the expulsion of the quartet; a recommendation that was expressly carried out by the Faleye-led faction, backed by the Elders’ Committee.

    Aluko and the SWC members loyal to him filed a suit at an Ado Ekiti High Court to challenge their expulsion, but the case is still pending. Aluko bid his time to fight back and the opportunity came with the inauguration of January 12 of a Military Board of Inquiry into the misconduct of soldiers, who allegedly participated in the famed Ekitigate.

    He traveled to Kaduna, venue of the sitting, to give evidence before the Maj.-Gen. Adeniyi Oyebade-led panel and tendered documents on the involvement of officers and men of the Nigerian Army in the rigging of Ekiti governorship poll. His appearance before the panel sent shock waves back home as he reportedly tendered documents that revealed how soldiers gave ‘undue’ advantage to PDP at the poll.

    As if that was not enough, Aluko shocked many Nigerians when he appeared on a live programme on Channels Television on Sunday, January 31, and made startling revelations on how the governorship poll was rigged in favour of Fayose. Before appearing on the programme, Aluko had earlier in the same day addressed reporters in Abuja on the issue and the news was already been in the public domain. But, the live programme was the icing of the cake.

    Aluko alleged that former President Jonathan released a total sum of $37 million (about N4.7 billion) to influence Fayose’s victory both at the PDP primary election and the main governorship election. He also revealed that the party at a strategy meeting held in Aso Rock Villa convinced Jonathan to release a huge sum of money and order the military and other security agencies to cooperate with the PDP to ensure that the party wins the governorship poll.

  • Taming Fayose and the judiciary

    Fayose has become not just an Ekiti nightmare and a national embarrassment but also a bad advertisement for the country in the international arena. Speaking recently during an intellectual engagement, at the University of Lagos, a visiting US scholar instinctively said America has its own equivalent of Fayose in Donald Trump, the Republican front runner in the November race for the White House. Both are easy preys to political enemies that have variously described them as ‘vacuous, rabid, hallucinating, lacking in depth, and having an infantile mind’. Substituting notoriety with popularity, Fayose often takes impetuous decisions such as dancing naked on the street without him realizing it.

    Last Wednesday was one of such occasions when Fayose during a workshop to promote women participation in politics, said without feeling – ‘I don’t know if there are missing girls. It is a political strategy, because I don’t think any girl is missing. If they are missing, let them find them’. As far as he is concerned, the Oby Ezekwesili-led #BringBackOurGirls campaigners that drew the attention of the international community to the plight of the abducted girls, are office seekers.  But what was galling, was that this was coming only two weeks after a high ranking British foreign service official disclosed that the abducted Chibok girls were indeed sighted inside Sambisa forest few days after their abduction.

    But first who is Ayo Fayose who was first foisted on Ekiti by Obasanjo in 2003? Before he was impeached in 2006, his tenure was marked by unprecedented level of violence resulting in the assassination of some prominent Ekiti sons. He later confessed, he ‘had to flee, (some claimed in the booth of his car) with all his ‘property left in the Government House’. He was apprehended by the EFCC and accused of financial mismanagement along other criminal charges. And  in his own words, “During the seven and half years of political wilderness, I was taken to court over what I knew nothing about 59 times, aside the 45 days I spent in Ikoyi Prisons during my trial by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)”. In 2011, he lost a senatorial election contest to Babafemi Ojudu with a margin of over 30,000.

    But the turning point came in 2014 when he allegedly received $2m from ex-President Jonathan to outwit his other PDP candidates in their party’s primaries.  And for the ‘coup against the Ekiti’, according to Dr Temitope Aluko, his alter ego and self-confessed partner in crime, ex-President Jonathan provided $37m  and  ‘1,040 recognised soldiers and another batch of 400 ‘unrecognised soldiers’ brought from Enugu in addition to  44 special strike teams brought in (with) Toyota Hilux buses from Abuja and Onitsha.’ The April 2014 battle was led by the then Minister for Police Affairs Adesiyan, Musliu Obanikoro, junior minister of defence, Brigadier General Aliu Momoh  with another contingent of 12,000 mobile police men, 26 sniffer dogs,15,000 NSCDC personnel’.

    It is on record that as governor-elect, he was accompanied to court by thugs who beat up the judge presiding over his eligibility case. He also employed the services of the thugs to chase 19 elected members of the state House of Assembly out of town while he ran the state with seven PDP members. His hand-picked cronies went on to win the subsequent election into the state and national houses of assembly having driven serious contenders out of town with the help of thugs. The opposition went to court to contest Fayose’s election on the basis of his constitutional banditry, his status as an impeached governor, and the use of military to win the flawed election. The Supreme Court however upheld Fayose’s election.

    In his inaugural address, Fayose offered ‘peace, prosperity, and progress, employment, food, and stomach infrastructure’. You can put tar on the road but if I don’t have a car and I’m hungry, then that tar is meaningless’. And in pursuit of his government policy of stomach infrastructure, he eats ‘boli’ roasted plantain and drink agbo ‘jedi’, (native concoction for pile) on the streets with his grass root supporters. Last December, he directed all civil servants across the state to come to Ado Ekiti for some cups of rice and chicken. Many spent a whole day only to receive chicks instead of chicken. Today, a state that introduced N5, 000 social welfare packages for the elderly under Fayemi is battling with unpaid five months salary arrears.

    Fayose has always tried to divert attention through repeated attacks on the person of President Buhari who has so far ignored his asinine theatrics. Perhaps the search for attention explains Fayose’s ill-adviced decision to play politics with the abducted Chibok Girls which has become a national tragedy. The irony is that like those PDP stalwarts that shared $2.1b loan earmarked for military hardware to fight the insurgency, Fayose who allegedly got $37m and about 30,000 security personnel to rig the 2014 election at a time our ill-equipped soldiers could not even defend their own barracks is culpable for the abduction of these innocent children.

    But who is to tame Fayose with the Supreme Court saying its hands are tied by its earlier flawed ruling despite the fresh evidence that showed the 2014 election was a sham (the military authorities retired Brigadier Momoh who anchored the rigging of the 2014 Ekiti election)? The buck stops on the table of Buhari and his APC- a party in government but not in power.

    The model builders that came up with the doctrine of ‘separation of powers’ spoke of ‘checks and balances’; but the theory in truth was designed to be a balance of terror. Both the legislature and judiciary are institutional tools which the executive as temporary custodian of state powers needs to manage society for good or bad over a given period often specified by the constitution.

    In the last 16 years, PDP as the ruling party has been able to use the judiciary as an accomplice in their members’ betrayal of our nation. Either in the electoral theft of opponents’ mandate, the collapse of banking sector and the stock exchange, oil subsidy fraud and the mismanaged of the privatization process, or the systematic looting of the nations resources, the judiciary played a supportive role. With the introduction of plea bargaining by the judiciary, enemies of state emerged from temporary detention to become governors, senators, king-makers and god fathers. Those the PDP power wielders could not bend in the judiciary, they break. Thus we had a Justice Isa Salami who was unjustly suspended and prematurely retired for ruling against PDP in Edo, Ondo, Ekiti and Osun states.

    Besides the bizarre Supreme Court ruling in Ekiti and Rivers which seem to literarily challenge the people to embark on self-help, the judiciary appears not to be enthusiastic about the executive’s current war on corruption.  For instance all that was asked of Bukola Saraki, the Senate President was to defend himself against allegation of false declaration of assets. But this he has evaded in the last eight months with the connivance of the judiciary that has tried to undermine the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) of 2015. The judiciary behaves as if it is not vulnerable.

    That the tail is now wagging the dog with the likes of Fayose saying Buhari and APC have no capacity to rule, is the fault of President Buhari and his APC. The executive’s control of the awesome apparatus of state power is a reminder that the doctrine of separation of powers does not envisage the judiciary or even the legislature acting as if they are answerable to none.  If President Buhari and Odigie-Oyegun, the APC chairman, unfortunately, both non politicians, are however having problem as to how to wield power, they can consult Obasanjo, Jonathan, his godson and their PDP or create time to read Niccolo Machiavelli the founder of modern political science for his advice on the brutal reality of building a state. It is an affront for those who ought to be behind bars to test the resolve of custodian of state power.

  • Fayose, Aluko draw battle line as ‘truce’ crashes

    Fayose, Aluko draw battle line as ‘truce’ crashes

    •Says no reconciliation with governor
    •Govt files mandamus for arrest

    Did the embattled whistleblower on the last Ekiti State governorship election, Dr. Tope Aluko and Governor Ayo Fayose really reconcile on Sunday in Lagos?

    Contrary to what the world was made to believe, the “raging feud” between the duo is far from being over.

    Aluko, who described the reconciliation between him and Fayose as a “joke of the Century”, insisted that he never begged for forgiveness from the governor as being peddled in some quarters.

    He accused Fayose’s Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka of “hypocrisy, distortion of facts and spreading lies” on the “reconciliation process”.

    At a briefing in Lagos, Aluko said he was under duress to admit to a reconciliation, which was aimed at tarnishing his integrity.

    He said he went to Eko Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos on Sunday to honour an invitation by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leadership to address some issues affecting the state.

    Aluko said he went to the meeting with his wife, adding that he was shocked to see the governor walk into the meeting. He noted that he accepted to be at the meeting because he was invited by two senior members of the party.

    His words: “I need not recall the drama and face-off that ensued between Fayose and I at the meeting. At a point, my wife barged into the meeting to inform me of the presence of reporters.

    “I became enraged and decided to leave the place but I noticed the governor rushing after me downstairs in a Gestapo manner.

    “My wife was fidgeting and almost crying and suddenly I could not find her around me. I realised that I need to obey Fayose’s instruction to face the press because of my family’s safety.”

    The former PDP scribe said he still stand by his words. “I have earlier told Nigerians about the manipulation of the 2014 governorship election and I still stand by all I said.

    “You will notice the several counter allegations by Fayose and his media team that none of them has refuted all I have said. Rather the attack has been on the messenger and not the message. I will like to apologise to Nigerians that perhaps, accepting the invitation was a tactical error.

    “I will also like you to know that I am dealing with a master fraudster who is always full of mischief. You will all recollect how he announced the purported death of Afolabi Akanni; the purported arrest of four members of the House of Assembly.

    “I need to emphasise that all that transpired at Eko Hotel on that day was an organised propaganda/drama to stain my image and malign my personal integrity and I believe it would be a good script for Nollywood,” he said.

    Aluko also spoke on his Twitter handle where he posted two tweets on what really transpired in Lagos.

    In a tweet posted on Monday, he said:  “I did not collect any money from Fayose. I was invited to a meeting by well meaning Nigerians and I felt it was imperative to honour such a meeting but I was surprised to see reporters around.”

    In another tweet posted yesterday, the PDP chieftain described the governor as a “chameleon”, adding that the reconciliation was staged to assassinate his character.

    Aluko declared that the battle line is now drawn and will continue until there is a victor and a vanquished.

    He said: “I did not beg Fayose, he approached me and it was courteous that I honored Ekiti leaders who wanted peace to reign in Ekiti, contrary to the lies being spread by Fayose’s mouthpiece Lere Olayinka.

    “I have come forward in strong terms to rubbish Olayinka’s hypocrisy with his distortion of facts about the reconciliation process. The spread of lies about my ‘repentance’ is calculated.

    “Fayose and his paid agents are cowards who only want sympathy through the back door. Their pranks can only be described as ‘the joke of the century’.

    “I know Fayose well. He is a chameleon and I also know that he must have devised all these arrangements to further assassinate my character and that was why I was meticulous by not speaking to the press.

    “Like I said  on Monday, I won’t dignify Olayinka with a response and I won’t join issues with him but the public should know that it was peace they claim they wanted and now that they have indicated their insincerity, it therefore means the battle continues until there is a victor and a vanquished.”

    The government has said the case of perjury against Aluko would go on in court.

    Addressing a briefing in Ado-Ekiti yesterday, the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Owoseni Ajayi, said the state has filed a mandamus in the court to compel Aluko’s arrest.

    This, he said, became necessary, following the failure of the Commissioner of Police and the Inspector General of Police to arrest Aluko, following an arrest warrant ordered by an Ado-Ekiti Chief Magistrate’s Court.

    Ajayi alleged that the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami,  has not done enough to advise the Federal Government to obey court orders.

    The commissioner claimed that despite the warrant of arrest slammed on him, Aluko still goes about with military and police escorts.

    Ajayi said: “The apology of Aluko to Governor Fayose was personal. We can’t because of this interventionist apology collapse all our cases, government is not run that way.

    “We can’t abandon our responsibilities as a state just because someone

    apologised to our governor on a case already in court. They are not fresh cases and we will pursue it to a logical conclusion,” he said.

    APC: reconciliation changes nothing

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has said that the purported truce between Governor Ayo Fayose and Dr Tope Aluko will not alter anything on the revelations on the probe of the June 21, 2014 governorship election fraud.

    It maintained that the meeting between Fayose and Aluko won’t affect the credibility of the evidence Aluko forwarded to the military on the alleged rigging of the 2014 governorship poll.

    The APC denied luring Aluko to lie against Fayose and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), saying what transpired in Lagos over the weekend was an internal affair of the umbrella party and that the opposition had no hand in it.

    The truce report has started generating ripples among Nigerians, with Fayose’s media aide, Lere Olayinka, dismissing the army probe as a charade.

    But APC Publicity Secretary Taiwo Olatunbosun said in a statement yesterday that the reported truce between Fayose and Aluko would not alter anything in the revelations at the probe panel.

    He said it was mischievous to insinuate that Aluko was lured by the APC to lie against Fayose and the military officers who were dismissed after they were found guilty by the Army probe panel.

    Dismissing allegations that Aluko was lured by APC to implicate Fayose and the soldiers, Olatunbosun explained:

    “This is purely an internal matter within PDP and so APC has no hand in it. The reported meeting between Fayose and Aluko brokered by PDP leaders has proven conclusively that the latter is a full member of PDP.

    “It is that recognition by PDP that made its leaders to invite the duo to a peace meeting, and contrary to Olayinka’s insinuation, it is on record that Aluko had always insisted that his revelation at the probe panel was in response to APC’s petition against him on the controversial election in which he had to make restitution through confession to clear his conscience.”

    He added: “It is mischievous to insinuate that Aluko’s reconciliation with Fayose will hurt the credibility of the probe panel. We must note that Aluko swore to an oath before making his testimony at the probe panel, and so his statement remains sacrosanct till the last is heard on the matter to ensure justice in the resolution of Ekitigate.”

    He also warned Olayinka against attempt to discredit the entire probe process by saying that the military relied on Aluko’s lie to dismiss its top officers.

  • ‘Fayose a disgrace to democracy’

    ‘Fayose a disgrace to democracy’

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kaduna State, Yusuf Ali (Raba Gardama) has described Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose as an embarrassment to democratic ethos.

    He said in a statement in Abuja that the governor’s utterances in recent time have crossed the boundary of free speech.

    “His frequent insults and vituperations against the President have crossed the boundary of free speech. It is the height of indiscipline and typical of someone who is plagued with hangover.

    “Fayose’s outburst does not help the polity in anyway because it portrays him as someone still weighed down with the fever of electoral defeat when the whole nation has united behind President Muhammadu Buhari to deliver Nigeria from the mess of the 16-year misrule of the PDP.

    “If Fayose is suffering from verbal diarrhoea, I think it is time he goes for cure rather than abusing our president. This is unacceptable.

    “Loyalty to the president is not a matter of choice but it’s an obligation by all citizens, including Fayose, who always throws caution to the wind and runs his mouth as if there are no laws in the land.

    “Fayose is a whimsically eccentric person who shouldn’t have been a prefect in secondary school not to talk of governing the highly educated and urbane people of Ekiti.”

  • Ex-Ekiti PDP Secretary Aluko returns to Fayose

    Ex-Ekiti PDP Secretary Aluko returns to Fayose

    •I’m vindicated, says Fayose’s aide 

    Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Secretary in Ekiti State Dr. Tope Aluko,  who blew the whistle on how former President Goodluck Jonathan gave Governor Ayodele Fayose several millions of dollars and military support to help rig the June 21 2014 governorship election, has reconciled with the governor.

    He met with Fayose on Sunday in Lagos during a “surprised appearance”, according to the governor’s aide Lere Olayinka,

    Olayinka said: “Sources at the meeting said Aluko begged for forgiveness, prostrating and rolling on the ground for several minutes.

    “Aluko’s return to Fayose was facilitated by former Speaker of the House of Assembly, Dele Olugbemi.”

    After the meeting, both Fayose and Aluko spoke to the media.

    Aluko appeared on television to expand on his evidence against the election.

    He equally testified before the military panel that probed the role of the military in the election.

    The outcome of his testimony is the retirement of some senior officers including Gen. Abubakar Momoh.

    The reported reconciliation of the governorship poll fraud whistleblower, Dr. Tope Aluko and Governor Ayo Fayose in Lagos is reverberating back home in Ekiti State.

    Fayose’s Special Assistant on Public Communication and New Media Lere Olayinka,said he has been vindicated by Aluko’s latest action.

    Olayinka said his earlier position that “Aluko can make a 360 degree turnaround and return to the same Fayose that he claimed rigged election because he lacked integrity”.

    In a statement yesterday, Olayinka, who claimed he was speaking in his personal capacity, said he had to speak out because his conscience won’t allow him to keep silent on the development.

    He said: “Being the person who faced Aluko on TV, I am constrained to make my position known on this new development.

    “Even though the governor Fayose may not be too happy that I am making this statement, but as one of the major dramatis personae in the saga, my conscience won’t allow me to just keep silent after all the pains and confusion caused by Aluko.

    “Today, I have been vindicated because Aluko has done just that and I wonder how he will feel when he comes face to face with the people that he has destroyed. I wonder how he will feel when he comes face to face with those fine military officers that he went to Kaduna to lie against and made them to lose their jobs.”