Tag: Fayose

  • Fayose: Yoruba’s new PDP leader in action

    I sympathise with Ayo Fayose for his current travails. It is as if it is now a crime to be resourceful enough to defeat two sitting governors at different periods. He has on account of trials by his political detractors since his second coming six weeks ago become the face of all that is wrong with us as a nation and with our fledgling democracy.  The truth however is that the Fayose phenomenon is only symptomatic of a nation ‘of anything is possible’, one that thrives in aberration of putting  square pegs in round holes, hoping the nation will wobble on.  Didn’t we not too  long ago have an ill-equipped Aguiyi-Ironsi who thought all that was required to manage society was military training and tactics, an ill-equipped Obasanjo, who thought he could play god because fortune had smiled on him, and an  incompetent Shagari who only wanted to be a senator but found himself imposed on Nigeria. He smoked while Akinloye and his NPN wrecked the economy. There was also the cunning Babangida who took the nation for a ride for eight years of ‘transition without end’; an impostor called Abacha whose only agenda was to mindlessly loot the treasury. We have similarly had a terminally ill Yar’Adua and a Jonathan who by all accounts is a good man but lacks the competence and political will to manage a multi-ethnic society which is today torn between Christians and Muslims, north and south, Fulani versus Middle Belt and Ijaws versus Hausa/Fulani – their traditional allies.

    Fayose, today’s aberration is brash, garrulous, and confident. He is well grounded in the art of street fighting as espoused by his mentor the late Adedibu, PDP garrison commander of Ibadan politics who rose through the rank as an Action Group thug in the first republic to become the leader of Ibadan thugs and road workers union. He it was that told us that to be a governor, you must be ready to remove your dress and fight it out on the street and have no inhibition about falsely swearing publicly with the Holy Koran. Fayose has been an outstanding student. But for those like Obasanjo who have continued to prolong our nightmare through playing god, Fayose would have been a celebrated success if he had been restricted to his area of core competence – protecting the king on the throne. The Yoruba with its rich culture have long warned of the consequences of usurping the throne by those not groomed to ascend thrones. Accordingly they say, “Ti a ba fi eru j’oba, ilu a tuka.” The governor  by all accounts is not a slave; this is just the Yoruba way of saying those who were not groomed to be kings but usurp the throne, will mismanage the fortune of the people while the community will be in disarray. We witnessed the consequences of such an aberration during the reign of Abacha, when NADECO members fled the country. We saw a bit of it during Fayose’s first coming as governor 2003 -2006 when Ekiti elite fled from the state while revered traditional rules like the Ewi of Ado-Ekiti who had nowhere to run to was rudely challenged by Fayose to remove his crown and sceptre and come to the political arena for contest of popularity.

    Indeed the view of George Akosile, the state chairman of defunct Alliance for Democracy (AD) shortly before Fayose’s impeachment in 2006 was that “Fayose is not a proper person to rule Ekiti State. He has no certificate. He is an area boy…” This may sound harsh and uncharitable, but Akosile was vindicated by Fayose’s subsequent impeachment by 23 of the 26-member state House of Assembly in October 2006 for the mismanagement of N12 billion local government joint contribution fund and the alleged theft of N1.3 billion through the derailed integrated poultry project among 26 charges brought by EFCC to support his impeachment.

    Most people had thought that eight years in the political wilderness,  51 court appearances and months of detention over the yet-to-be resolved 26 charges EFCC  brought against Fayose would have sobered him but a leopard does not change its skin. This time around, he did not even wait for his inauguration before resorting to self-help. He simply led a band of thugs and okada riders into a court premises, beat up the judge handling the case about his eligibility to contest an election, filed long before the election. They tore the judge’s gown along with some prepared judgments.

    With inauguration, he started with the mundane. The government house commissioned on the eve of his inauguration, he claimed, was too big and too tastefully furnished for a people’s governor. He then directed okada riders and thugs to go and have a taste and feel of the place because government house belongs to them. Days later, his political detractors claimed he spent another N200 million to carry out further repair on the same house. At the state secretariat, a new entrance was to be constructed to keep ‘evil servants’ at a distance while the governor moves to his office every morning. There had been an earlier directive that civil servants who got promoted in the last one year were to revert back to their old positions. Due to no fault of theirs, they would also have to refund the allowances already earned because government is broke. Along the line, the people’s governor appointed a special adviser on stomach infrastructure. Government also issued a public notice inviting his supporters to a rendezvous at drinking joints for carousing on Fridays at government expense.

    Then from the mundane, the government moved to the bizarre. Never equipped to manage conflicts through negotiation and compromise with the other arms of government, he forced 19 of the 26 members of the state House of Assembly out of town, ferried the seven members of PDP in a government bus guided by over 300 heavily armed policemen to the assembly chambers where the seven hilariously pronounced the speaker and deputy impeached in their absence and accorded one of their seven members the title speaker. Minutes later, the governor, dressed like one of his supporters was addressing local and international press. He told bemused nation that he has recognized the new speaker and was prepared to work with him.

    With Ekiti now fully secured, Fayose who won an election without an agenda has moved on to the national stage. Last week he ferried PDP members and some leading Ekiti Obas to Obafemi Awolowo University, to sell Jonathan who is seeking re-election in 2015 to the marginalised Yoruba who the Jonathan administration has largely ignored for three years. This in itself was an arduous task. But Fayose instead of selling Jonathan embarked on petty personal wars by attacking Obasanjo’s person.

    Fayose’s answer to Obasanjo’s warning that “increasing corruption under Jonathan had damaged the economy, with possible consequences of having to borrow to pay salaries and allowances because of dwindling revenue allocation to states and local governments” was to call attention of the public to donations to Obasanjo library and an alleged sharing of N50 million to each senator and House of Representatives member during Obasanjo’s third term fiasco.

    Fayose’s answer to Obasanjo’s warning that “Nigeria cannot continue to indulge in disdain for truth, elevation of corruption and incompetence, reinforcement of failure, and celebration of mediocrity, tribal bigotry, fomenting violence and anti-democratic practices in states and National Assembly” was to accuse Obasanjo of intolerance of those with independent minds of their own.

    Fayose’s reaction to Obasanjo admonition that it took Jonathan more than three years to appreciate and understand that “Boko Haram is not simply a menace based on religion or one directed to frustrate anybody’s political ambition”, was to praise the president for refusing “to toe the path of unconstitutionality” and for respecting human rights by not committing crime against humanity” as Obasanjo once did.

    I am sure it is not only the Ekitis  at home and abroad that feel diminished by Fayose’s emptiness and attempt to wage petty personal wars with serious national issues at Ife last week, his entourage made of professors and respected traditional Ekiti rulers and even  Obasanjo who first promoted him beyond his level, would probably share the same fate. Behold the new Yoruba PDP leader, the nemesis of Obasanjo in action.

  • OAU students  boo Jonathan, Fayose at Yoruba summit

    OAU students boo Jonathan, Fayose at Yoruba summit

    Students of the Obafemi Awolowo University,Ile Ife,yesterday booed President Goodluck Jonathan and his entourage during a visit to  the campus to meet with Yoruba leaders ahead of next year’s   elections.

    The placard-carrying students  protested  the Jonathan Administration’s handling   of education in the country and called for an immediate end to what they called the rot in the sector.

    They were particularly incensed by the security measures put in place for the President’s visit which restricted vehicular movement in and out of the campus.

    In effect  shuttle  buses  which most students ride  between  the main gate and the campus were unable to operate and the  students were thus forced to walk long distances ,some to their exam halls.

    Some of the protesters’  placards read:“We Condemn Jos Killing of Students”; “Students Are Not Chicken”; “Don’t Sell Education As You Sold Electricity”; “We Demand Total Reversal of 2014 Hiked School Fees”; and  “We are Not Responsible For Jonathan’s Ineptitude”.

    The students also blocked  the road leading to the school’s sports centre where a Nigerian Air Force  NAF-280 was waiting to carry the President from the campus.

    They asked him to address them before leaving.

    The students also booed Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State who sought to pacify them.

     The governor had alighted from his car and walked up to the students with a view to addressing them.

    What he got from the students was a snub and shouts of unprintable expletives.

     His security details reading the unfolding drama quickly shoved him  into his car and drove him away from the scene.

    Some traditional rulers also beat a retreat to save themselves from embarrassment by the students.

    Hundreds of  PDP supporters, who had swooped on the OAU campus with different banners to welcome President Jonathan wore long faces.

    Addressing the Yoruba Unity Summit earlier at the Oduduwa Hall of the institution,President Jonathan pledged that he would take proper care of the Yoruba if re-elected in 2015.

    He described the South West as a key part of Nigeria which his administration must work with.

     He also promised   that the recommendations of the recently conducted National Conference would be implemented.

    He said: “the contribution of the Yoruba people to nation building is so enormous to be ignored. So, all parts of the country must work together in love, unity and understanding to overcome all the challenges facing us.”

    Appreciating the elders and the traditional rulers in the Southwest for their support for his government since inception, President Jonathan promised equal treatment for all geopolitical zones in the country.

     Delivering a paper entitled  “Unity of Yoruba Nation,”  former Transport Minister , Chief Ebenezer Babatope, said that  the political progress made by the  President, with  his ascension to the number  one position in the country was not a mistake.

    He assured Jonathan of the support of the Yoruba in 2015, saying the South West would not want to be deprived its position.

    In their goodwill messages,the Orangun of Oke-Ila,Oba Adedokun Abolarin, Chief Olu Falae, Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose, Mrs. Mulikat Akande Adeola and Senator Femi Okunrounmu advised Mr. President not to be distracted by comments and actions of some people against his administration.

     In attendance  at the summit were the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade, Owa Obokun of Ijesaland, Oba Adekunle Aromolaran, academics, captains of industries, and chieftains of the Peoples Democratic Party among others.

  • For Fayose, it’s back to wild ways

    SIR: The report during the past week of how seven lawmakers and three non-members acting under Police cover and implicit support of Governor Ayodele Fayose sacked the leadership of the Ekiti State House of Assembly of 26 members is still a source of worry to the generality of Nigerians. Only a little less than a month in office and with his now famous inaugural speech of a readiness to work with all irrespective of political affiliation to move the state forward and readiness to forgive all those who had wronged him in the past as if his impeachment in 2006 was faulty, there are already regrets, sadness and gloom in the state post June 21.

    The governor’s uncultured style and strong arm tactics can only lead to a predicable end. Leading the state is different from leading the mob and the earlier Fayose settles to the act of governing the better for him. It shouldn’t be too much of a big deal for him to protect life and property as well as providing the enabling template for economic activities and social services to flourish. The task of governance requires that he maintains a cool mien to enable him carry out the affairs of state as humanely as possible. Strong tactics and violence on societal institutions will not forever endure nor can be sustained.

    Obviously, winning an election is a different ball game from governance. He has silenced the judiciary, attacked the legislature and will soon turn his gaze to other sectors of the society; perhaps the academics will receive their fair share from him before long. It is nothing new about him or his style. From 2003 to 2006 when he was unceremoniously removed for peace and sanity to return to the state, those were his tactics.

    In retrospect the return of Fayose will give us in Ekiti an opportunity like never before to benchmark what we had been between 2010 and 2014 and the road not taken. The question the people will answer before long is whether the rule of the mob is preferable to humane and predicable governance.  Before long, we shall on the plains of Ekiti land to answer if manipulative, offensive and a leadership that openly said it shall supply liquor in the 21st century for the people every weekend is deserving a place in the land of honour. We shall answer if duplicity is a virtue. We shall look back and long for orderliness and transparent leadership. We shall compare methodology with impulsiveness.

    For certain, we shall look back in Ekiti and ask questions. I know for certain that we shall ask questions for we are by providence so wired. As for the moment, cry not my beloved Ekitiland for the horror shall not last for an eternity.

    • Rotimi Opeyeoluwa,

    Ado Ekiti

  • Anger as 7 PDP lawmakers endorse Fayose’s nominees

    Anger as 7 PDP lawmakers endorse Fayose’s nominees

    Under police cover and emboldened by a band of thugs, seven Ekiti Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) lawmakers “sat” yesterday to approve three commissioner-nominees presented by Governor Ayodele Fayose.

    The action drew outrage.

    The lawmakers also empowered Fayose to appoint 12 special advisers and constitute caretaker committees for the 16 local governments, pending the conduct of the local government election.

    The seven PDP legislators were joined by three individuals whose identities could not be ascertained, in a bid to surpass a quorum of nine members needed to carry out a valid sitting  of the House as stipulated by the Constitution and the Assembly’s Standing Rules.

    Reporters were not allowed to go inside the chamber with cameras.

    The electronic media were prevented from covering the “sitting” –  apparently to shield  the three “unknown legislators”.

    The “sitting” was conducted under a massive security cover provided by mobile policemen and operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS).

    A police Armoured Personnel Carrier marked NPF 5907 C and police pick-up vans were stationed outside the parliamentary building throughout the “sitting”.

    After the strange sitting, the nominees and the lawmakers were ferried into the Government House in a Toyota Coaster bus marked EKGH 111 with a massive security cordon woven around them.

    Fayose, in a letter dated November 11, which was addressed to the Speaker, requested the approval of the Assembly for the constitution of caretaker committees – a request that was rejected by the majority APC House members.

    A PDP lawmaker representing Ekiti East 2, Mr. Samuel Ajibola, told reporters shortly after the “sitting” that Speaker Adewale Omirin was on an assignment for his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), in Lagos. Deputy Speaker Taiwo Orisalade was on a campaign tour to his constituency (Ido/Osi 2), he said.

    Ajibola maintained that 10 legislators attended the “sitting” adding that they sat to ensure good governance, peace, progress and development of the state.

    But the All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmakers have declared the “sitting” as illegal, unconstitutional, unparliamentary and a rape of the Constitution and the Standing Rules of the House.

    They called for the arrest and prosecution of the three impersonators who posed as members of the House to carry out an illegality in the parliamentary chambers.

    The APC Assemblymen said no sitting was slated for Monday and the House was not convoked by the Speaker, Dr. Adewale Omirin, who is constitutionally empowered to do so.

    The PDP lawmakers at the  sitting “elected” Mr. Dele Olugbemi who defected from the APC on October 16 during Fayose’s inauguration, as the protem speaker.

    Olugbemi, who represents Ikole 2 Constituency, shortly after his “election” presided over the session in which the three commissioner-nominees were screened and cleared.

    The nominees are Mr. Owoseni Ajayi for Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Kayode Oso (Works) and Mr. Toyin Ojo (Finance and Economic Development).

    The “sitting”, which started at about 10.00 am, saw the PDP lawmakers led by Ajibola who is the Minority Leader, conducting the business of the day.

    The seven PDP lawmakers who could be identified by reporters inside the chamber are: Ajibola, Olugbemi, Mr. Adeyinka Adeloye (Ikole 1), Mrs. Abeni Olayinka (Ado 2), Mrs. Ayo Olajide-Fatunbi (Moba 2), Mr. Olowo Ajiboye (Oye 2) and Mr. Alex Adeojo (Ekiti Southwest 2).

    Ajibola was the only PDP member in the House before Fayose returned to power on October 16. He was joined by the six who defected to the  ruling party on the day of the governor’s inauguration.

    But reporters struggled to identify the three other persons posing as lawmakers as none of the trio was seen immediately the “sitting” ended at about 10.40 am.

    Ajibola, who acted as Leader of Government Business in the House, hinged the action of the PDP lawmakers on Section 27 of the Standing  Order, which, according to him, gives the lawmakers powers to appoint a speaker pro-tempore in the absence of the Speaker and the Deputy Soeaker.

    He argued that the protem speaker is empowered by the Standing Order to perform the function of the substantive Speaker when the first two principal officers are not around.

    Ajibola moved the motion  to allow the Sergeant-at-Arms to usher in the three nominees. Themotion was unanimously adopted by the lawmakers and their nomination was subsequently “ratified”.

    WE CONDUCTED A VALID SITTING-PDP CAUCUS

    Speaking with reporters shortly after the “sitting”, Ajibola denied that three unidentified persons joined the seven PDP lawmakers, adding that 10 lawmakers sat – a figure he described as greater than needed to form a quorum.

    “The quorum is nine and we had 10 members who attended the sitting of today. That shows that we formed a quorum. We don’t have PDP or APC in the House; we are all members of Ekiti State House of Assembly.

    “We make laws here and we treat issues brought before us in the overall interest of the people of the state.

    “The Deputy Speaker is on the field campaigning and Mr. Speaker is in Lagos for a party meeting. Section 27 of the Standing Order gives us the power to elect a protem speaker from among ourselves if the speaker and the deputy speaker are not around.

    “The law permits us to do so and what transpired today was a normal procedure.”

    SITTING, AN OUTRIGHT ILLEGALITY-APC CAUCUS

    The 19 APC lawmakers declared the sitting as an illegality, which violates the provisions of the Constitution and the House Standing Order.

    Speaking with The Nation on telephone, the Majority Leader, Mr. Churchill Adedipe, challenged the PDP lawmakers to identify the three individuals who posed as “honourable members”.

    Adedipe maintained that the 26-member parliament comprises 19 APC members and seven PDP members, wondering where the ruling party “recruited three thugs” to sit in the House in a “desperate bid to reach the quorum of nine”.

    Adedipe said the House does not hold plenary sitting on Mondays, maintaining that anything done in the hallowed chamber by PDP lawmakers and the three impostors was an exercise in futility.

    He likened the “sitting” to what took place during the tenure of the  Third Assembly when some PDP lawmakers who did not form a quorum conducted a “sitting at dawn” to screen and ratify nominees for the State Independent Electoral Commission (S.I.E.C).

    Adedipe recalled that the illegality was later nullified by the State High Court, expressing confidence that the latest illegality will not stand the  test of time as his party would challenge it.

    The majority leader also revealed that chairmen and members of caretaker committees in the 16 local government areas and 19 Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) have filed a suit challenging their dissolution by Fayose, wondering why the PDP-led government couldn’t wait for the determination of the case before constituting new ones.

    Adedipe argued that it is in the Standing Order of the House that members should stay action on any issue that is before a court of competent jurisdiction.

    The Majority Leader, who represents Irepodun/Ifelodun 1 Constituency, said the action of Fayose and the PDP lawmakers was an attempt to foist a fait accompli on the court of law and a contemptuous breach of the 1999 Constitution.

  • Fayose’s one month brought painful reversals, says APC

    Fayose’s one month brought painful reversals, says APC

    THE All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has lamented the hardship which the administration of Governor Ayodele Fayose has allegedly brought upon residents.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatunbosun, the party said while it was the practice in other states to celebrate their governor’s achievements after a month in office, the experience in Ekiti State “is that of gloom, anger, frustration and disappointment by the people”.

    Olatunbosun said rather than offer hopes of better livelihood for the people as promised during his campaigns, the governor had been playing what he called “politics of deception”.

    His words: “Before the election, he created the impression that within one month, Ekiti State would have become an El Dorado where the people will have all the comfort and necessities of life.

    “He undermined everything done by his predecessor, Kayode Fayemi, to put the state on the fast lane of development.

    “Fayose has been saying his development agenda was enough to allow the common man get the best out of life.

    “But what do we have so far and what do we expect from the foundation Fayose is laying?

    “Of course, a journey back to Egypt, hopelessness, job losses and the old practice of governance by deceit.

    “The closure of the Federal College, Isan-Ekiti, sealing of the petrol stations belonging to opposition politicians, outrageous award of contract to put marble in front of the Government House, which he had earlier described as too expensive; repainting of the newly painted building and relaying of asphalt on an already asphalted road leading to the lodge were awarded to his sister’s company.

    “To add salt to injury, artisans were “imported” from Ibadan when many Ekiti artisans could do the job. This was a man who claimed to be a friend of the masses.

    “He is repainting the Governor’s Office awarded by direct labour at the cost of N200million to his brother. He told the permanent secretary, General Administration Department and Head of Service to find alternative entrance for civil servants working within the Governor’s Office building because he doesn’t want to be meeting the “evil servants” while coming in at the main entrance.

    “The civil servants in the Governor’s Office now pass through the back to their offices, yet this is the class of people he professed to be his friends before the election.

    “He has also cancelled the appointment of eight permanent secretaries who were legally appointed after passing necessary examinations according to the service rules.

    “Fayose also collected September federal allocation but used it to pay October salary while refusing to pay September salary.

    “He has sacked 800 street sweepers; the state capital is now dotted with refuse dumps, thus making a mess of Fayemi’s urban renewal scheme.

    “Security of lives and property is at risk, as banks in the state refused to open for business to protest incessant robberies.

    “The governor did not spare the House of Assembly from humiliation and blackmail over non-confirmation of his commissioner-nominees and failure to grant his request to dissolve the local councils as he froze the House’s accounts in reprisal.

    “For the first time in its history, Ekiti was in darkness for 15 days. He has reduced the running grants of civil servants by half and annulled the promotions of about 5,000 civil servants promoted last year and slashed the allowances of traditional rulers by 60 per cent; yet these are the people he raised their hopes before election.

    “The Internally Generated Revenue started declining from N400 million in June (immediately he was declared governor-elect). It has now gone down to an embarrassing N120 million in November from N600million attained by Fayemi in the last three and half years.

    “It is a pity that rather than celebrating one month of progress and development from where his predecessor stopped, the new administration is busy chasing shadows, boring the people with the same old tale of what his predecessor did or did not do. Ekiti deserves more than these jesters in government.”

  • Hardball challenges Fayose to a beering contest

    Hardball challenges Fayose to a beering contest

    Now Hardball is full of envy for the great people of Ekiti State. Why am I not an Ekitite? Perhaps one should begin to consider relocating to that land of knowledge and learning, considering the epochal novelty exfoliating therefrom.

    We, the untutored, were grappling with the concept of Stomach Infrastructure (SI) and having our laughs when whiz governor, the new kid on the block handed us the operational definition of SI without further ado. He simply created a Department of Stomach Infrastructure (DSI) in his Expanded Executive Council and appointed a Special Assistant and a Personal Assistant for that all-important task. All this happened on inauguration day – no debate, no grammar and no memoranda. Governance made easy, simple and straightforward. The KISS factor – keep it simple stupid!

    There are reasons aplenty why some of us are lost in lustful longing for the Ekiti treat and would yet migrate to that Odua heartland. Have you heard that the ‘gallant guber’, the ‘gods’ gift to his people, Governor Ayo Fayose, is already preparing for a bounteous Christmas for his people in the spirit of stomach infrastructure?

    Hear him: “Christmas is coming, why do people go out of their ways to be shopping or doing other things if it is not just to make people merry?

    “So I’m grooming chicken, buying rice, yams, plantain and the rest of them. I am sure if I give them to families during the festive period, they will be happy. So stomach infrastructure is a way of life.”

    By Jove, it promises to be a bumper of a Christmas for the great people of Ekiti this season and for many seasons ahead. Wow, the thought of a specially-groomed chicken from the gubernatorial poultry! Good people of Ekiti, brace for the time of your lives. It’s goodbye to poverty, goodbye to hunger and your welfare is assured. It’s goodbye to crimes too for as your governor has posited, most people who commit crime do so because they feel that life no longer holds any sweetness for them and there is no comforter anywhere.

    This is unassailable Fayosean intervention which requires no further intellectual interrogation. But Hardball’s concerns and fascinations are with the governor’s proposition that he does his beer (not drink, mind you) with his people every Friday. Bingo! Hardball hereby challenges the quaffing governor to a beering session one of these cool Friday evenings.

    What joy that would bring; how that would release a glorious spirit of the Muse like a billion confetti into Hardball’s universe. And what would be the governor’s brand? What would be the accompaniment to his beer – nkwobi, isiewu, sizzling cow-tail soup or pepper snails? What would be His Excellency’s delight?

    How many bottles can he knock down? Real men; the beer parlour bums would undo their belt and kill the bottles until they lose count or they count loosely, whichever one happens first. In fact great aficionados would sit at the command position, make sure the table never grows bare or cold and they hold court as loudly as they can. Most notably, they seem to possess the supernatural powers to pass on their consumption to others around the table so that as the hours grow thin they can rise and traipse into the night, leaving their co-quaffers inebriated and in a semi-horizontal posture. Let’s meet at the parlour Mr. Governor.

  • Blame Fayose for insecurity, says APC

    Blame Fayose for insecurity, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has said Governor Ayodele Fayose should be blamed for the rising insecurity in the state.

    A statement by the Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatunbosun, said since the governor’s inauguration, the state had been in the news for all the bad reasons.

    The party cited two bank robberies in Ifaki and Ikere and blamed Fayose for the lackadaisical attitude on law enforcement.

    Olatunbosun said: “Ex-Governor Kayode Fayemi took security issues seriously while in office.

    “He funded security agencies that the law enforcement agents were willing to do their jobs. That was why there were no reports of security challenges during his tenure.

    “We have it on good authority that the governor has cut by half security votes to the police, army, DSS and Civil Defence .

    “When you don’t have good equipment and the ones you have cannot be maintained, then you expose security agents to attacks.

    “The criminals are also emboldened to ply their trade. That is why you have robbers writing to the banks.

    “Investors are leaving the state in droves because their investment could not be guaranteed.

    “The governor, at his inauguration, promised Ekiti people adequate security, but the reality on ground points to a breach of that promise.

    “The total darkness in Ekiti State has also compounded the problem.”

    The party urged the governor to concentrate on providing adequate security, instead of pursuing perceived political enemies.

  • Fayose freezes Assembly’s accounts

    Fayose freezes Assembly’s accounts

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose has reportedly frozen the accounts of the House of Assembly.

    The Speaker, Dr Adewale Omirin, has condemned what he calls the incessant blackmail and intimidation of the House by the government.

    He said Fayose’s reactions to the refusal of the All Progressives Congress (APC) members to join the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were going beyond approved standards of modern governance.

    A statement by his Special Adviser on Media, Wole Olujobi, said the latest allegation of the demand of N135 million for the screening of commissioner-nominees was a propaganda taken too far.

    The Speaker said the reports in the media were misleading and the House would not be distracted from making quality laws for Ekiti people as done in the last four years without asking for money.

    The statement said: “The standard practice is to present the list of the nominees to plenary; the nominees will follow with the submission of their credentials. They will be screened before confirmation.

    “The governor sent three names on Monday and the list was read that day. Since it was a public document, we read the letter the second day at plenary.

    “Nobody submitted any credential. We don’t know the nominees. They have not submitted their credentials for the appropriate committees to screen them. It is surprising that the governor expects the House to confirm the nominees immediately. This is strange in parliamentary conduct.”

    Omirin said the governor responded by freezing the bank accounts of the House of Assembly.

    “One arm of government cannot close down the activities of the other.How can you elevate intimidation and blackmail to an art of governance?

    “The chief judge was blackmailed that he took a bribe of N20million to stall hearing on the local council development areas case and another alleged N200million to reassign the E-11’s perjury case to Justice Olusegun Ogunyemi to return a guilty verdict on the governor.

    “After the judiciary had been blackmailed to submission, it is now the turn of the parliament to be brought to its knees by blackmailing members and freezing the accounts of the House as if the House is a department in the Governor’s Office.”

    The Speaker said the governor would have himself to blame if he continued in his anti-democratic conduct.

    “All members mentioned in the bribery scandal would go to court to seek justice. Ekiti radio and television managements would account for libel contained in their broadcasts.

    “All those involved in concocting these damaging acts will be made to account for their actions,” he said.

    Omirin said for pointing Fayose’s attention to the subsisting case on the local government in court, police and PDP thugs yesterday ransacked the home of Kayode Fasakin (Ekiti West Constituency II).

    The Speaker said the House would meet over  “the reckless use” of the state media to blackmail the lawmakers, even as he added that the Nigeria Broadcasting Commission (NBC) would be put on notice on the reckless and unprofessional use of the media to haunt the opposition.

    But Fayose’s Chief Press Secretary Idowu Adelusi  dismissed the allegations.

    He said: “Governor Fayose has not ordered the freezing of the accounts of the House of Assembly and neither has he asked anybody to insult or assault the Speaker.

    “The Speaker should understand that today Fayose is his governor, and the office is sacred, and he is the symbol of Ekiti people.

    “If he in the name of politics continues to denigrate that office, he is denigrating the Ekiti people.”

  • Governor slams NERC for blackout

    Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose has slammed the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) for the power outage in the state.

    Fayose said in the last 12-15 days, the state has been in darkness. Ifaki-Ekiti has not had light for over 10 months.

    The governor promised to pay N5million owed by the people.

    Fayose spoke yesterday in Abuja at an emergency meeting with NERC and CEOs of some of the power transmission companies.

    He said: “You know that I am new, even though I am also old because I only went on sabbatical. All I want to add to Ekiti is value and make a difference because if as a state we continue to live on diesel, knowing well how financially challenged we are, you know what it will entail.

    “This issue of electricity is presently a challenge in my state and I intend to change it because all I want is solution on how it can be made better. It is really difficult to know who to relate to.”

    NERC CEO Sam Amadi told the governor that the problem in Ekiti was a failure of transmission.

  • Judge quits Fayose’s eligibility case

    Judge quits Fayose’s eligibility case

    The “eligibility” case against Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose, which was to be heard today at the State High Court, in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, may not hold as Justice Isaac Ogunyemi has reportedly quit the case.

    Mr. Justice Ogunyemi, in an earlier ruling, on the ‘eligibility’ case instituted by an Ekiti group, E-11, assumed jurisdiction to hear and try the case.

    E-11 had contended in its application that Governor Fayose, as the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), lacked the eligibility (integrity) to contest any elective position, having been indicted by an administrative panel in 2006 for “gross misconduct” and “impeached”.

    E-11 alleged that the facts regarding this impeachment were not disclosed by Fayose in the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Form CF001.

    Mr. Justice Ogunyemi, according to a source, had cited “threats to his life” as an excuse for quitting the case.

    The source said: “Mr. Justice Ogunyemi has returned the case file to the registrar.

    “I can confirm that the lawyers have been informed not to come to court today.”

    The PDP had urged the Chief Judge, Justice Ayodeji Daramola, to re-assign the case to another judge, alleging that Justice Ogunyemi had been compromised and that its interest would not be protected with his continued handling of the case.

    When reassigned, the new judge will be the fifth to handle the matter.