Tag: Fayose

  • 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.

  • Don’t destroy agric college, Ekiti APC urges Fayose

    Don’t destroy agric college, Ekiti APC urges Fayose

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has urged Governor Ayo Fayose to stop attacks on the people of Isan Ekiti and the removal of equipment at the College of Agriculture in the town.

    In a statement by its spokesperson, Taiwo Olatubosun, the party said Isan was the latest community to be singled out for vengeance and persecution by Fayose.

    It added that the college’s destruction would thwart the food security and livelihood programme conceived by his predecessor, Dr Kayode Fayemi.

    The governor allegedly sent people to the college on Wednesday to remove farm equipment.

    They were resisted by women and men, young and old. Children were said to have joined in the mass protest.

    The statement reads: “Signs that the governor will interfere with the college manifested immediately he assumed office three weeks ago when he said he was not going to recognise the college.

    “The people were prepared for him and that was why they resisted those he sent to the town to remove the tractors and equipment.

    “We are also aware that the Provost and Bursar were mandated to release about N40 million left in the school’s account.

    “Fayose is a leopard that can never change its spot. This is a man who deceived the world that he has changed only to embark on a vicious revenge mission against his perceived political and personal enemies.

    “He closed down the Federal Government College in the town without any reason and relocated the Agricultural Development Programme office (ADP) from Isan.

    “Fayose is doing this to get back at Isan community where former Governor Kayode Fayemi hails from and because it is in his character to always undermine the achievements of his predecessors.

    “The governor should see himself as the governor of all and should promote harmony rather than fan the embers of discord by setting communities against one another.

    “This is a man who vowed to have forgiven his enemies in church only for him the following day, to seal the petrol station of the Speaker of the House of Assembly.

    “He should take a cue on magnanimity from Fayemi who inherited Ado-Ifaki road from his predecessor, Segun Oni and completed the project despite the fact that Oni hails from Ifaki. So why is Fayose punishing Isan community because of Fayemi?

    “We wish to appeal to President Goodluck Jonathan to prevail on Fayose not to carry out his threat of crushing the people as the consequences will be too grave.

    “He will be held responsible for his policy against the people of Isan Ekiti, who have committed no offence other than protecting their remaining legacy.

    “We also wish to remind the governor that the college was established by an Act of the House of Assembly therefore, his move against the school is a breach of the law.

    “Fayose should stop being petty and live up to his promise of making life easy for Ekiti people and not unleash terror on communities he perceived as enemies.”

  • I’ll leave Ekiti better, says Fayose

    I’ll leave Ekiti better, says Fayose

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose has assured residents of his commitment to “greater Ekiti” during his tenure.

    The governor, who spoke through his Chief Press Secretary, Idowu Adelusi, in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, yesterday, said the administration would work not only to meet but surpass the people’s expectations.

    He urged the people to promptly pay their taxes, levies and rates, adding that government would also respond to such gesture responsibly.

    Adelusi’s words: “We know the expectations are high and we are in a tough period as far as the economy is concerned. We are taking note of all the advice given us by people and groups.

    “For instance, we appreciate the Ekiti Council of Elders on the advice that we embark on projects that have quick and direct bearing on the welfare of the people.

    “We will not shy away from the provision of physical infrastructure, just as we will create the atmosphere for people to earn decent living and be able to take care of their emotional needs.

    “From what is happening in the international oil market and the subsequent drop in federal allocations, it is obvious that we have to look more inwards in generating revenue and we appeal to those in charge to support us in blocking leakages and raising the bar.

    “Those in the House of Assembly and our judicial officers must know that we are all Ekiti people and we must work together to make our state great. Nobody should allow for distractions. No matter our political persuasions, the interest of Ekiti comes first.”

  • Senator accuses Fayose of picking  Assembly candidates

    Senator accuses Fayose of picking Assembly candidates

    Senator Ayo Arise has accused Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose of picking the 26 candidates ahead of tomorrow’s ward congresses of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Arise, who spoke with reporters yesterday in Oye-Ekiti, said: “I have been inundated with calls that the governor has a list of all 26 candidates for the House of Assembly elections.

    “To my surprise, I heard the governor called a meeting and read out the list of candidates. What is the meaning of Saturday’s congresses then?”

    Arise, who is vying for the Senate, warned that the purported move by Fayose could destroy the party and make nonsense the genuine contributions of notable members.

    He said: “It seems as if Governor Fayose was possessed by demons immediately he assumed office. As we speak, he has drawn the list of 26 House of Assembly members, thereby shutting out other aspirants.

    “Aside this, he had instructed my challenger, Duro Faseyi, to draw up the list of delegates for Ekiti North primaries, which shows that I have been rigged out.

    “I supported Fayose before the election, but as a party man, I will not fold my arms and allow him ruin this party.

    “Now we are just going to the congress to go and waste our time. We cannot run an election this way. Some of us are decent. Let us follow rules and the constitution.

    “Let aspirants go for the form and contest the primary. We are all his loyalists. We all worked for his success. He should not ruin the party because he does not want anything again.

    “This is an election within the same party and not between PDP and other parties. All of us within the party are working for 2015. There must be a congress where three ad- hoc delegates will emerge from the wards.

    “All we are asking for is for a level-playing field. This is the same party, the same PDP, it is not an election between two opposition parties.

    “It is an election among people who are of the same family who worked to ensure the success of this party at the last election.

    “ I believe that with that success we will be able to translate it for success in 2015 for Mr. President and the National Assembly members.

    “Duro Faseyi did not win his ward. It is an anomaly for him to win a ticket against me. People like me will not keep quiet. The President and PDP should call Fayose to order.

    “When someone begins to play god, he will destroy not only himself but the party. All I want is free and fair election. The Yoruba say if you are given a bad name, act to prove them wrong. Why should Fayose begin to “backslide” two weeks after he became governor?”

    But Fayose’s Chief Press Secretary Idowu Adelusi said the governor had no plans to short change any aspirant.

    He said: “Everyone in the party will stand for primaries where the delegates will choose who will represent them. To be a candidate of the governor does not exclude you from the primaries.

    “The governor has no favourite candidate. It will be a free and fair congress. He does not have an approved list of delegates. Nobody will be treated as a sacred cow.

    “Nobody will be deprived of the right to contest. Senator Ayo Arise is a leader of the party. If he feels aggrieved or noticed that something is wrong, he should meet with the governor or resort to party mechanism rather than going to the press.”

  • Declare your assets, Fayose told

    Declare your assets, Fayose told

    A group, Ekiti Youth Vanguard, has urged Governor Ayo Fayose to declare his assets.

    In a statement by its spokesperson, Charles Fakunle, the group said Fayose should emulate his predecessor by making a timely and public declaration of his assets within his first month in office.

    Former Governor Kayode Fayemi deposed to the Assets Declaration Form for Public Officers at the Registry of the State High Court, Ado-Ekiti, barely a month after assuming office.

    Fayemi is the first governor of the state to have made public his worth in cash and assets.

    “It is high time we started holding our leaders accountable in this country.

    “Fayose has been making it a public issue that his predecessor had acquired so much. We now challenge him to also make a public declaration of how little or much he was able to acquire outside of politics.

    “Such move by Fayose will not only reveal the true position of his assets, but also defray rumours that he has acquired properties in Lagos, Abuja, Ibadan and Ado Ekiti through some shady means.

    “We are also aware of the allegation of N1.3billion fraud hanging on his neck which he is yet to clear himself.”

  • Fayose appoints campaign DG as Chief of Staff

    Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, on Wednesday appointed the Director-General of his campaign organisation, Barr. Dipo Anisulowo, as his Chief of Staff.

    The governor also appointed Chief Bisi Kolawole, a former member of the Ekiti State House of Assembly, as his Special Assistant on Environment.

    The Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Idowu Adelusi, who announced appointments, said they take immediate effect.

  • Ekiti to build more roads

    Ekiti to build more roads

    The Ekiti State government has assured residents that the Fayose-led administration will complete all road projects and build new ones.

    The Special Adviser to the Governor on Works and Infrastructure,

    Kayode Oso, said this in Ado Ekiti while addressing staff of the Ministry of Works and Infrastructure and officers of the State Traffic Management Authority.

    The aide warned that the administration would not tolerate shoddy jobs, emphasising that sluggish execution of projects would be frowned upon.

    He advised officials of the State Traffic Management Authority to discharge their duties fairly.

  • After all said and done, Ekiti demand action from Fayose

    After all said and done, Ekiti demand action from Fayose

    After all the hoopla about the June 21 election in Ekiti State and assumption of office of Governor  Ayodele Fayose, the attention has turned finally to how far and soon it will take the new helmsman to prove the electorate right on their choice at the polls writes SULAIMAN SALAWUDEEN

    The vast drama space which Ekiti became in the heat of the June 21 election has lately receded, yielding space for a palpably settled vista, where the actors have changed performances and expectations of residents assuming more prominence.

    No more long convoys of siren-blaring vehicles in breakneck speeds heading in opposite directions; large gatherings of party peoples here and there about the state and almost at same time, spawning and spewing as much promises as they do diatribes across loud speakers; larger than life banners of seekers after the target seat in the state in open spaces, street sides, at spots both likely and unlikely.

    While express pronouncements of the new Governor Ayodele Fayose have quite often betrayed awareness of the needs of the citizenry especially in terms of empowerment and livelihood, there also are such needs which residents from one community to another in the state, especially in Ado-Ekiti, capital of the state, seem to seek the state government’s urgent intervention.

    These included good, motorable access roads in the communities; electricity power supply; provision of good drinking water; safety of lives and security of properties; and such other demands which the leadership’s routine neglect and pretence have accorded continuing relevance across the tiers in our immediate Nigeria milieu. But again, the issue is not entirely how quick will expectations be met, but even how far will remedies when offered would also last?

    Motorable access roads in communities

    As often generally acknowledged, the last administration of Governor Kayode Fayemi had, through its popular urban renewal initiative instituted lasting changes in road infrastructure in the state. All major roads in Ado and across other 132 towns and communities in the state have either been rehabilitated or reconstructed, while link roads through the towns have been generously attended to.

    But the tales and experiences in the communities within Ado township much as elsewhere in other towns in the state, have remained baleful.

    The jutting-jangling of movements resulting from erosion-afflicted passages and ways had constrained vehicle-using house owners in communities from Basiri-Nova area on Iyin road to Ajebandele on Ikere road, and other areas of the capital often to abandon the luxury of such blessings metres away from their homes and seek less pleasant alternatives.

    Lamenting the fate of unmotorable link roads within the communities, Chief Nnamdi Iwuchukwu, a resident of Oke-Ala/Oseromi Church area in Basiri area maintained “Our major problem here is road. Next to it is electricity supply. The roads have been the trouble for us as long we came to settle”.

    According to him, the situation has so many effects which he noted included denials of access to places; high cost of maintenance of automobiles; parking vehicles at distances and making do with alternatives like trekking or using commercial motorcycles to access locations.

    Nnamdi’s words: “Most of those living anywhere here from Basiri to communities on Nova Road can no more drive their vehicles to their houses. Go and find out, the roads are just too bad. Although the last governor (Fayemi) tried on the major roads, the ones in the inner communities need to be given attention now.

    “Even those who insist on managing the roads come to regrets almost all the time. Their vehicles spoil too often, constraining them to consulting the mechanics every other day. What really is the enjoyment in having a car when someone would seek the grace of the mechanic too often?”

    “The new governor should assist us. We park our cars somewhere else and trek down to our houses. If we have loads to move to the houses from the vehicles, we carry them on our heads or we hire Okada (commercial motorcycles)”, he said.

    As a way out, Nnamdi explained that “I know constructing drainages to channel the paths of flood will help the roads. I am not an engineer but if the government can construct drainage channels on the roads, the problem would be greatly solved. Just as the last government had focused on major roads, let Fayose  concentrate on the roads within and between communities. We will be happy”.

    The hills and the urgency of dredging

    Findings however confirm that a major contributor to the worrisome situation of roads is the surrounding hills in most communities which channel flood water down the hillsides at a speed which must wash away road portions, rendering them most often impassable and their very habitations deluged.

    Residents especially around Oke Ala said when floods rush down the hills, they also pack heavy quantity of sand alongside other debris onto the Iyin-Ado express road, a situation which almost always impose tasks on residents who often battle to clear away such dangerous debris off the road.

    Nnamdi said: “Whenever heavy rain falls, large quantity of sand are washed unto the main Basiri Road which also tends to weaken the road at such unfortunate portions. But the sand can lie there unattended for days before someone comes to clear it away.

    “As I have said, the solution is constructing drainage channels for access roads across the communities. These will also lengthen the survival span of the major roads that have been constructed”.

    Regarding equal necessity of dredging to expand the path of flood, Idowu, a resident of Alafiatayo Street on Nova Road explained that when flood paths were constrained, the result had often been to find their ways anyhow with devastating results.

    Her words: “Flood has done a lot of damage to us in this area as it had done in other areas in Ado-Ekiti and elsewhere in the state. Whatever any government does, if adequate attention is not accorded dredging, we will continue to suffer flood effects.

    “Imagine the volume of flood water coming from Basiri, passing through Nova area up to Bawa Estate on Adebayo-Iworoko road and environs and the common effects it has been having on residents. The state government would have to take dredging more seriously if it actually wished to stop the experiences of devastations by flood during rains which have led to losses of both lives and properties.

    Electricity supply/power generation

    Recognising the extreme imperative of electricity supply to enhancing peoples’ empowerment/employment which he had popularly tagged ‘stomach infrastructure’, Governor Fayose at a maiden interaction with journalists after the June 21 election, maintained: “While it will not be practical or possible for me to promise to industrialise Ekiti, what I will do is to support available infrastructure to boost supply. This will help the artisans and attract investors”.

    Indeed, the electricity situation in Ado, based both on experience and general opinion, has lately been parlous, with unsavoury tales of gridlock oozing as much from residents as from small scale industrialists, artisans and hoteliers.

    Findings among residents, especially among the artisans and hoteliers, confirm the lack of electricity supply in Ado during normal work hours. The state capital was lately on permanent and unbroken black-out for six weeks.

    The General Manager, Prosperous Royal Hotels and Suites in the capital, Tope Akinlaja, lamented that “Absence of electricity is the only major challenge facing all businesses here in Ado-Ekiti”.

    Akinlaja said: “We hoteliers have been particularly hit by the problem of inadequate power supply, a situation which has forced us to run diesel-powered generators day and night with attendant effects on cost of our services. Most of our services would be less in cost by at least 25 per cent if electricity supply is better assured.

    “The trend is already having an impact. While most businesses have wound up, the few available ones are reeling under insufficient public-owned electricity supply.

    He equally clarified that individually and collectively, efforts have been made to see to the improvement of supplies to no avail.

    “We have visited the Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) to no avail”. If the new administration can meet with the suppliers, they will say what the problem is and what to do for us to have the change we need”, Akinlaja said.

    Provision of drinking water

    Despite huge attention of the last administration in Ekiti State to improving residents’ access to good drinking water through multi-layered policies and programmes, not much was availed as residents, especially in. Ado-Ekiti still sought water through non-public, often unsafe, arrangements.

    This much was admitted by the Special Adviser to the former governor on Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), Mrs Bunmi Dipo Salami, who attributed the development to the ageing water infrastructure instituted by past administrations and the huge cost needed for reversals.

    The issue came up recently at a two-day International Experts Seminar on Water tagged ‘Water-Tech 2014’ where participants agreed that Ekiti would do with tailor-made solutions for different communities making up the state.

    Speaking at the Seminar, National President of Association of Waterwell Drilling Rig Owners and Practitioners, Mr. Michael Ale, maintained it was an unworkable system to lay pipes to connect different communities when rocky hills feature the landscape everywhere.

    Ale said the solution to the problem would come through sinking of boreholes for each of the communities which can then be encouraged to maintain the facilities through their own individual arrangements.

    His words: “The geological features of Ekiti contribute to the reason the state doesn’t have water. If you see the undulating nature, it is not because the government is not doing its part”.

    He tasked the Federal and State Governments on the need to increase access to portable water by brokering partnerships with competent local and foreign experts, adding the experience of the experts count for desirable solution.

    Ale equally urged the State governor to see the importance of water to livelihood and achievement of his stomach infrastructure programme for the people.

    He said: “His Excellence believes in stomach infrastructure.  Stomach Infrastructure is 70 percent water because you can’t eat raw food or meat”, he said.

    Safety and security of life property

    The last administration went distances to improve the security situation in the state beyond where it met same on assuming headship in October 2010.

    As often noted by then Governor Fayemi and acknowledged by many residents, there was marked and significant improvement upon the “one week, one trouble” phase which typified life then in the state.

    To achieve this, it would be recalled, the governor donated about 40 well-kitted vans for day and night surveillance and patrols by the police and also commissioned a N20 million worth Security and Alert System to enable the Police monitor, through a control room located within the precincts of its headquarters, security situation  especially in Ado-Ekiti.

    Immediately noticeable then was the reduction in day-time armed robbery attacks in the capital in the period which spanned three years and which still subsists till now.

    But crime rate across the hinterland and within communities has remained unbearably high, findings have shown. Few weeks ago, dare-devil bandits waylaid an Ibadan bound bus on Igbaraodo road, shot some occupants and made away with about N1.5 million, a development which was strangely denied by the police.

    Fayose, who himself had recognised the need to sustain attainments of the last administration in the area of security, is being urged by residents to support existing infrastructure to improve the situation in the inner communities.

    A resident who craved confidentiality said: “Though the situation is not like before, burglars and robbers are still very much around in Ado and do very well operate on inter-township roads.

    “In Ado, they have continued to operate in areas like Odo-Ado, Dalimore, Oriire and Omisanjana areas where many residents have lost valuables and sustained gunshot wounds to the marauding hoodlums. Fayose needs to meet with police authorities to change this situation”, he said.

  • An earful from Fayose’s people

    An earful from Fayose’s people

    When I turned in my copy for this space last week (“Fayose 2.0:  A troubling start”), I fully expected that its publication would set off spirited comments, pro and contra, in roughly equal measure.

    I was flat out wrong. Reactions poured forth all right, but they were far more contra than pro. Governor (Dr) Peter Ayodele Fayose’s teeming supporters gave me an earful, and not just on account of the issues I raised in the column.

    In retrospect, I should have kept in mind what a young resident of Ekiti told me in a telephone conversation last June as the returns of the state’s gubernatorial election were being tallied.

    Fayose was going to win and win big, he had asserted.

    “Despite the integrated poultry scam on which he expended hundreds of millions of Naira without producing a single egg?” I asked.

    “The people have largely forgotten, and those who haven’t forgotten don’t care,” he rejoined.

    “And despite facing two murder raps?” I pursued.

    “If Fayose should kill off one-half of the population of Ekiti State,” he said without fear and without revulsion, “the remaining half would still vote for him.”

    This is of course a gross libel on the proud, valiant, principled and highly accomplished sons and daughters of Ekiti I have been privileged to know at work, at play and in social intercourse. Fecklessness is not their defining character.

    My interlocutor, I suspect, was carried away by Fayose’s folksy ways and his capacity for “connecting” with the mass of the people, to the point of believing that his hero could do whatever he needed to do and not have to worry about consequences.

    “We just love him,” he added, in case I didn’t grasp what he had been saying.

    If I had kept this profile in mind, I would perhaps have anticipated the sandbagging that was sure to follow the publication of my October 21 column, “Fayose 2.0: A troubling start.”

    Not all of it was bad news, however.

    Duro Afonja, a longstanding follower of this column from whom we had heard nothing for quite a while entered this thoughtful critique online:

    “It’s too easy to laugh at Fayose, but while shaking our heads over stomach infrastructure, agbo jedi (herbal concoction for haemorroids) etc, it is necessary to conduct an inquiry into what Fayemi did wrong to squander his goodwill to the extent that the people preferred a Fayose’s return to his continuation.

    “The people knew Fayose, so all he said at his 2nd inauguration was not news to them, yet they chose him. Fayemi and the APC crowd took the people for granted, became complacent and rested on their PhDs.

    “Fayemi would have written and delivered a better inaugural address, he’s a gentleman etc. but na dat one the people go chop?

    “Stomach Infrastructure should not just be seen in terms of rice and chicken but in terms of the disconnect of government from the people.”

    Another correspondent, who signed off as “asula”, wrote in a text message:  “Thanks for that wonderful piece on Fayose . . . but with such serious character defect how did he manage to persuade Ekiti kete to elect him for a second time?”

    Also belonging in the category of the more thoughtful reactions is this one:  “I read your column of October 21 with dismay. As an experienced and respected columnist, you didn’t’ seem to see anything good in the inaugural speech of the new governor.  The former governor you eulogised like an angel recorded his own minus while in office. There should be a balance between IDEALISM and PRAGMATISM.  Whatever may be the inaugural speech of the new governor, it is too early to judge and crucify. Be modest in your writings.”

    And this, also:  “You have x-rayed all the misdeeds of Fayose in the past. He didn’t do any good thing?”

    From then on, the text messages, unsigned for the most part, get downright tacky.  Here is a random selection:

    “Olatunji, you talk like a little boy, you have turned your old age into a curse.”

    Another:  “Your write-up today is full of lies and jargons. I know you as a regular beggar at Asiwaju’s residence.”

    You have to wonder what he was doing so regularly at Asiwaju’s residence.  But I digress.

    “Not all pots are black,” wrote another correspondent in an sms. “Believe what you believe and let Fayose be. You are full of emptiness.”

    Yet another wrote, taunting:  “You are obviously a hater and an enemy of progress.  You still can’t digest the fact that a not-too-schooled Fayose upstaged a well-schooled Fayemi. I feel your pain.”

    Then this:  “Your write-up lacked depth. I wonder how you became a professor. You should be ashamed of yourself. At 70, you collect pennies from your paymasters to run elected officials down.”

    You have to wonder how much he collects from his own paymasters. But I digress again, for the last time.

    This next comment cannot but strike you with its lexical freshness. It reads:  “I know quite a few professors who are groundnut materials. You have now joined the list. Hungry professors like you are a shame to academia. Destructive criticism of a man of the people does not serve any good purpose.”

    Me?  “Groundnut professor?” That’s a new one. Who says Fayemi’s people have a monopoly on learning?

    Back during the Babangida era, some young, obviously disgruntled and probably envious junior academics came up with a hilarious taxonomy of the Nigerian professoriate.  First there were those they called agbero intellectuals. The Yoruba prefix denotes the motor-park tout, whose task is to get the vehicle filled with passengers, without the slightest thought about its carrying capacity or its roadworthiness. The only thing he cares about is his commission, calculated from the number of passengers.

    The agbero intellectual, then, served any government in power or any cause, no matter its complexion or ideology. A denizen of the corridors of power, he flaunted his access at the slightest provocation or with no provocation, marshaled the argument to justify any policy. His commission was the trappings of office and, like the motor-park tout, he prized it above all else.

    Then there was the miliki (or playboy) intellectual, cigar-chomping, cognac-swilling, weighed down by gold necklaces, more concerned with living the good life than with changing a footnote, to say nothing of changing a paradigm.  He drove the finest cars and hobnobbed with the men of the moment, the better to indulge in their favourite pastime of influence-peddling.

    I think there was another category – perhaps two — that I cannot recall with confidence. But “groundnut intellectual” or “groundnut professor” was definitely not one of them.

    It is a new entry in the vocabulary of scholarship, for which my correspondent who, most likely from an excess of modesty, chose not to claim ownership.

    Could I through this medium appeal to him to shed his modesty and step forward to claim just credit for what is sure to enter the books as a lexical breakthrough?

    Should Fayose ever require a Senior Special Assistant on Mental Infrastructure, there is his man.

  • APC warns of Fayose’s alleged  ‘squandermania’

    APC warns of Fayose’s alleged ‘squandermania’

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has raised the alarm over what it called the ‘squandermania’ of Governor Ayodele Fayose.

    The party, in a statement at the weekend by its State Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatunbosun, alleged that Fayose bought a N43 million Range Rover while still a governor-elect and passed the bill to the government.

    The statement read: “Our attention has been drawn to a publication where Governor Ayo Fayose reportedly accused his predecessor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, of being after self comfort.

    “If there is any Ekiti governor past or present who is after self comfort but pretends to be a friend and lover of the masses, it is Fayose.

    “The governor’s reference to accreditation of courses at the State University shows that he either lacks information and proper briefing on the transformation that took place under Fayemi or he is simply mischievous.

    “It was during the Fayemi administration that 52 courses were accredited for the first time in the 32 years existence of that institution.

    “The former governor was the first to release N400 million capital grant to the institution.

    “During this period, the College of Medicine which is awaiting accreditation was given approval to operate by the Nigerian Medical Registration Council of Nigeria.

    “Fayose’s attempt to rewrite history will fail because his past antecedents as a master of stunts and a pretender will continue to hunt him as it is doing now.

    “Fayemi’s achievements are there for all to see and no amount of bad blood and hagiography can erase it. It is not by prostrating and weeping before teachers that ensures their welfare but by lasting welfare packages and institutional reforms which his predecessor put in place.

    “Ekiti teachers are one of the best paid in the country with the core subject and rural allowance incentive as well as the 27.5 per cent teachers’ peculiar allowance. Teachers certainly did not earn N19,300 minimum wage during Fayose’s first term.

    “Over 4,000 primary school teachers were promoted by the Fayemi administration; 13, 230 primary and junior secondary school teachers were trained.

    “The standard of education improved considerably under the Fayemi administration and it was not by accident that Ekiti won the best secondary school teacher and second best primary school teacher in Nigeria last year.

    “Performance in WAEC and NECO improved considerably from 24 per cent in 2010 to 53 per cent in 2013.

    “This was how Fayose lied about a non-existent N50 million bed in the Government House. Fayemi served Ekiti with diligence, candour and deprivation.

    “ Fayose knows that he lied about the N3billion cost of the new Government House and we challenge him to release independently verifiable documentary evidence to prove us wrong.

    “Nobody could deny the fact that the Government House is a legacy bequeathed by the Fayemi administration for the use of his successors.

    “No wonder the governor sleeps and works from the same Government House that he has condemned. Whether Fayose likes it or not, Ekiti will forever be grateful for the monument.”