Tag: Gov. Ibikunle Amosun

  • We will not demolish any village for new Polytechnic – Amosun

    We will not demolish any village for new Polytechnic – Amosun

    Gov. Ibikunle Amosun on Friday said that no village would be demolished for the establishment of the new Ogun State Polytechnic at Iwuku in Ipokia Local Government area of the state.

    Amosun made the promise at the foundation laying ceremony at the site of the main campus of the institution in Ipokia.

    The governor said that the decision to establish the school in Iwuku, Ipokia, was not to inconvenience the indigenes of the area, but to fulfil one of his electioneering campaign promises to the people.

    He pleaded with traditional rulers and village heads in the area to moderate their traditional festivals and other traditional activities for the sake of the incoming students.

    He appealed to the traditionalists in Yewaland and environs to accommodate prospective students of the institution.

    The governor emphasised on ‘Oro festival’ which the community is known for and appealed to adherents to limit the timing of their rites to midnights.

    Amosun said that it was when development was allowed in any community that the culture and tradition of such community could also be developed.

    “We have our tradition and culture, but we must moderate it. We will do our ‘Oro festival’, but it is better done in the dead of the night because we want development.

    “We don’t want a situation where students will resume and their movements will be restricted at times when they should be in school. It is when we have development that our culture and tradition can be developed.”

    The governor said that the establishment of the institution in Ipokia would change the landscape of Ogun West, adding that well meaning individuals in the area should contribute to its development.

    He said the establishment of the polytechnic in Ipokia was part of his administration’s socio-economic blueprint to locate infrastructure across the nooks and cranes of the state.

    The governor said that the institution would take off in October or November as directed by the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE).

    Oba Kehinde Olugbenle, Olu of Ilaro and paramount ruler of Yewaland, advised all the Obas and village heads in the area to moderate traditions and apply wisdom in order to allow for smooth running of the new institution.

    “I have to say this here, the Obas and Baales in Ipokia should moderate some traditions in this area, we should apply wisdom because we need to accommodate these students and lecturers coming around.

    “We are not saying we should stop our culture and tradition, but we must apply wisdom and moderate what we are doing. We have started in part of Yewaland, we must also do same here in order to allow development,’’ he said.

    Olugbenle called on all sons and daughters of the area to support government’s gesture by donating structures for the quick take off of the polytechnic.

    Mr Suraj Adekunbi, the Speaker, Ogun Assembly, commended the government for locating the school in Yewaland.

    Those present at the ceremony include the Deputy Governor, Mrs Yetunde Onanuga, Chief of Staff, Odebiyi, Head of Service, Abayomi Sobande, All Progressive Congress (APC) National Financial Secretary, Alhaji Tajudeen Bello and members of the state executive council.

  • OGBC workers begin strike over unpaid salaries

    Workers in Ogun State Broadcasting Corporation (OGBC) in Abeokuta on Wednesday started an indefinite strike over unpaid four months’ salaries.
    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) gathered that the workers arrived at the station around 5..00 a.m and locked the studio and offices to prevent the 
general manager and top management staff from having access to their offices.
    The workers, who were led by Mr Abiodun Ogundipe, Chairman, Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) and Mr Ayo Aina, Chairman, Radio, Television and Theatre Arts Workers (RATTAWU), had issued a three-day warning to the management to pay the salaries.
    Ogundipe told NAN that there was no going back on the strike until their demands were met.

    He said that the state Head of Service, Mr Abayomi Sobande, had visited the workers and appealed to them, promising that something would be done.
    “Sobande said we should allow for skeletal services pending the time they would get back to us before the close of work.

    “We are not going back on the strike. The strike has not been suspended, we will continue until our demands are met, “he said.

    NAN reports that the workers, had during a press conference on Friday, threatened an indefinite strike from Wednesday over non-payment of outstanding salaries.
    The  workers said that  inspite of  issuing three different notices to the management, nothing was done  to pay the outstanding salaries.

    Apart from the arrears of salaries, the workers are also claiming that some pension deductions from 2012 till date totalling about N50 million had not been remitted.
    The workers said deductions to the National Housing Fund of over N2 million were not remitted.

    The workers, however, commended Gov. Ibikunle Amosun for increasing the monthly subvention to the station from N3.5 million to N10 million.

    Some armed police officers were seen at the entrance of the station.

     

  • Amosun swears in three new judges

    Amosun swears in three new judges

    Three new judges were on Thursday sworn-in by Gov. Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun at a ceremony held at the Executive Council Chamber of the Governor’s  Office  at Oke-Mosan in Abeokuta.

    The newly appointed judges are Mr John Olatokunbo, Mrs Abiodun Shobayo and Mrs Eniola Fabamwo.

    Amosun urged the judges to uphold the principles of fairness and equity in the administration of justice in the state.

    He added that they should see their appointments as a call to service, adding that the assignment was coming with greater dedication and commitment.

    “I appreciate the serving judges in the state for distancing themselves from all forms of attitude that could bring the judiciary arm of the state to disrepute.

    “Even in the face of overwhelming challenges confronting the arm and the nation at large, it is important to be more resolute in discharging justice to all persons without fear or favour, “ Amosun said.

    The new judges, who expressed gratitude to the governor for their appointments, gave an assurance that they would contribute their quota toward  efficient administration of justice in the state.

  • Gov. Ibikunle Amosun, the people are still not smiling

    •(A reminder to a bungling governor)

    gun State still looms like a gothic platitude of pain and death from its transit townships but the “Gateway State” remains Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s bower of bliss. There, in his stately Eden, Amosun  lives immune and insensate to the ravages of ill-will and pent-up fury tearing the natives apart from inside out. Governor Amosun must be having a blast inside the Government House at Oke Mosan. He does not have to rise and retire to his bed everyday wondering if he would die along the deadly stretch of Lagos-Abeokuta highway, particularly at the spots where innocent children, mothers, fathers – dependants and breadwinners – die like stray fowls, accidentally or by installments, in his administrative landmine.

    Governor Amosun’s loved ones are extremely lucky; unlike the mother who left home with her three children only for them to be brought back as mangled corpses from an accident, caused by bad road, to the deceased’s husband. Amosun is certainly favoured by the ‘gods,’ unlike the bereaved families who sent their wards to school only to receive news that they had been crushed to death by a steel container in a gory accident along the Sagamu-Benin expressway. Is Governor Amosun neglecting that death trap because it is a ‘federal road?’ If that is the case, is Governor Amosun solely remunerated from revenue he makes from Ogun State or from the ‘federal purse?’

    Governor Amosun is one lucky dude as he does not have to live up to the promise he made to the poor, hopeless pupils of the Community Primary School, off Agoro road, Owode-Titun, Ota, Ogun State. One year and six months after they lost their classrooms to a violent rain squall, most of the 740 pupils have been learning with tears, under a crooked shed held together by wooden poles and corrugated iron sheets. The school’s Parents Teachers Association (PTA) constructed the shed last year when it was clear that the state government will not come to the children’s rescue. Although Governor Amosun promised to rebuild the school when his campaign train visited the area to seek re-election, he has since forgotten his promise and the area.

    Thus through scorching sun blaze and violent rain squalls, the pupils huddle together helplessly, in futile lunges for comfort and cover from the ravages of nature, tearing at their fragile frames. For the only public primary school in the community, the descent into decay started in May last year, when a rainstorm blew off the roof of the block of six classrooms and the staff room. The storm also tore off the entire side of the building. Yet Governor Amosun conveniently forgets the sad fate of the poor pupils of Community Primary School in Owode-Titun, Ota.

    Some cratered meters from the school, the stars are still a backdrop for the inhuman condition at Owode junction, just before you get to Ifo. Is Governor Amosun waiting for that expedient moment of disaster or road mishap of immense magnitude to occur before he swoops in with a bereaved mien and overzealous aides, to misappropriate anguish where he feels none?

    The natives of Ijoko, Agoro, Ijako, Iyana-Ilogbo, Ilepa, Ijoko, Alade, Oju Ore, Ilo-Awela, Elekunmefa, Imise, Onihale, Singer, Lusada, Ewekoro, Atan-Ota and Igbesa to mention a few, are still dying slowly and accidentally, from the perils of plying their muddy and badly cratered roads and there is still ugliness in Lafenwa, Aiyetoro, Olugbode and various communities along Itele road.

    From a distance, the piercing and indiscriminate glare of sunlight and moonshine desecrate these townships like tombs slipshodly carved along the graying highway that leads to Abeokuta, Ogun State’s capital city. Closer, the people and houses in the communities take shape like a stream of accidental shadows, their hard noises striking one’s face and making the senses numb with jarring clarity. It is their noiseless undertones that however, evoke intense feelings of awe and curiosity. Sad desperate glances of the natives inspire a thirst for buried narratives that they miserably learn to endure as unreal jests made by death.

    Guess his Excellency in Ogun State, has learnt to glance without flinching at the straggle of human suffering emblematic of the pale ghost of his “Gateway State.” Wonder if he is unaware of the deaths and squalor across the townships; wonder if he knows that there are schools with better structures, histories, progressive and ideological foundations that deserve as much attention and support as he is currently giving his model schools’ phantasm; wonder if he simply chooses to ignore the descent of the tourist tracts where decay and death spit venom at the hapless citizenry, like Siamese cobras every day.

    Governor Amosun is probably unmoved to affect heart-felt responses to the malaise. Perhaps he is making spirited gestures even as you read to extend citizenry-centred governance cum democratic dividends to the disillusioned natives of the state. Perhaps he just doesn’t know how to go about it.

    Ignorance is not an excuse for denying the citizenry good governance and their fundamental human rights. It is no longer tenable to hoodwink the citizenry by chants of ‘Change’ and platitudinous avowal to abolish squalor and foster general prosperity; time has revealed what section of the citizenry such ideological ‘life boat’ solutions are meant to deceive. It shall no longer be “politically expedient” to neglect a class of the governed just because, by will or circumstance, they inhabit parts of state the ruling class would rather not lose sleep over; except at the time of election or re-election.

    Governor Amosun is spending his second term in office which makes it even more dangerous for the APC to maintain dominance in Ogun State if he fails. When the party eventually presents its candidates for public offices in 2019, what glowing achievements will it point to as Amosun’s legacy and reasons why it should be given the people’s mandate again? The oft over-hyped and derided bridges and roads in Abeokuta? Or the equally contentious model school projects? These familiar arguments have gotten too old now and they are infinitely strange to the poor citizenry braving the perils of the state’s townships every day.

    Life in Ogun State’s townships is in grave decline. Together, these neglected tracts constitute an ambiguous ‘sick rose’ accentuating Ogun State’s descent into a food for worms even as you read. Though a sick rose, Ogun State is manouvered to mimic a growth cycle in the hands of Amosun and amid the rabid PR blitz launched and managed by Camp Amosun.

    That is why the state government will do nothing even if foreign investors  cum fortune hunters like cement giant, LafargeWAPCO Plc, subjects its host communities to terminal death, by its dangerous production activities, in desperate pursuit of profit. (It is instructive to note that LafargeWAPCO perpetrates in Ogun State, atrocities it wouldn’t dare commit in France and other European nations but that is a discussion for another day.)

    Ogun State’s manifestation as a sick rose satirizes Governor Amosun’s preferred portraits of it as a bower of bliss. It reveals an inner hostility; the governor’s flirtatious art of concealment necessitates that truth’s approach must take the form of a rape. If not, the people of Ogun State will continue to die by the onslaught of the conqueror maggots of hypocrisy, neglect, arrant betrayal and underdevelopment afflicting the state.

    Does Governor Amosun, like too many of his peers, consider truth as he hates to see it, as a perverse fetish? Does he believe that any critique or contradiction of his gospel of ‘Change’ is a swerve from goodwill and fruitfulness? If so, his much celebrated ‘Change’ project is diametrically opposed to the APC’s gospel of ‘Change.’