Tag: Kayode Fayemi

  • Fayemi: I’ll account for Ekiti’s finances anytime

    Fayemi: I’ll account for Ekiti’s finances anytime

    EKITI State Governor Kayode Fayemi has promised to account for his management of the state’s finances during the four years of his administration when requested.

    He spoke while addressing citizens during his Thank You tour of Ajoni , Ekiti South East, Ekiti East, Ayekire and Gbonyin councils.

    The governor said he had managed the finances with integrity and this was why the anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), had no reason to come to Ekiti State since he became governor in 2010.

    Fayemi added that he had no reason to tamper with public funds to earn a living; saying that his source of livelihood was not hinged on the state’s treasury.

    He stressed that he came into politics with a name reputed for integrity and would not quit politics with a soiled one.

    While sharing information on how he managed the treasury at the receptions at the headquarters of the councils, the governor said he would be waiting for anyone with  information indicting him for financial misappropriation.

    Fayemi added that he had always given priority to the development of Ekiti State.

    “I need not steal from the coffers of Ekiti State before I can make a living. Anyone who has information that Ekiti money is missing should come and meet me or take me to court. I have a name to protect and so I need not do anything that can soil my name. I am not like some people who do not have Ekiti development at heart,” he said.

    The governor said the state was an open book, even as his government made accountability and transparency its watchword.

    The commitment to transparency, according to him, led to the domestication of the freedom of information act.

    Fayemi stressed that he was the only governor who declared his assets and published it in national newspapers as part of commitment to accountability.

  • Fayemi: we’ll pay August salary

    Fayemi: we’ll pay August salary

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi has assured workers that they would receive their last month salaries before Friday.

    The governor said this yesterday at the launch of his thank you tour of the 35local governments.

    He said the workers know that his administration has not defaulted in the payment of salaries since it came on board in October 2010.

    The governor, who was received with funfair in the councils, said the aim of the tour was to thank the people for their support for his administration.

    Fayemi said the government gets overdraft to pay salaries before the state gets its monthly allocation but the opposition approached the banks in June to prevent the state from getting the loan.

    He said the rumour making the rounds that he was carting away funds is baseless and untrue, noting that all public funds have been judiciously and accountably used in the last four years of his administration.

  • Ekiti: Ifa ti se o! (Ifa has done it!)

    IN Ekiti of Ayo Fayose, governor-elect, on the brink of taking over from the outgoing John Kayode Fayemi, Ifa has really done it!

    Translated in a way, Fayose could mean: “Ifa will do it”.  Since that is Governor-elect Ayo’s surname, and no sane person spews out sweet palm kernels thrust in their mouths by benevolent spirits, it can logically be deduced that Fayose prayed that prayer for himself; and that Ifa has actually delivered to the lucky name bearer the very promise of his name. Talk of metaphysical incest!

    But as they say in the great Nigerian lingo, nothin’ spoil.  In any case, in plain English, ill luck is not transferable — and neither is good luck! So, you can’t really blame Ayodele Fayose for benefitting from the great promise of his own name?  Mba! Oti o!  A’a!

    Still, there is a terrible déjà vu about Fayose’s name and its peculiar promise fulfilled. On his first coming, Fayose was an enfant terrible, a gubernatorial gadfly, nay Leviathan, before whom everyone, king or subject, patrician or plebeian, Jew or gentile, must rock with fear. Ah, those days! It was one day, one trouble; one minute, one scandal; one second, one uproar; and you-know-who was masterfully strutting the stage of the grand orchestra of discord.

    Yeah, Ekiti had known some peace these past four years. But if you think those bad old times are gone, just re-witness what happened in an Ado-Ekiti High Court yesterday.  For the taste of the bedlam, the intro of The Nation’s front page report of Tuesday  September 23: “Panicky lawyers, litigants and officials ran out of the court room, screaming as scores ran into their offices and shut their doors; others hid under tables, away from the rampaging thugs.”

    And what did the High Court do to deserve being laid so low; sacked by low-life thugs that mercilessly cracked down on the cream of society, and invaded our Law’s high temple of justice turned mere den of thieves?

    Mr. Justice Isaac Ogunyemi just permitted himself the temerity, and awarded his court the illusion that both can assume jurisdiction over a case against the All-mighty Fayose, Ifa’s own appointed!  What arrant nonsense!  So, in front of Ayo Fayose, even the courts must bow? And if so, what happens to our democracy, anchored, at least in its pristine form, on rule of law and checks and balances?

    And Jonathan? As always, he sees no evil, he hears no evil — especially if that evil works for his own good! Welcome to a presidency of anything goes, where no abomination is foreclosed! By their brazen court show, the Fayose camp’s tactics are clear: intimidate the court and the case will vamoose! Under Jonathan’s presidency of anything goes? It is very, very possible!

    But let no one defile Ifa. Ifa, to the Yoruba, is awo mimo (immaculate cult), which suffers no stain. It is at the heart of the Yoruba religious cosmos. Whoever dares it with dirt only dooms himself. Proof? Ask Fayose himself: from the disgrace of his first coming.

  • Fayemi pledges to support  Ekiti’s new CP

    Fayemi pledges to support Ekiti’s new CP

    •Police chief resumes in Osun

    EKITI State Governor Kayode Fayemi has said his administration would not relent in its effort at giving the state police command maximum support to maintain peace and reduce crime.

    Fayemi made the pledge yesterday while receiving the state new Commissioner of Police, Mr. Taiwo Lakanu, who visited him in Ado-Ekiti.

    The governor, who described crime rate in the state as the lowest in the country, urged Lakanu to work hard to ensure a further reduction in crime.

    He promised to work with the police commissioner to ensure success in his new capacity as the number one police officer in the state, saying Lakanu’s track record and experience would benefit Ekiti people in the area of security management.

    Fayemi advised the police chief to work together with other sister security agencies and also collaborate with the Office of the Attorney General to facilitate quick dispensation of justice.

    The governor revealed that Lakanu would be the sixth Commissioner of

    Police he would work with since coming to office in October 2010, noting that Ekiti State has been lucky to have competent officers to head the command.

    Earlier in his remarks, Lakanu disclosed that he had been briefed on the numerous assistance rendered by the government to the police, most especially in the area of logistics.

    The new Osun State Police Commissioner, Mr. Abubakar Marafa, has assumed duty.

    The police chief, who resumed last Monday, took over from the former Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ibrahim Maishanu, who was recently promoted to the rank of Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG).

    Marafa, at the handling ceremony, praised Maishanu for leaving the state police command better than he met it.

     

    He also hailed Governor Rauf Aregbesola, for providing logistics, including several Armoured Personnel Carriers (APC) with which the command is using to fight crime.

    Maishanu, in his remarks, noted that though there were several challenges facing the command under him, especially the just concluded August 9 governorship Election in the state.

    He said that the command under him was able to bring the situation under control, maintaining law and order.

    Brig.-Gen. Adeyemi, the Commandant of Army Regiment in Ede, who spoke on behalf of other sister security agencies, described Maishanu as unassuming, brilliant and gentle officer that always carries other security agencies along.

  • Fayemi, Ajimobi, Daniel, Ikuforiji eulogise Ade Ajayi

    Fayemi, Ajimobi, Daniel, Ikuforiji eulogise Ade Ajayi

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi has described the late Professor Emeritus Ade Ajayi as “an Ekiti ambassador, who is worthy of emulation”.

    Speaking yesterday during a condolence visit to the late historian’s family in Ibadan, Oyo State, Fayemi said the late professor promoted honour and integrity as a scholar.

    The governor, who was represented by his deputy, Prof. Modupe Adelabu, commiserated with the bereaved family and urged them to celebrate the deceased.

    In the condolence register, he wrote: “On behalf of the Ekiti State government, I have come to say Rest in Peace, Dear Daddy, our pride and great national icon.”

    Fayemi was received by the late Ajayi’s first son, Niyi.

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi also commiserated with the family of the late former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Lagos (UNILAG).

    In a statement, Ajimobi said: “We can rightly claim that the late Ajayi was our son because he lived a great part of his life here in Ibadan. Many of his profound theses in history were conceived right here and he found the peace and tranquility, which contributed to his long life and peace of mind, in Ibadan.

    “Prof. Ajayi does not belong to the realm of those who can die or have died. Whenever or wherever African history is discussed, the emeritus professor would live. Wherever his seminal thoughts are being cited, he would appear to them. So he cannot be said to have died.”

    Former Ogun State Governor Gbenga Daniel said: “Prof. Ajayi’s role in the documentation of African history was respected beyond the shores of the continent, especially as he was instrumental to making African history a branch of academic discipline.

    “From a humble, but noble background, Prof.  Ajayi’s rise to the exalted academic position of UNILAG VC was that of a silent achiever, with his touch in nearly all landmark achievements in the nation’s foremost ivory tower.

    “Although saddened by the passage of such a great man, we are consoled that he left an indelible mark on the cultural life of Africans. The only way to honour him is to preserve his legacies by passing the historical past of our society, nation and the continent to coming generations.”

    Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Adeyemi Ikuforriji said: “The late emeritus professor of History was among the group of Nigerian academics, who laid a solid foundation for the Nigerian university system. Although his loss is painful, we thank the Almighty God for enabling him to attain the matured age of 85 before his demise.

    “On behalf of my family, fellow legislators and the entire management and staff of the Lagos Assembly, I commiserate with the family of the late don, the government and people of Ekiti State, the VC, staff and entire UNILAG community on this sad and irreparable loss.

    “May the Almighty God grant his soul eternal rest and his family and loved ones the fortitude to bear the loss.”

     

     

     

     

     

  • Jonathan, Fayemi mourn Ade Ajayi

    Jonathan, Fayemi mourn Ade Ajayi

    •President mourns ex-minister Chike Offodile

    President Goodluck Jonathan and Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi have commiserated with the family of former University of Lagos (UNILAG) Vice Chancellor, Prof Jacob Festus Adeniyi Ajayi, who died on Sunday.

    The President urged “students, friends, associates and colleagues in the field of Nigerian and African history to take solace in the knowledge that in passing on, he leaves behind a body of significant works that will stand to his eternal credit and assure him of a lasting place of honour among Africa’s greatest historians”.

    In a statement yesterday by his Special Adviser to the President

    (Media and Publicity), Dr Reuben Abati, the President reaffirmed “the nation’s enduring gratitude for Prof. Ajayi’s notable contributions over many years to the development of education and educational institutions in Nigeria as a lecturer, professor, Dean, Deputy Vice Chancellor and Vice Chancellor at Federal universities”.

    Jonathan assured the late Prof. Ajayi’s family, relatives, friends and colleagues of the Federal Government’s full solidarity and sympathy “as they mourn the very eminent historian and 1993 winner of the Distinguished Africanist Award”.

    He prayed God Almighty to receive Prof. Ajayi’s gentle soul and grant him eternal rest.

    Jonathan also mourned a former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Chike Offodile (SAN).

    The President commiserated with the late Offodile’s family, the Obi and people of Onitsha, friends and professional colleagues of the former minister, who also served his community as the Onowu Iyasele of Onitsha.

    He thanked God for the late minister’s “long and fulfilled life in the course of which he distinguished himself in the legal profession and service to his community and fatherland”.

    The nation, Jonathan said, would remain grateful for the late Offodile for his commendable service as a former member of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) and his contributions to the development of the legal profession.

    The President prayed God to grant the late Offodile peaceful eternal rest.

    Dr Fayemi expressed sadness on the death of Emeritus Professor Ade Ajayi.

    In a statement yesterday in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Olayinka Oyebode, the governor described the native of Ikole-Ekiti, Ekiti State, as an intellectual giant whose legacies would continue to benefit many generations to come.

    Fayemi described the late Prof Ade Ajayi as a man of integrity who built a reputation of hard work, honesty and represented the core values of Ekiti State.

    He said the deceased was a great Ekiti ambassador who positively projected the image of the state and Nigeria across the world.

    Fayemi said the renowned historian showed tremendous concern for the growth and development of Ekiti State.

    The governor recalled that his last engagement with the Emeritus Professor of History after the June 21 governorship election in the state showed him as a man of immense wisdom who was always willing to encourage and mentor the younger ones.

    He said the late Prof Ade-Ajayi mentored numerous scholars who have contributed to teaching, learning and research all over the world.

    Fayemi added: “The works of this great scholar in the field of History have become reference points to scholars, researchers, students and the reading public.”

    The governor said the late Prof Ade Ajayi’s tenure as UNILAG vice chancellor recorded unprecedented successes and “remains a reference point in the history of the institution”.

    “On behalf of the government and people of Ekiti State, I send my condolences to the family of this great man and we pray God to grant them the fortitude to bear the loss,” the statement added.

     

  • Winners and losers

    Winners and losers

    Both the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) prepared well for the governorship election. But, there were some principal characters whose involvement shaped the contest. These stakeholders are the winners and losers of the contest.

     

    Winners: APC

    Few months ago, the party was down in Ekiti State. During the governorship election, its candidate, Governor Kayode Fayemi, lost to the PDP candidate, Mr. Ayodele Fayose. The outcome of the poll was surprising because the governor has performed in office. The PDP had boasted that its victory meant that it was now well positioned to recapture the Southwest. But, the it is now a draw. The APC has maintained its hold in Osun, despite its defeat in Ekiti.

     

    Tinubu

    No doubt, the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, is Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s leader. The governor, who had served under him in Lagos as Commissioner for Works for almost eight years,  is a dependable and loyal party man. Tinubu played a major role in his ascension to power in Osun State.  Although Tinubu is a national figure, the Southwest is his primary base. He is the leader of the progressives in the region. When Ekiti was recaptured, it was insinuated that his sphere of influence had reduced. But, with the victory of Aregbesola, the party has received the tonic to forge ahead into 2015 electoral battle.

     

    Akande

    The elder statesman is a father figure to the progressive bloc in Osun State. In 2003, the former APC Interim National Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande, lost the governorship election to former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola. It was painful to lovers of progress and prudence. Now, the second term he could not achieve or what he lost to alleged rigging has now been achieved by one of his political children.

     

    Aregbesola

    His victory can be described as the triumph of the people’s will over the federal might. The stomach infrastructure theory collapsed. Aregbesola fought for three years to regain his stolen mandate. In almost four years, he has demonstrated the brilliance of a patriot, astute administrator and performer. A week to the poll, a Lagos APC chieftain said it would be difficult for to rehabilitate Aregbesola by the APC, if he is defeated or rigged out. “He has been working and there is no evidence that he has amassed wealth. He deserves victory. I know he will win, but we must not sleep on guard,” said the legislator. With his endorsement for continuity, he has emerged as one of the undisputed leaders of Osun politics in post-Bola Ige era and the toast of the people.

     

    Adeleke

    The former governor, Senator Isiaka Adeleke, defected from the APC to the PDP, few months before the poll. He was harassed on the eve of the election by policemen who covered their faces to avoid being identified. The PDP had picked Hon. Adejare Bello from Ede, his base, as Omisore’s running mate. The former Speaker of the House of Assembly had boasted to deliver the area to the PDP. But, it amounted to day dreaming. The success of the APC in Ede has affirmed Adeleke’s stature and popularity at home.

     

    Adeyeye and his team

    Prof. Sola Adeyeye, the vocal senator from Osun Central, was the Chairman of Rauf Aregbesola Campaign Organisation. He and members of his team organised rallies and campaigns for the governor. He was not afraid of molestation by security agents. When the Acting Inspector General of Police Abba visited the state, he complained about the victimisation of the APC members. “I have signed my will”, he said, daring the security agents.

     

    Osun voters

    Osun has the highest number of urban centres and towns in the country. Across the three districts and six zones, Aregbesola is loved by the people. Although they were wooed with cash gifts and food stuffs, they voted for their conscience. They trooped out in large numbers to exercise their voting rights. In particular, they also shunned unruly behaviour. Not only did they vote for the governor, they also defended their votes.

     

    INEC

    The electoral agency also conducted a fairly credible poll. Complaints by stakeholders during the election were responded to by the Resident Electoral Commissioner, Olusegun Agbaje. Polling officers reported for duty in time. There was no shortage of polling officers, ballot boxes and papers. Unlike 2007,there was no aiding and abetting. INEC staff did not collude with security agents to abort the wish of the people.

     

    Losers:  PDP

    The greatest loser is the PDP. The party has been checkmated in its bid to recapture the Southwest. Politically, President Goodluck Jonathan may have an axe to grind with Aregbesola because he could not garner votes from the state at the 2011 presidential election. That was due to the governor’s influence. The PDP was said to have invested a lot in the exercise, in terms of logistics. The outcome of the election has shown that there is a limitation to the power of federal incumbency.

     

    President Jonathan

    When the President visited Osun State for campaign, he boasted that PDP chieftains would return to the state for the inauguration of Senator Iyiola Omisore as governor. Instructively, the President could not point to the achievement of his administration in the Southwest state in the last three and half years. He said he would speak on his achievements after Omisore might have won the poll.

     

    Omisore and Bello

     

    The politician from Ile-Ife is a veteran governorship aspirant. His ambition to rule the state started during the Abacha days. Indeed, it was said that the Alliance for Democracy (AD), which fielded Akande as its flag bearer in 1999 relied on Omisore’s structure to win the poll. In 2002, the former deputy governor showed interest in the governorship. He left for the PDP, contested the senatorial election in detention and won. He was re-elected in 2007. But, in 2011, he was defeated by his kinsman, Senator Babajide Omoworare. The PDP candidate, who emerged as the PDP flag bearer at a rancorous shadow poll, was determined to dislodge Aregbesola. Like his Ekiti State counterpart, he indulged on riding okada to rallies. He was also sighted on the street eating corn and roasted plantain. But, he was rejected by the people. Although he garnered substantial votes from his town, Ile-Ife , they were inadequate to make him governor. Before the poll, Omisore’s running mate, Bello said that he would pull the rug of Adeleke’s feet at home. But, after the close of the poll, he failed to deliver.

     

    Southwest PDP

    The crisis-ridden zonal chapter was motivated by its marginal success in Ekiti to challenge the APC to a duel in its stronghold. Its members holding important positions in the Federal Government threw their weight behind the PDP candidate. Among them were the Minister of State for Defence, Senator Musiliu Obanikoro and  his Police Affairs counterpart, Jelili Adesiyan. The Chairman of the Contact and Mobilisation Committee, Buruji Kashamu, also gave a helping hand. But, the rainbow coalition could not match the APC arsenal.

     

     

     

     

  • Fayemi greets Muslims at Sallah

    Fayemi greets Muslims at Sallah

    EKITI State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, has felicitated with Muslim faithful in the country and all over the world on the occasion of the Eid-el-Fitri.

    In a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Olayinka Oyebode, Fayemi expressed joy on the successful completion of the Ramadan fast by Muslims. He explained that witnessing another Eid-el-Fitri is a special privilege from the Almighty Allah who has control over the destiny of man.

    The governor said the 30-day spiritual exercise has drawn the faithful closer to Allah, while urging them to keep on practising the lessons learnt from the holy month in their relationship with their Maker and fellow human beings.

    He also urged the citizens to be vigilant and remain security conscious even as they celebrate, noting that the recent spate of bomb attacks  and general insecurity in the country has made it imperative for Muslims and adherents of other religions to seek the face of God in prayer for divine intervention in the affairs of the country.

    Flaying the killing of scores of Nigerians in the various terror attacks in Kaduna and  Kano during the week, Fayemi said the prayer of the faithful is needed more than ever for God’s guidance for the country’s leaders to have the right approach towards ending the nefarious activities of the insurgents.

    Condemning the attack on former Head of State and leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), General Muhammadu Buhari, Fayemi said had the terrorists succeeded in killing Gen. Buhari, the incident would have precipitated a chain of reactions, an end of which nobody could predict.

    Noting that Muslims and adherents of other religions in the State have always lived together in peace and harmony, the governor urged continued peaceful coexistence among the people of the State.

     

  • Muslims must extend good deeds beyond Ramadan, says Fayemi

    Muslims must extend good deeds beyond Ramadan, says Fayemi

    EKITI State Governor, Kayode Fayemi, yesterday said Muslims the world over must sustain their good deeds beyond the holy month of Ramadan.

    He said: “Good deeds should be an all-time, all-weather practice.”

    Fayemi spoke through the Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Ganiyu Owolabi, while breaking fast with Muslims across the state yesterday.

    He noted that “Islam not only encompases Ramadan. It is more than Ramdan”.

    Fayemi said he had applied his four-year tenure to elevate every section, and segment of the state, adding that Muslims had been especially considered by his administration.

    According to him, his achievements in government was made possible through the supports and efforts of Muslims.

    Fayemi prayed that God would accept the good deeds and spiritual efforts of Muslims in the holy month.

    In his sermon at the event which held at Jibowu Hall within the Government House Complex, the Chief Imam of Ikere-Ekiti, Alhaji Abdussalam Babatunde, noted that good deeds should be the character of Muslims whether during Ramadan or outside the month.

    According to him, Ramadan should serve as a reminder of such deeds of piety and godliness, which mortals often stray away from when pressed by the flesh.

    Abdussalam noted that the conduct of caring and sharing, which the Muslims are especially enjoined to engage in during the month had become rare in today’s world, a situation which he said had heightened enemity between individuals and nations, making life unbearable for many.

     

  • Osun governorship election: Aregbesola’s big challenge

    Osun governorship election: Aregbesola’s big challenge

    If elections are won or lost on character and performance, as they should, Osun State’s governorship election coming up on August 9 should be a shoo-in for the incumbent, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. But then, as we saw in the June 21 Ekiti State governorship election, the almost universally hailed character and performance of the incumbent, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, seemed to have counted for practically nothing when he suffered heavy defeat at the hands of Mr Ayo Fayose, the candidate of the country’s ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    In Ekiti at least, what seemed to matter most was instant gratification for the people through the so-called “infrastructure of the stomach” and, even more importantly, the use of Federal Might (with capital F and capital M) to cow any opposition (It’s only a foolhardy man who would challenge the well-armed 30,000 security agents drafted into the state for the election who, as the governor said based on intelligence at his disposal as the state’s chief security officer, had instructions to “mow down” anyone who dared raise his figure in protest at their open  partisanship).

    As it was in Ekiti so would the PDP like it to be in Osun. One big difference, however, is that, unlike in Ekiti, a not-so-subtle religious propaganda weapon against the governor is being added to the other two.

    No less a person than the PDP governorship candidate himself, Senator Iyore Omisore, gave this game away. Asked in an interview in PUNCH (July 18) if he was sure he would win the election, he said: “Of course, yes. I mean the indices are there for all to see; the decaying infrastructure, the disrupted education system, THE RELIGIOUS BIGOTRY, infrastructural inconvenience, social malaise, impoverishment of our people.” (emphasis mine).

    Omisore went further to accuse the governor of wrongly “lumping students from Islam-based faith schools with students of Christianity-based faith schools together AND EXPECTING ONE RELIGION TO SUPERCEDE THE OTHER…” (Again emphasis mine). As a Christian, it is obvious Omisore is accusing the Muslim governor of favouring Islam.

    Since Aregbesola dared to declare a public holiday to celebrate an Islamic New Year in the state two years ago, many of his critics have worked overtime to cast him in the image of a Muslim extremist. For many of such critics, the absurdity of the logic that what is good for one religion is necessarily bad for the other has clearly escaped them.

    Not surprisingly, beneath Omisore’s apparently inadvertent betrayal of his religious animosity towards the governor, an even more insidious crude religious campaign is being waged where Christians in the state are being told that a vote for Omisore is 10 votes for Christ!

    In this manipulation of religion to gain power, Omisore is only in the excellent company of our president, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, for whom the Church had for a long time become his platform for issuing policy statements and indirectly denigrating Islam. Even then for anyone to equate Omisore with Christ is really the height of blasphemy. But then this is Nigeria where politicians think nothing of invoking the Good Lord’s name in vain.

    For someone who, at the least, is not averse to being compared to Christ, it was truly amazing how he could lie through his teeth about his relationship with the late Chief Bola Ige, whose murder several years ago he was implicated in and tried for and eventually acquitted.

    In the PUNCH interview I’ve referred to, the newspaper asked him point blank if he did not kill Ige. “I did not,” he replied, “kill Chief Bola Ige at all. I can’t kill anybody, anyway, not to talk of Chief Bola Ige. Chief Bola Ige was my leader. He was like an uncle in-law to me.” He did not, he also said, instigate the removal of Ige’s cap and glasses in the palace of the Ooni of Ife, a humiliation which presaged Ige’s brutal murder in his own residence in Ibadan.

    An amicable relationship between the two was definitely not what it looked like nearly 13 years ago when Omisore denigrated the chief in an interview in the rested TEMPO weekly newspaper (December 27, 2001). In that interview, he called Chief Bisi Akande, who he was deputy governor to and from whom he was estranged at the time, some of the foulest names imaginable and added Ige to the target of his diatribe.

    “Recently too,” he said in the interview, “Bola Ige came on radio here to insult me and my family. THAT IS THE LAST ONE. He was beaten yesterday, the people of Ife beat him up and he was crying like a baby as they removed his cap and his glasses…He was disgraced out of Ife, he had to be dressed like a woman to get out of town.”(Again, emphasis mine).

    Asked in effect if he approved Ige’s humiliation, he said yes in effect. “He has offended Ife people. If he insults me, he has insulted my people and they have the right to react.”

    Omisore concluded the interview by describing Ige as a Yoruba traitor. “Bola Ige,” he said, “is a traitor to Afenifere… He is the Akintola of our time. What Akintola did to Awolowo is what Bola Ige is doing to Adesanya and to the Yoruba people.”

    It is truly amazing how the man can now turn around to say he never held anything against Ige but, instead, had always regarded the chief as his leader and an “uncle in-law”, whatever that means.

    Omisore would not only tell a lie about his relationships to curry favour with Osun voters to the extent that his implication in the murder of Ige is an issue in the elections, it is also obvious he is afraid to engage Aregbesola in any debate over what each of them can offer the good people of their state. Challenged to a debate by the governor, first he said Aregbesola was mentally unfit. When that did not seem to wash with the public he changed his tune and said in effect that the governor is a thug-in-chief. “Going to participate in a debate with violent people with array of thugs will be too much of a risk to take for us,” he said in another interview in PUNCH (July 20).

    In an interview in The Guardian (July 10), Aregbesola said he was confident he would win any election in his state that was “credible, transparent, free and fair.” Therein lies the catch; an election can look credible, transparent, free and fair but the reality may be totally the opposite. An election in which a central government squeezes the opposition by slashing revenue allocation to states under the guise of falling revenue due to massive oil thefts and delays the release of even the little that is left in order to cause disaffection between opposition states and their civil servants, an election in which huge numbers of security agents are deployed to intimidate the opposition, etc, such election can hardly be described as credible, transparent, free and fair.

    Actually the rigging of elections can be even more cynical than financially squeezing opposition states and deploying massive force to intimidate. The other day, I received an email about the election which, on the surface, seemed too farfetched.

    “Do u ever thk along this line…” it said in the arcane language of texts. “200,000 ballot papers thumb printed in Abj, CBN abj convey to CBN Ado ekiti, CBN Ado to some selected commercial banks, some selected commercial banks to some party leaders in Ekiti land, party leaders to some ward leaders, ward leaders to 10 women per polling unit…Each woman with 10 already in their body, they pick one each and drop 11 in the box where they v bought agent.”

    My instinct was to dismiss this as an outlandish conspiracy theory. But then when I remembered the memorable words of Major-General IBM Haruna, a former minister of information, in one of the most interesting interviews published by the rested Citizen, which I headed, I said to myself this may not be as outrageous as it sounds. As the general said, any time anyone tells you something is impossible in Nigeria, consider it done.

    In spite of all these great odds against Aregbesola, I believe Ekiti is unlikely to be repeated in Osun on August 9. But then so many impossible things have happened in the country since 1999 that it will not surprise me if, in spite of Aregbesola’s character and performance, he loses the election.

    TWO OMISSIONS…

    In response to my column of last week, two readers, Chief Femi Alafe-Aluko and Olu Sangotikun, drew my attention to my omission of Aremo Segun Osoba among the country’s journalism icons who celebrated their birthdays this month. Segun, probably the country’s best reporter ever, celebrated his 75th birthday on July 15.

    Another journalism icon, Nduka Obaigbena, Chairman of Thisday and President of the Newspaper Proprietors Association of Nigeria (NPAN) celebrated his 55th birthday on July 14.

    Here’s wishing both Happy Birthdays and many more returns in arrears.