Tag: Ladoja

  • APC: Ladoja sponsoring lies against Ajimobi

    APC: Ladoja sponsoring lies against Ajimobi

    •Accord: it’s not true

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo State has accused the governorship candidate of  Accord, Rashidi Ladoja, of sponsoring the circulation of a “leaflet of concocted lies” against the Abiola Ajimobi-led administration.

    It said the electorate would not be swayed by such lies.

    In a statement by its Director of Publicity and Strategy, Olawale Sadare, the APC said Ladoja has a penchant for fabricating lies and circulating same to mislead the public, especially to win undeserved electoral mandate.

    It claimed that the former governor was always at the forefront of attempts to institutionalise dirty politics in the state since 2002, when he succeeded to out-do other contenders to get the governorship ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The statement reads:   “The crude manner in which Ladoja secured the governorship ticket to contest the 2003 election remains fresh in the memory of the original members of the PDP.

    “The lies he told against the late Lam Adesina to dislodge him from the Agodi Government House were largely responsible for the failure of that administration to complete its well deserved two terms in office.

    “We recall that Ladoja also sponsored many lies against the Adebayo Alao-Akala administration in the build up to the 2011 elections but the effect was not in his favour as majority of the electorate knew what to do with their votes. He then sought to discredit the mandate given to Ajimobi by sponsoring infantile lies again.

    “Not satisfied with the “hand of fellowship” extended to him by Ajimobi who accommodated several nominees in his government, Ladoja used his loyalists within the corridor of power to obtain some classified information which he either doctored or twisted to mislead the public.

    “At a debate recently, he was confronted by the governor on some falsehood coming from his camp and he left no one in doubt of his character as one who thrives on perjury and mudslinging.

    “Ladoja has again begun to sponsor damaging publications, engage the services of rumour mongers and lie merchants to work against the governor and the APC after it became clear that the electorate would vote for the governor based on performance, promise and track record.

    “We came across a leaflet being circulated in Ibadan in which Ladoja and his sympathisers packaged some lies and tagged it ’50 reasons why Ajimobi should not be re-elected’.

    “We are also aware of a wicked rumour being circulated that scores of passengers disappeared with two Ajumose shuttle buses. These are the handiworks of the same disgruntled elements.

    “As we urge the public to verify every claim from politicians with a view to ascertain its genuineness or lack of it, we call on the Accord  leader to change his ways and turn a new leaf as politics should not turned to an instrument of character assassination, subterfuge and mudslinging.”

    But the Director-General of the Rashidi Ladoja Campaign Organisation, Adeolu Adeleke, denied the allegation.

    He said: “It is part of APC propaganda. If some people levy allegations against a government, and it believes that it is a lie, it should feel unconcerned.

    “We have more reasons than those stated in the leaflet on why Ajimobi should not be re-elected. That shows we are not behind it.”

  • Ladoja and Trans International Bank

    SIR: I read an advertorial in the Tribune on Tuesday last week where Senator Rasheed Ladoja, former Governor of Oyo State was accused of destroying Trans International Bank (TIB) to satisfy his interests in First City Monument Bank FCMB. The Senator responded that it was all lies. However, we, the victims who were sacked from the bank know better.

    I can never forget the crisis in the bank then when we were sacked . They didn’t even pay us our entitlements.  Unfortunately for me, I had just lost my husband due to illness and was left to cope with two children aged eight and four years.  Things were so bad that I lost my four years’ old daughter to malaria because I couldn’t afford anti-malarials.

    What I want to ask Senator Ladoja is: why did he move Oyo State Internally Generated Revenue accounts and the Federal Allocation Accounts from Trans International Bank to other banks?  Is this removal of funds not what started the collapse of TIB?

    Senator Ladoja should not come now and start telling us how good he was to workers.  He didn’t care about the workers of TIB and the local business men who patronised the bank. Over 3000 people were affected by Senator Ladoja’s decision.  These people are out there who suffered the pain of sack.

    The question is: what future lies ahead when all we have are politicians who won’t take responsibility for their past actions and still want to come back?

     

    • Moji Adeyemi

    Apata, Ibadan

  • Ladoja faults INEC’s pact with NURTW

    Ladoja faults INEC’s pact with NURTW

    The governorship candidate of Accord in Oyo State, Sen. Rashidi Ladoja, has faulted the decision of the state’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to engage the services of commercial drivers in conveying election materials to voting centres.

    Ladoja, who spoke through his campaign organisation, condemned the choice, describing it as “an unholy alliance” between INEC and the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW).

    He said it was a call for anarchy.

    The campaign group, in a statement by its Director-General, Adeolu Adeleke, said the arrangement to use buses belonging to NURTW members to convey INEC officers during elections was suspicious.

    Adeleke said the arrangement was not only wrong on account of NURTW members being loyalists of the All Progressives Congress (APC) but also endangers the integrity of the results of the elections.

    “We want to advise the Resident Electoral Commissioner, Rufus Akeju, not to centralise the hiring of buses; rather, the electoral officer in each local government council should be given the opportunity to hire buses without any condition attached to it.

    “We want the REC to conduct free and fair elections and warn him not to engage in any activity that will change the will of the people, as any attempt to do this will be strongly resisted.”

  • ‘Ladoja, Alao-Akala’ve no fresh ideas’

    ‘Ladoja, Alao-Akala’ve no fresh ideas’

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo State has slammed two former governors-Rashidi Ladoja and Adebayo Alao-Akala- saying they lack fresh ideas to develop the state.

    The party said the two former governors were not worthy of being trusted with the people’s mandate.

    Ladoja and Alao-Akala are the candidates of Accord and Labour Party (LP) in next month’s polls in which the duo and 10 others, including Teslim Folarin of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), are seeking to dislodge Governor Abiola Ajimobi.

    In a statement in Ibadan yesterday by its Director of Publicity and Strategy, Olawale Sadare, the APC regretted the combined eight-year rule of the former governors, describing it as the darkest chapter in the state’s history.

    “In an ideal situation, the duo cannot indicate interest to vie for any political office again, having failed the people when they had the opportunity to govern.

    “Indeed, from 2003 to 2011 could be aptly described as years of locust during which the people had the worst experience of political violence, abuse of power and official corruption.

    “The citizenry would never forget in a hurry how Ladoja engaged his erstwhile political godfather in a needless supremacy battle which cost them their cherished peace, economic resources and the  lives of their beloved ones.

    “Ibadan became a theatre of war because a governor dared to renege on a pact designed to favour his personal interest and that of the then dreaded garrison commander.

    “On the other hand, Ladoja’s successor Alao-Akala, who assumed power by default, and could not convince anyone of having an understanding of what governance was  about, embarked on spending spree.

    “He was popular for his recklessness, impunity and corrupt practices.

    “In all of this, the masses became worse for it and the developmental drive of the state entered the reverse gear.

    “Painful enough, the same characters still have the effrontery to parade themselves as the only ones who must rule Oyo State at all cost.

    “And without a clear-cut manifesto, they have been moving round the state, insulting the citizenry, all in the name of political campaigns.’’

  • Ajimobi to Ladoja: Statesmen should not lie

    Ajimobi to Ladoja: Statesmen should not lie

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has said lies and character assassination should not be found among statesmen, especially those who have had the privilege of administering a state.

    His comments followed an interview by former Governor Rashidi Ladoja in The Tribune yesterday.

    Ladoja had alleged that Ajimobi and leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) made overtures to him to be given the governorship ticket while Ajimobi goes to the Senate.

    In a statement by his Special Adviser on Media, Festus Adedayo, the governor said: “The truth is that Ladoja has become used to spinning lies that it has become a way of life.

    “Isn’t it illogical that a sitting governor would be asked to vacate his seat for someone he beat to the third place in the 2011 elections and that same sitting governor will gladly go to the home of his ‘nemesis’ and gleefully hand over his mandate to him?

    “Again, it is clear that, in telling this lie, Ladoja merely wants to recreate the absurd position he found himself in 2007 when, as a sitting governor, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) took away his ticket and handed it over to his deputy.

    “It is apparent that he lacked political sagacity and the so-called people’s support, which were responsible for this political hemlock handed over to him to drink.

    “Isn’t it a negation of common sense that the governor, who was a former senator and a principal officer of the Senate and who completed his tenure, as against Ladoja who didn’t, would prefer a Senate slot that he once occupied to the prospect of continuing as the Chief Executive Officer of a state?

    “Ladoja must have thought that Oyo people and Nigerians have no sense of appreciation of logic and common sense.”

    Ajimobi picked holes in Ladoja’s claim that he was not arrested by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), stating that he was merely on a “roller coaster of comedy”.

    “Nigerians will, with this statement, appreciate the real comedy that Ladoja is. If he meant to demonstrate his naivety of semantics, he did it so well. For his information, he cannot rewrite the fact that he was arrested and detained for mismanaging the proceeds of the sales of shares belonging to Oyo State.

    “In his defence in a newspaper advertorial, he said he did not personally refund money to the EFCC. Does he have to personally refund money? If any money was refunded by his co-accused, he cannot exonerate himself from it,” the statement said.

    Stating that Ajimobi was yet to receive “Ladoja’s letter”, asking the governor to apologise for accusing him of the refund, the statement said the former governor was merely buying time as he does not have any case to pursue in court.

    On the allegation that the Ajimobi administration reneged on the agreement he had with the government to give him and his party 20 per cent of all appointments in the state, the governor said Ladoja was being driven by “political covetousness”.

    “Could Ladoja, known to be arrogant and unbending, during his time as governor, ever concede this absurd demand to anyone? Was it not a similar demand from the strongman of Ibadan politics, Chief Lamidi Adedibu, for a chunk of Ladoja’s security vote that led to the spiral of violence which consumed so many lives in Oyo State and which eventually truncated his regime?

  • ‘APC didn’t offer governorship ticket to Ladoja’

    ‘APC didn’t offer governorship ticket to Ladoja’

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday refuted claims by the Oyo State Accord Party (AP) governorship candidate Senator Rashidi Ladoja that the party offered him its governorship slot.

    The National Vice Chairman (Southwest), Chief Pius Akinyelure, said the party never considered Ladoja, stressing that the thought was a figment of his “hyper-active imagination”.

    He said Ladoja may have confused an invitation to him to join the party as an elder with an imaginary offer aptly nurtured by his pre-conceived preference for the governorship ticket, which he may have coveted during preliminary interaction between him and the Southwest APC leadership.

    Akinyelure said there was no way the APC would have by-passed the performing Governor, Abiola Ajimobi, who had  indicated his interest in a second term, and offered the ticket to Ladoja.

    He added: “It is politically normal for a party like the APC, which is always interested in enlarging its coast, to invite more people to join its fold. Ladoja, being a former governor and senator, was invited to join the APC so that he can become one of the elders of the APC. There was never a time the governorship ticket was offered to him.

    “Governor Ajimobi has performed excellently. The party and the people  are proud of his achievements. There was no way the party would have given the ticket to Ladoja when the governor, who has performed creditably in his first term, had indicated interest in re-election. Therefore, it is not true that Ladoja was offered the ticket as claimed by him.”

  • Go to court, Ajimobi dares Ladoja

    Go to court, Ajimobi dares Ladoja

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has challenged former governor and Accord Party governorship candidate Senator Rashidi Ladoja to go to court to defend the allegation that he refunded N500million to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) .

    Ladoja has threatened to sue Ajimobi,  saying there was no truth in the claim that he returned N500million to EFCC.

    The governor said Ladoja returned the money to the anti-graft agency to avoid going to jail for stealing the state’s funds.

    Addressing a crowd of party supporters and leaders at the launch of his second term campaign in Ibadan at the weekend, Ajimobi insisted that Ladoja actually returned the money.

    “I’m ready to meet him in court,” the governor said, stressing that the refunded money was being used by his administration to build model schools.

    Ajimobi said the people should be watchful and avoid voting for those who did not do anything economically meaningful for them when they had the opportunity of ruling the state.

    The governor, who said he deserved a second term as a result of his achievements, maintained that the success he recorded were unmatched in the history of the state.

    Ajimobi, however, said he was ready to prove his claim in the court of law.

  • APC kicks as Ladoja accuses Ajimobi of N68b debt

    APC kicks as Ladoja accuses Ajimobi of N68b debt

    Name the banks

    Former Oyo State Governor Rashidi Ladoja has accused Governor Abiola Ajimobi of plunging the state into a N68 billion debt.

    Ladoja is the Accord Party’s governorship candidate.

    The former governor, who spoke through the Director General of his campaign organisation, Adeolu Adeleke, said the state was indebted  to two unnamed third-generation banks.

    But the All Progressives Congress (APC) challenged Ladoja to name the banks, describing the accusation as cheap propaganda.

    Ladoja said the debt was incurred by the banks on account of a deal that warranted the financial institutions undertaking to finance the road expansion projects embarked upon by the government but which he alleged, were abandoned.

    He said one of the banks was owed N50 billion and the other N17 billion.

    The N67 billion debt, according to Ladoja, was in addition to a multi-billion bond secured by the government.

    The campaign director said the figure was part of a preliminary investigation by his party on the state’s debt profile as of last June.

    On the N500 million Ajimobi said he refunded to the state government, Ladoja wondered why the governor waited this long before talking about the issue.

    “Two of the bank drafts purportedly connecting Senator Ladoja with the false refund of money bore the dates: May 2, 2008 and May 7, 2008. But Senator Ladoja, confident that his integrity is intact, submitted himself to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on August 8, 2008.

    “What then is the nexus between the drafts published and Senator Ladoja? Could Ladoja have ‘refunded’ money before he went to the EFCC?

    “If indeed there was actually any plea bargaining as alleged, why is the matter still in court? Is the APC not aware that the case is with the Supreme Court?

    “Ajimobi also claims that the money he purportedly recovered from Ladoja through the EFCC is being used to build model schools in the state. But our perusal of the 2014 budget estimates did not show the inclusion of the recovered money in the budget.

    “We challenge Governor Ajimobi to waive his immunity and invite the EFCC and ICPC to probe his government.

    “A kilometre of road is awarded for N1 billion in Oyo State and the same contractor gets a kilometre of road for N400 million in Ogun State.

    “The intention obviously for Ajimobi is to tarnish the ever-soaring image of Ladoja, who has become his political nemesis, ahead of the February judgment day. But we are glad that his effort was a monumental fiasco,” Adeleke said.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said the ancient propaganda style employed by the Accord Party would not work in the 2015 elections.

    In a statement by its Director of Publicity, Olawale Shadare, the APC said: “Ladoja and his party use the traditional hunger for news by reporters to pass across his childish propaganda and ill-digested lies.

    “The question reporters should ask him is the name of the so-called banks the government owes.

    “It is only reporters whom the profession gives the licence to hide the names of sources and important institutions, not desperate reporters. Let him quote the names of the banks and the amounts being owed them so that journalists can go to the banks and cross-check. Even political propaganda has left such infantile level.

    “Ladoja is merely pursuing shadows; the APC said the Accord Party and its leader could not fathom how government could have such huge infrastructural achievements without borrowing a penny.

    “To underscore the penchant for lies of the Accord Party, the Oyo State government, despite dwindling allocations from the Federal Government, has paid December salaries of workers. Only contractors who have not completed their works are yet to collect full payment.

    “It is equivocation of the highest order. If the state government owes that amount of money, it goes without saying that anyone who wants to come on board would not perform as he would be battling to pay back debts.

    “Why is Ladoja fighting the battle of his life to become governor if the government he is coming to administer is in this kind of debt? The party and its leader are too intellectually shallow to understand the implication of this childlike allegation of theirs.”

  • Ajimobi: I ‘ve outclassed Ladoja, Alao-Akala

    Ajimobi: I ‘ve outclassed Ladoja, Alao-Akala

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi spoke with BISI OLADELE in Ibadan, the state capital, on his achievements, his opponents in the Oyo governorship race and chances at the poll.

    With the elections just few weeks away and four other top contenders in the race, what makes you think you can win the election?

    Among all the contenders, we have three that have been in public service. Of those three, we have two that have been governor before and one a senator. When you check the track records of each and everyone of us, you can safely say that the assessment of each of us is easier than one who has never been in public service. I believe that the records of the two former governors are there for everyone to see. When you check those records, whether in the area of social infrastructure, physical infrastructure, peace, security and safety, which I consider to be most important for development in any state or nation, you will find out that we stand out. The government of APC led by Senator Abiola Ajimobi is synonymous to peace and development. In the last few years, like eight to nine years before we came on board, Oyo State was known as a place of violence . Today, the records, even as highlighted by the security agencies and published by the police, suggest that Oyo State is safer, more secured and more peaceful than it used to be. Murder cases have gone down considerably.

    Apart from murder cases, we have established agencies that support the security agencies such as Operation Burst. We have been able to bring together all security agencies – the police, army, SSS, immigration, NSCDC et cetera. We have supported all of them with vehicles, bullet proof vests and all sorts to ensure that Oyo State is very safe for our people. So, I can say the foundation of our administration is safety and security of lives and property. And, I make bold to say we are far ahead in the area of peace and security than the former governments. I can provide the statistics. For instance, prior to 2011 and 2012, murder cases were recorded to be about 24 per cent in Oyo State, it has reduced to about four per cent. Armed robbery cases were about 48 per cent and since we came in it has been reduced to less than five per cent – kidnapping and others included. The statistics also support the fact that Oyo State, is one of the safest and most peaceful states in Nigeria. I believe that if you also look at other parameters, for instance, social infrastructure, you will notice the difference. Social infrastructure means health, education, water, energy in general. We have done better than other administrations and again, the statistics are there. Before we came in, Asejire Dam and Eleyele waterworks were functioning at less than 10 per cent capacity. Today, we are producing at over 82 per cent, which has resulted in more water for the people.

    Again, we have repaired and rehabilitated many waterworks, including Oke-Ogun, Ibarapa, Oyo and others. In terms of providing potable water, we have done better than previous administrations. If you talk about education, we have recently recruited about 5,300 teachers into service. This is unprecedented. But, the uniqueness of this is in the fact that unlike in the past where they will recruit like 500, 1000, maximum 2000, we recruited a higher number at once. We are picking those teachers from their neighbourhoods unlike before where people were recruited in Ibadan and sent to Ogbomosho or Oke-Ogun. This resulted in broken homes and several divorces. The teachers came to appeal and we decided that wherever we are going to appoint anyone, the person must come from that locality. This is to encourage the teachers. More importantly, we have rehabilitated many classrooms, we are introducing model schools in each of the senatorial districts. And these model schools will have state-of-the-art equipment, laboratory, recreation centers, and where emphasis will be on practical education, where there will be sufficient teachers. Education stands on three legs, that is, teachers, students, and infrastructure. With the teachers, we are recruiting more and training them. Last year we trained more than 7000 teachers. The loophole that existed within teachers in primary schools that are graduates have been plugged. This encourages them. Not only that we have provided them with enhanced salary packages, when you train the teachers and encourage them with welfare packages and all, they tend to give their all in their teachings. With the students, we have provided extra trainings where we liaised with the University of Ibadan and other schools to teach them. We have also introduced supervisory roles with the University of Ibadan, Lecturers go round and supervise the teachers and students.

    On the third leg is the infrastructure. We have provided more chairs, furniture and equipment for the schools. I have talked about the model schools. Some people want to know why we are pulling down some buildings, those schools are located strategically. We do not want to go to some bush now and build a school there and there will be problem of transportation. So, those who are arguing that we should get a virgin land and build on do not consider the proximity of the schools to the children. That is very essential. The schools we are pulling down are important. So, all these we have done apart from the usual payment of WAEC and NECO fees.  When you look at our performance and also about good governance, I will say good governance is about transparency, accountability, transparency and productivity. When you look at all that combined, you will see that we stand a better chance than other competitors, since they have once been governors. Even in the area of welfare, let us look at it from the area of environmental. Removing people from trading on the street to the side of the street and we have provided them with alternatives. The previous administrations of the two that are competing now also drove people off the streets in Elekuro, Aperin and Iwo road. They did not provide alternatives. We have provided alternatives. For instance, we have provided shops for traders. Look at Scout Camp, it can accomodate 3000 traders, and they are there, given free of charge. Not only that, we provided for them N20 million trading fund. No administration has ever done this. Recently, we also provided 300 million interest-free loan to 6000 traders which comes to N50,000 per trader. We took this loan from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and they have charged us nine per cent interest. We did not collect any interest from our traders.

    In the area of health, we have treated close to 1,000 000 people by bringing the hospital to the doorsteps of the poor. We go to a local governments, call people to come for free consultancy, treatment and surgery. Apart from rehabilitating the hospitals, we have employed more doctors. When I came in, the ratio was far below the UN recommended ratio. We have brought in about 300 medical personnel. In terms of welfare, when we came in we met a salary and wages of about N2.9 billion. Today, we have N4.9 billion wages. We have increased the salaries even without the prompting from workers. Today, many of the salary scales and levels are incomparable with neighbouring states. Oyo State ranks first in some levels and second in others. We have never been third. In terms of taking care of employees, we have increased their salaries and even provided them with buses for free transport. It is free for students and workers. And for the public, it is 75 per cent subsidized, compared to what commercial vehicles charge. For instance, if you have a family of five, you save an average of N500 per day, in a week is N2,500, a month N10,000, a year, N120, 000. Whether you like it or not this government is providing you a yearly savings of N120,000. It is the work of the government to provide you basic things like that. No government will line you up on the street and start distributing money. It is the job of the government to make things cheaper and you pay less.

    How are you coping with paucity of funds and how do you hope to overcome it in the fsce of dwindling federal allocation?

    On the paucity of funds, Oyo State has about 10 million people. When we came in, we were given N4.2 billion or N4.5 billion. Bayelsa State has an average of 700,000 people and it gets not less than N20 billion a month. Right from the onset we are at a disadvantage. In the last one year we have been getting an average of N3 billion. Recently. We even got about N2.8 billion. Every month we have a deficit of about two billion or average of about 1.5 billion. How do we cope? That is why it is essential for every government to provide an attractive and enabling environment for investors to come in. When they come in you will be able to get tax gains and also create commercial activities that will provide more employment for people. It has a multiplier effect. What we are saying simply is that our own approach is to create a foremost, a safe and secure environment for people to come and also build physical infrastructure that will attract people to the state.

    Once there are good roads, water, electricity and all that, people will come. Then you also have more people working. But, above all, we have brought in at least eight big international companies because the state is more peaceful, better and aesthetically improved. The largest edible oil factory in Nigeria is in Oyo State. The largest soya bean manufacturer in West Africa is here. The largest producer of bread in Africa is here. The largest ICT service provider is also here. We can go on. Also the largest producer of day old chicks is also here. The largest producer of powdered milk called Kamal Milk is now in Oyo State and the largest Shoprite in Nigeria is in Oyo State. The more of these companies we have, the more we increase our Internally Generated Revenue which goes up with these companies coming in. We also have Agodi Gardens, which is an income-generating park, which is where we now have international conference centre, health farm, recreational activities like amusement park, hotels et cetera.

    It is a park we are trying to develop like the one in South Africa. We got a South African company to do it in conjunction with Nigerians. What we are saying is that we are making it conducive so that people can come when it is attractive and safe. Now we are getting the cumulative effects. In whatever we are doing, we have been able to partner with most of these investors, rather than the government spending most of its resources, we are getting investors to partner with. Like Agodi Gardens, we have got investors coming in and partnering with us. Like four point Sheraton hotel, we have got the land, they are partnering with us. Also in the area of housing estates, previous administrations sold all the government quarters. One of them even sold all the quarters and got about N3 billion. He wanted to pay pensioners. The week before we came in, they took the money and spent. And it was meant for pensioners. An average government quarters is sold for N15 million to N18 million. The quarters, about eight, facing the Government House, if sold for that price will be about 120 million. We decided against it. We invited investors, we said UAC should come and work with us. They agreed. We decided to give them the land as our contribution. The site is near completion. It should be completed around March or April. At the sale of those prices, we now have about 89 apartments. These apartments, when sold, should bring in about N5.6 billion from which the state government owns 45 per cent. Compare this to the N120 million we would have got. We will get not less than N2 billion. That, to us, is good governance. For us that is re-engineering and a way to save money. We are also trying to communicate to our people to make them know that the Federal Government has reduced our money by at least 40 per cent. It is not even enough to pay staff salary. Do you know that we are the only government that has been paying 13 months salary since the inception of Oyo State. Despite the paucity of funds, we still manage.

    As for the allegations, we make sure our contractors are competent and financially capable. Sometimes they say we do not patronize local contractors, but about 80 per cent of the jobs we give out are to local contractors. The major jobs are for those who can finance the jobs. And we are financing them as well. When you finish we pay you within 18 months of completion. We are structuring our finances through IGR, PPP and through third party participation. I think it is politics when people say that. This government has developed all zones more than any government. One, no government has dualized all entry points into major cities. When we came in, for the first time, the entry into Ibadan was dualized. That is the Challenge axis, Adelabu Market axis and Orita. We are also doing the network road system. We take an area, look at the network, where it leads and connects, then we construct it. We have dualized more roads than any government. Two, Ogbomoso has never had a dualized road, this government has done that. Ogbomoso now has a modern town hall which this administration did. Oke- Ogun is divided into Zone One and Two. Iseyin is the entry point. We have dualized their roads. The best NYSC Camp in Nigeria is built by us and it is in Iseyin.

    All the satellite campuses in Oyo State have been upgraded to full polytechnics. In other words, education has a multiplier effect on development. There are cities and towns in the US that are called university towns where once you establish it there, development will spring up. So in Oke-Ogun, we have given them schools, roads . We have done about 15 roads: Saki-Otu-Alaga, Ogboro-Road, Saki-Apinnite, Otun-Oyo et cetera. We have just awarded the Saki-Polytechnic-Bariba Road; we are dualizing it. We have done their town hall. More importantly, for Oke-Ogun we believe more than anybody else we have developed their road networks. Oyo has never had a dualized road, ours is the first and the people there are happy. We are also building a radio station there. I want to know any other government that has worked in terms of development in each of these zones; zone by zone.

  • Ajimobi, Akala, Ladoja,  Folarin square up for Oyo race

    Ajimobi, Akala, Ladoja, Folarin square up for Oyo race

    BISI OLADELE  examines the struggle for the Agodi Government House, Ibadan and the chances of gladiators in the governorship race.

    Preparations for the  governorship election in Oyo State started two years ago, barely 18 months into the current tenure. It was propelled by the routing of two former governors – Rashidi Ladoja and Adebayo Alao-Akala – by Governor Abiola Ajimobi in the keenly contested election in 2011. It compelled the key figures and their supporters to return to the drawing board, to lay the foundation for their success in this year’s contest. But, it has not been rosy for the three of contestants, as some of their followers have defected to other parties, seeking where their bread would be  buttered.  Some even left for Labour Party (LP), where they are regrouping to give the three leading figures a fight in the coming election.

    Yet, the All Progressives Congress (APC), the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Accord Party remain the leading parties, with the three figures listed above calling the shots.

    Political activities however reached a highpoint recently, when the three major parties picked their governorship candidates.

    APC

    Even for the ruling APC, it was a keenly contested primary. Some courageous politicians  picked the governorship forms to join Ajimobi in the battle for the party’s ticket. They are a son of the late former governor Lam Adesina, Dr Ayo Adesina and Mr. Adebayo Shittu, a lawyer.

    While Adesina is a United Kingdom-based professional, Shittu is based in Ibadan. Adesina is unknown in Oyo State politics, unlike his late father. He is also not known to have built any strong political structure that could have aided his emergence at the governorship primary.

    Shittu has been a politician since the Second Republic. He was a member of the old Oyo State House of Assembly, representing Saki, his home town. He was also a commissioner under Ladoja between 2003 and 2007.

    He contested the governorship election under the platform of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) in 2011. But, he lost to Ajimobi. His party, the CPC, is one of the three major opposition parties that metamorphosed into the APC.

    The odds that worked against Shittu’s emergence as the APC candidate were two-fold.  One, he hails from Oke-Ogun and his political structure was not strong enough to secure the governorship ticket. Most of the political parties were bent on fielding an Ibadan indigene for the obvious population advantage of the city.

    Ajimobi was able to grab the ticket because the inbency factor worked in his favour. Besides, he is an exprienced politician. He served as a Senator on the platform of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) between 2003 and 2007. He was also the governorship candidate of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) in 2007.

    Accord

    There was no contest for the governorship ticket in the Accord Party because only the leader of the party, Senator Rashidi Ladoja, is the sole governorship candidate. No other member of the party indicated interest in the ticket.

    PDP

    It was the opposition PDP that witnessed the hottest contest for the governorship ticket. About 11 aspirants t6ook part in the primary. They are: Adebayo Alao-Akala, Hazeem Gbolarumi, Isaac Babalola, Taoheed Adedoja, Soji Adejumo, Ayo Adeseun and Femi Babalola. Others are Kehinde Olaosebikan, Teslim Folarin, Oluseyi Makinde and Azeez Adeduntan.

    A former Minister of Power, Elder Wole Oyelese, withdrew from the race at a point, to pave the way for him in the Oyo Central Senatorial ticket.

    However, the major contenders were just three: Alao-Akala, Folarin and Makinde.

    Alao-Akala

    The immediate former governor of the state, Alao-Akala still commands huge following within the party across the state. Except in Oyo zone where his fortune has plummeted since 2011, the Ogbomoso-born politician still sustains good following in his town, Oke-Ogun and a sizeable portion in Ibadan. He also possesses the financial capacity to prosecute the governorship race with candidates of other parties.

    But, in spite of the above credentials, he did not get the ticket. At least two odds against him. One, he is not an Ibadan indigene. This factor is strong for winning the governorship election this time around. It was known well in adavance that two Ibadan men, Ajimobi and Ladoja, were likely to fly the flags of their parties. The PDP chose to field an Ibadan indigence in order to benefit from the population advantage. For instance, the number of voters from Ibadan South West and Ibadan North local governments alone is higher that those of the five local governments in Ogbomoso.  Two, having lost the election once, largely due to credibility factor, the party decided to look elsewhere for a more credible candidate to give Ajimobi and Ladoja a good fight.

    Alao-Akala defected to the Labour Party following his failure secure the PDP ticket. He is sure to pick up the LP governorship ticket, to realise his ambition of taking another shot at the governorship this time around.

    Folarin

     The former Senate Leader eventually triumphed in the primary and emerged the standard bearer of the party in the state. He is one aspirant believed to be favoured by the Presidency. He controls the party’s state executive and is widely connected in Abuja.

    Though a two-time senator, Folarin’s popularity is believed not to be strong enough to beat Ladoja and Ajimobi  in the governorship race.

    Oluseyi Makinde

    A younger genaration of politician, Makinde began the race to Agodi Government House as early as 2012. He had a formidable structure in the state, particularly in Ibadan, his place of birth.

    But, in spite of his youthfulness and his structure, the party delegates overlooked him and handed over the ticket to Folarin.