Tag: Makinde

  • Makinde’s wife seeks collective effort to end female genital mutilation

    Makinde’s wife seeks collective effort to end female genital mutilation

    The wife of Oyo Governor Mrs. Tamunominini Makinde has canvassed for the collective effort of stakeholders and community leaders toward ending Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) in the State.

    She said the danger FGM posed to the health of women and girls across the State is enoumous, asking for an end to the practice..

    Speaking in Ibadan at a programme at Oyo State Government House to celebrate this year’s “International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation”, Mrs. Makinde said: “FGM has adverse health and negative interpersonal consequences, it also belittles our women and girls, as stakeholders, let us engage community leaders, religious leaders and policymakers to create constructive policies that will promote positive change and fairness on FGM.

    “Stakeholders should use their position to initiate conversation within the community to fight against the harmful practice of FGM.

    “Women and girls do not need to go through complications, severe pains, excessive bleeding, genital tissue swelling, fever and others that are associated with FGM, nor do they need depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder or low self extreme as a result of FGM, let us say no to FGM.

    “In Oyo State, we need a complete woman as a mother and wife, not a broken depressed woman, stakeholders and community leaders should encourage our people to speak up against FGM and change the harmful norms of FGM, let’s advocate for the well being of our women and girls, so, we can pave way for healthier women and save our childbirth.

    Read Also: Makinde signs Oyo electricity regulatory commission bill into law

    The Aseyin of Iseyinland, Oba Sefiu Oyebola, who spoke on behalf of traditional rulers at the event, said they would go back to their respective domains and enlighten their subjects on the dangers of FGM.

    Some of the FGM survivors lamented that FGM has made them loss their marriages and turned them into single mothers due to lack of sweetness during sex, urging the government at all levels to implement policy that will put lasting solutions to it. 

  • 14 years later, Makinde delivers Akala Road in Ibadan

    14 years later, Makinde delivers Akala Road in Ibadan

    Fourteen years after the commencement of the New Carage-Challenge-Apata road project initiated by the late Oyo state governor, Adebayo Alao-Akala, the inner road has finally been completed by the current administration of Governor Seyi Makinde.

    The project, which length is 11.8 kilometers is expected to improve commuting time from Lagos, Ibadan, Abeokuta, and other parts of the ancient city.

     It is also expected to boost socio-economic activities among the people.

    According to the construction giant, Messrs Kopek Construction Limited which handled the job, the project is one hundred percent completed and awaiting opening.

    Many residents paid glowing tributes to Governor Makinde for completing the project abandoned for eight years by his predecessor.

    They also commended the contractor for the good job. 

    On the project which was done in three phases, Pa Mathew Adejobi described Governor Makinde as a true symbol of a good leader.

    Pa Adejobi, who is one of the landlords in Kuola, Apata, Ibadan, noted that despite the initial setback and the decision by the past administration not to touch the project, Makinde showed exemplary leadership by ensuring the completion of the project started by late Otunba Alao-Akala.

     Also, Alhaja Bosede Adeogun, a resident of the Challenge area, expressed gratitude to Governor Seyi Makinde for deeming it fit to complete the project, adding that the governor has always demonstrated that he cares for the people.

    Alhaja Adeogun said: “When the road was started by our former governor Alao-Akala, we were so happy. This road has brought uncountable benefits to the people of Ibadan. The people felt the pain because the road was abandoned. You can see now that people are very happy with our governor, Seyi Makinde because he completed this road. See, the problem of traffic and the pains of sleeping on the road for hours at Apata that is no longer there because of this new road. We are happy and we thank God for the life of our governor Makinde.”

     Speaking on behalf of Messrs Kopek Construction Limited, Paul Chamoun, an engineer, who is the Project Manager of the company, said the quality of the road can be compared with the best anywhere in the world, assuring the people that the road would be adequately maintained for a whole year.

     He hailed the communities for their help, support, and cooperation within the period the project lasted, despite the painful decision to demolish a big estate to pave the way for the construction of the road.

    He said: “There was a lot of compensation on the road. After the compensation was fully done, we started the demolition, and it took us less than a year to complete the project. Honestly, we thank God we didn’t face any challenges.

    Read Also: Oyo community seeks Makinde’s intervention in alleged land grabbing

    “As for the community, they were very helpful, really they are very friendly. “From the government also, there was no delay in any payment, and there was no challenge in all these. You know, Kopek Construction Limited is a well-known company, we have more than 35 years in the construction business, especially in the South West, we thank God that we are known for quality jobs, and we try our best, the maximum we can do to make sure that we deliver the best job and the best quality. “

    “On the maintenance, we have one year for the maintenance of the road, but I can assure you that the work we did on the road is superb.”

  • Oyo community seeks Makinde’s intervention in alleged land grabbing

    Oyo community seeks Makinde’s intervention in alleged land grabbing

    • Allegation false, says monarch

    Oyo  State Governor Seyi Makinde has been called upon to intervene in the alleged land grabbing at Iware community in Afijio Local Government.

    Members of the Oyerinade Ruling House had accused the traditional ruler, Oniware of Iware, Oba Rasheed Adeniyi Owoade, of unlawful sale of the community land.

    They said it is even wrong on the part of Oba Owoade to parade himself as the Oniware, arguing that cases instituted on the matter are still pending in court.

    However, the monarch in a phone conversation with our correspondent described the allegation of land grabbing as spurious and unfounded.

    Read Also; No petrol supply issues, says NNPCL

    He said members of the ruling house had dragged him before the Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG), Zone 11, Osogbo “on some of these issues.”

    He added that they even wanted the AIG to institute a case against him on the matter, but he declined, telling them to approach the court.

    Oba Owoade said two cases have been instituted against him that are pending in courts.

    But the ruling house in a statement deposed to by 11 of its members, including Pa Akinade Adejare Ifekunle and Princes Babatunde Adegboye, Adeyemi Adedibu Olumide, Ajibade Oladimeji, Ajibade Olutayo, Aderibigbe Olufemi,

    Miss Adedigba Ronke, Mr. Ademola  Muyiwa as well as Princesses Akinola Oyenike, Ajibade Folashade and Ajibade Mojisola insisted on the intervention of Governor Makinde.

  • Oyo will soon achieve energy sufficiency, says Makinde

    Oyo will soon achieve energy sufficiency, says Makinde

    Oyo Governor Seyi Makinde has said the State will be the first to achieve energy sufficiency.

    The Governor, who stated that achieving energy sufficiency in Oyo State has always been a major focus of his government, expressed the readiness of the State to partner with the British American Tobacco (BAT), Ibadan Plant, to achieve this.

    Makinde spoke when he attended the 20th Anniversary of the BAT Ibadan Plant at the company’s premises in Ibadan..

    Makinde said: “You are going to be commissioning a 1.4 megawatts solar plant. This is pretty much in line with our aspiration in Oyo State.

    “For us, energy sufficiency is a big part of this administration. When I came in, there was no Energy Ministry but we now have and the Commissioner for the Ministry is here.

    “Less than 3km from here, you have the City Gate for the gas coming into Ibadan. So, we should be able to work together to utilize Nigerian gas in this environment.”

    Read Also: Revisit my petition, deposed monarch begs Makinde

    Makinde, who maintained the State will also within the next few weeks, commission its 11 Megawatts Power Plant with 10 Megawatts gas-driven while 1 Megawatt is solar-powered, said he would soon sign the Bill establishing the Oyo State Electricity Regulatory Commission.

    He added that States can perform optimally if the constitution is amended in some aspects, stating that dependence on Abuja will reduce drastically.

  • Revisit my petition, deposed monarch begs Makinde

    Revisit my petition, deposed monarch begs Makinde

    Deposed Onido of Idoland in Ido Local Government of Oyo State, Chief Tajudeen Agura, has urged Governor Seyi Makinde to revisit his petition on Ido chieftaincy for development of the town.

    He said the step became necessary because emergence of the Onido, Oba Gbolagade Babalola (Gbadewolu I), who was suspended by the government a few days ago, was not in consonance with the Chiefs Law declaration ‘and he’s not even from Ido and Agura family’.

    The government last week suspended the Onido following reports linking him to illegal mining .

    A statement by Agura reads: “Ido chieftaincy is guided by law, which is the declaration given to us in 1958 and stamped in 1960 that says “Declaration made under Section 4 (2) of the Chiefs Law, 1957 of the Customary Law regulating the selection to the Onido of Ido Chieftaincy. There’s only one ruling house and the identity of the ruling house is Agura.

    Read Also: ‘Makinde’s withdrawal doesn’t discredit process’

    “The person who may be proposed as candidate by the ruling house entitled to fill a vacancy in the chieftaincy shall be a male descendant from the male side of the ruling house.

    “I was appointed as the Onido of Ido on July 6, 2009 by the late Oba Samuel Odulana (Odugade I) and the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters gave me a letter indicating the governor’s approval.

    “After that, the late Governor Abiola Ajimobi gave me an instrument of office on July 29, 2011. In 2013, my colleagues at Ido Local Government, which constitutes Ido Local Government Traditional Council, asked me to partake in illegal activities, which I refused to do. But, since then, they have been writing petitions to the government that I grabbed land and the issue was investigated by a three-man panel constituted by the late Governor Ajimobi, but it found nothing against me.

    “As I speak, the panel’s findings are yet to be released because it did not indict. I tried to petition Governor Ajimobi, but to no avail till his death.

    “I also petitioned the new government when it came in 2019 but till now, no action has been taken. I don’t know whether the governor saw my petition or not until a few months ago when I implored the governor to revisit the issue and I learnt it is with the Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters for action.

    “I implore Governor Makinde to revisit the petition because the man is from somewhere around Moniya and I feel this is injustice. This made me to sue the Olubadan and Oyo State Government.”

  • Revisit my petition, deposed Ido monarch begs Makinde

    Revisit my petition, deposed Ido monarch begs Makinde

    Deposed Onido of Idoland, in the Ido local government area of Oyo state, and member of the Agura family, Chief Tajudeen Akinola Agura has urged governor Seyi Makinde to re-visit his petition on Ido chieftaincy for development of the town and its environs.

    Chief Agura highlighted that the recent appointment of the current Onido, Oba Gbolagade Babalola (Gbadewolu 1), who was suspended by the state government a few days ago, does not comply with the Chiefs Law declaration.

    He pointed out that Oba Gbolagade Babalola is not a native of Ido or a member of the Agura family.

    Recall that the state government last week suspended the current Onido because intelligence report linking him to activities of illegal miners in his council area.

    A statement by Agura stated: “Ido Chieftaincy is guided by law which is the declaration given to us in 1958 and stamped in 1960 which says that “Declaration made under Section 4 (2) of the Chiefs Law, 1957 of the Customary Law regulating the selection to the Onido of Ido Chieftaincy. There’s only one ruling house and the identity of the ruling house is Agura.

    “The person who may be proposed as a candidate by the ruling house entitled to fill a vacancy in the Chieftaincy shall be a male descendant from the male side of the ruling house.

    “I was appointed as the Onido of Ido on 6th July 2009, by the late Oba Samuel Odulana (Odugade 1) and the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters gave me a letter indicating the approval of the governor.

    “After that, late Governor Abiola Ajimobi gave me an instrument of office on 29th July 2011. In 2013, my colleagues at the Ido Local Government Council which constitutes the Ido Local Government traditional council and asked me to partake in illegal activities which I refused but since then, they have been writing petitions to the government that I grab land and the issue was investigated by a three-man panel constituted by the late Governor Abiola Ajimobi but found nothing against me.

    “Up till, now as am speaking, the findings of the panel are yet to be released just because the panel did not indict me on any issue. I have been trying to petition Abiola Ajimobi but all to no avail till his demise.

    Read Also: Makinde to deliver keynote address at IEC in Ibadan

    “In 2019, when the new government came on board, I also petitioned the government but up till now, no action has been taken. I don’t know whether the governor saw my petition or not until recently just a few months ago when I told the governor to re-visit and it’s presently with the Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters for necessary action.

    “I want to implore the governor of Oyo State, Engr. Seyi Makinde to re-visit the petition because the man is from somewhere around Moniya and feels that this is an act of injustice and this made me take Olubadan and Oyo State government to court and both suits are to be consolidated this February 29.

    “The law of the land does not permit what the last government headed by late Governor Abiola Ajimobi did as he refused  to release the panel’s finding to please his confidants who want to claim what does not belong to them.”

  • ‘Makinde’s withdrawal doesn’t discredit process’

    ‘Makinde’s withdrawal doesn’t discredit process’

    Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki has said the withdrawal of his Oyo State counterpart, Seyi Makinde, from the ward congress of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) does not discredit the process.

    He spoke while addressing reporters after three delegates emerged winners at the PDP ward congress election in Ward 4, Benin, Oredo Local Government.

    Obaseki said: “We have three governors involved in the exercise, and one withdrawing does not discredit the process. Makinde’s withdrawal does not discredit the process. What makes the process credible is the quality of the participation. I hope our efforts to unify the party continue, and we ensure that the PDP plays its role in the politics of this country.

    “The purported PDP crisis is hyped, but on the ground it is not as they want us to believe.”

    Read Also: All eyes on MPC to strengthen naira’s correction

    Obaseki hailed the peaceful conduct of the statewide ad hoc ward congress for election of delegates for the 2024 governorship primary election.

    He noted that the peaceful and credible exercise further demonstrated that the PDP was a well-organised party.

    Enugu State Governor Peter Mbah, who was also the chairman, Edo State 3 Ad-hoc Ward Congress Electoral Committee, said PDP was a party known for fairness, equity and justice, noting that the exercise was peaceful.

    The delegates elected to represent Ward 4, Oredo Local Government, included Efosa Viola, who scored 148 votes; Alabi Godwin, who polled 232 votes and Wilson Evbuowman, who got 219 votes.

  • Makinde to deliver keynote address at IEC in Ibadan

    Makinde to deliver keynote address at IEC in Ibadan

    In his mission to revive the education system in Oyo State, Governor Seyi Makinde will deliver a keynote address at the International Education/Study Abroad Fair 2024 in Ibadan.

    The conference will serve as a platform for the governor to speak on his plan on global future opportunities that will attract investors in the diaspora to invest in the rapidly developed education sector in the state.

    Read Also; Namibia’s President Hage Geingob dies at 82

    The Study Abroad Fair is scheduled for February 23 at The International Conference Centre University of Ibadan, Oyo State.

    In a statement signed and made available by the Partnership Director of the project, Lady Tolu Eledan, the summit theme “Accessing Education Beyond Borders; Embracing Global Opportunities” is aimed at bringing together renowned institutions, experts, decision-makers, and key influencers in the field of international education from around the world to exchange their ideas and knowledge in discussing the challenges and opportunities in the education sector.

    She emphasised that the summit will focus on empowering aspiring students to make their education study plans.

  • Edo, Ondo polls signpost troubling future

    Edo, Ondo polls signpost troubling future

    Kogi State governor Usman Ododo has so far spoken and acted like someone undeserving of the office his predecessor and kinsman Yahaya Bello single-handedly gifted him. Everything about the new governor betrays his mindset: his wistful look, his unspeakable subservience to the former governor, his first set of appointments, his deferential statements. He will not be the first man to be imposed on a people, nor will he be the last. Those who claim to be his betters, such as ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo, had done much worse in imposing misfits and ruining whole destinies. There is indeed hardly any former governor not susceptible to the itch to aggregate to himself the interest of the state’s electorate. In nearly all the impositions, Nigeria has been worse for it. Now, a different kind of farcical electoral shenanigan is playing out in the governorship polls of Edo and Ondo States, for obviously no lessons have been learnt. The field is crowded in Edo State, which will be the first to have a go at imposition in September, and for the November Ondo poll, Lucky Aiyedatiwa, probably the most remorseless of governors, given the way he handled the illness of his predecessor, has a head start in an uninspiring field of aspirants.

    Edo first, then. Governor Godwin Obaseki has no conception of loyalty or finesse. Nor does he care anything about ideology or fairness. He is a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) over which, in the Edo chapter, he has a tenuous hold as leader. He will first need to get his protégé elected in the primary poll slated for later this month, but will almost certainly head into the September poll with a fairly divided house, an unruly field of political and governorship hopefuls, and a hardly disguised preference for Asue Ighodalo, a corporate lawyer and investment banker. But then there is also Omoregie Ogbeide-Ihama from the Dan Orbih/Nyesom Wike PDP faction, and the cantankerous and sometimes disagreeable deputy governor, Philip Shaibu, who is determined to be a pain in the neck of Mr Obaseki. The governor won his second term exemplifying the state’s suspicion of the godfather phenomenon, an electoral tool deployed with devastating impact against ex-governor Adams Oshiomhole who denounced his leadership and backed Osagie Ize-Iyamu, a pastor. The governorship primaries in the PDP and APC are therefore expected to be keenly contested, but the victors are unlikely to underscore the beauty and independence of democratic practice in Nigeria.

    The dynamics of the Ondo governorship APC primary is unusually different. With a less congested field, which appears more worrisome than Edo’s in terms of leadership capacity, the state may head for an anticlimax. Sen Jimoh Ibrahim is a powerful and wealthy aspirant, but he will have to move mountains to best the incumbent. In his reactions to the late governor Rotimi Akeredolu’s health crisis and eventual death last December, Mr Aiyedatiwa hardly put one foot right. He needed to be patient, circumspect, calculating, and even dissembling if the situation demanded. Instead, he spoke brusquely, displayed abrasive and grating manners, and came across as unfeeling and dismissive. Since assuming the governorship, his tactlessness has left many people squirming and bewildered. But, for a governor, patronage is a powerful tool, and the Ondo governor has won many officials and ordinary people to his side. It is nevertheless too early to determine whether he would win, for his opponents will match him in every department of the game. But incumbency, regardless of how long a governor has been in office, can be stifling and unnerving to any opponent.

    Edo and Ondo, however, reinforce and exemplify Nigeria’s deeply flawed succession politics that keeps churning out misfits as local government, state, and federal administrators. The administrators may have flattering academic qualifications, but leadership is far more than academics, far more than loyalty, and far more than looks, eloquence and to some extent even charisma. Decades of focusing on wrong leadership yardsticks have worsened Nigeria’s existential challenges. There will always be global economic pressures triggering or exacerbating domestic economic crisis. And there will always be internal conflicts sometimes consequent upon warped constitutional arrangements and safeguards incapable of mediating ethnic, religious or regional suspicions and pressures. No part of the world is immune to such disharmonies and pressures. What makes the difference is the capacity of their leaders and perhaps too their imagination and boldness. There is nothing in the coming elections in Edo and Ondo that encourages the belief that prospective governors will be judged using the right yardsticks. In Ondo, a flawed Mr Aiyedatiwa schemes his relevance by positioning himself, against all scruples, and even before his benefactor is buried, to take advantage of the state’s desperate situation. And in Edo, the controversial and overhyped Mr Obaseki, who spoke glibly about democracy and denounced godfather politics when he campaigned for a second term, is now desperate to reproduce his kind, with scant attention paid to democratic practices. He believes his preferred candidate’s impressive CV should clinch the argument.

    The succession battle raging in Rivers State between Mr Fubara and ex-governor Wike should serve as signal lesson to political leaders eager to impose successors. Nothing is ever guaranteed. Most states where succession was midwifed by meddlesome political leaders have ended in a cul de sac. But no one takes history lessons to heart, and as Ondo may yet prove, perhaps even those who will vote at the party primary as well as at the governorship election seem absolutely incapable of learning anything. The choices facing Edo may be less complicated than Ondo’s; but simple or complicated, the chances of producing first-rate leaders, when the outgoing leader is himself third-rate, is one in a million.

    Atiku, Makinde and Ibadan blast

    A farcical drama played out in Ibadan last week when Governor Seyi Makinde, still smarting from the January 16 explosion in Ibadan, openly jousted with former vice president Atiku Abubakar over the latter’s lack of empathy for the people of Oyo state. Labour Party’s Peter Obi, a former presidential candidate, had visited the state to condole with Mr Makinde and Oyo people over the loss of lives and destruction of properties. The PDP’s former presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku, said the governor plaintively, had not deemed it fit to visit and commiserate.

    The former vice president’s media aide, Paul Ibe, however, refuted the governor’s claims. Mr Makinde, a notable member of the famous G-5 was too busy minding other things, he said, to read the letter of sympathy published in the media and issued less than 24 hours after the blast. How the spokesman missed the inanity of his response is hard to say. Of course Alhaji Atiku’s statement was published in the media, but for a former vice president conversant with bureaucracy and officialdom, it is passing strange that he considered such impersonal methods adequate, let alone one a spokesman would openly boast about. Does vindictiveness not have a limit for Alhaji Atiku?  

  • Explosion: Makinde to meet affected residents Tuesday

    Explosion: Makinde to meet affected residents Tuesday

    • Governor says state will receive integrated report from experts

    Barring last minute change, Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde will next Tuesday meet affected residents of Adeyi, Bodija, who were displaced from their homes by the explosion that rocked the area on January 16.

    The Nation reports that many of the affected residents are still being accommodated in hotels around the vicinity, as provided by the government.

    The governor gave the hint on Wednesday when he visited the epicentre of the blast in company with top government functionaries to access the level of work.

    He said the meeting would give the stakeholders opportunity to brainstorm on the next plan of action in the short, medium and long term.

    Makinde said the government was awaiting integrated reports of the health, engineering and structural side of activities so far, which would guide the next decisions to be taken by the government.

    He said: “We should have an integrated report on Monday on the health side, on the engineering and structural side of things and also post recovery and clean-up going on there.

    “Some of the people are still in hotels around here; we have to get them to start living as normal as possible and we have scheduled an expanded meeting for Tuesday. After this meeting, we should be in a position to actually layout what next step we will take, medium and extended.

    “We are here just to monitor the progress made so far and the places cleaned up. They have carried structural integrity test on buildings here and I believe this.

    “With the report that has been given to us, we only have one individual still to be operated on.

    Read Also: Tinubu to University unions: prioritise dialogue to avoid frequent strikes

    “So, on the medical side of things, we are doing okay. We are doing clean- up and also engagement with the community here.”

    The governor said the state would go tough on holders and owners of harmful substances with the newly signed Executive Order 001 of 2024.

    “Although some people may like to continue to misinform the populace in terms of saying they still believe this is bomb and a kind of terrorist attack, we have seen, just like I said from day one that some people came here and stored up explosives in this place.

    “This is a residential neighbourhood and it shouldn’t have happened and what we have done today is that I have signed an Executive Order on handling armful substance. If you say an explosive, this is on the Executive List of the Federal Government, but harmful substances, we can deal with them in our state.

    “Our own law here can take care of that and this is why the Executive Order is on handling harmful substances that are dangerous. It may not just be explosives; you are not supposed to be walking around with an acid for instance, so if you are caught in Oyo State not following the law on how to handle such substances, the law will take its course.

    “It is zero tolerance for people who are breaking the law of the land; we will ensure this is not allowed.”