Tag: Mimiko

  • APC to Mimiko: use N6.8b Paris fund to pay workers

    APC to Mimiko: use N6.8b Paris fund to pay workers

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State has told Governor Olusegun Mimiko to offset salary and pension arrears with the N6.8 billion collected from the Paris Club.

    A statement by its Publicity Secretary, Abayomi Adesanya, alleged that N6.8 billion was paid to the Ondo State government on November 30, by the Paris Club, to pay salary and pension arrears.

    The statement reads: “We are also aware of plans by the governor to divert the N6.8 billion for the payment of contractors for some fictitious and incomplete projects

    “Our advice to Mimiko is to pay the pensioners and workers with the N6.8 billion Paris Club funds accordingly.”

    The party called on the pensioners and workers to be watchful of the “wicked” plot against them and rise up to the occasion, especially in this festive season.

    It noted with displeasure that while workers could no longer meet their financial obligations due to the six months’ salary owed them, Mimiko was planning to divert the money into phony contracts with the aim of enriching himself and cronies.

    But Commissioner for Information Kayode Akinmade described the statement as baseless and unfounded.

    He urged the APC stakeholders to contact the Federal Ministry of Finance for verification of their ‘frivolous’ allegation.

  • Osinbajo, Ambode, Mimiko, others attend RCCG Holy Ghost Congress

    Osinbajo, Ambode, Mimiko, others attend RCCG Holy Ghost Congress

    The Vice President, Professor Yemi Osibanjo and his wife, Oludolapo; Governor of Lagos State, Akinwumi Ambode and his wife, Bolanle; Ondo State Governor, Dr Olusegun Mimiko and his wife Olukemi; Speaker, Ekiti State House of Assembly, Kola Oluwawole and Chief Judge of South Africa, Mogoeng Mogoeng, were on Friday present at the Redemption Camp on Km 46, Lagos Ibadan Expressway, for this year’s Holy Ghost Congress of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), with the theme; ‘Complete restoration’.
    The one week long congress, which began on Monday, December 5, ended yesterday, Saturday, December 10. It was a gathering of millions of worshippers from all over the world.
    In his sermon on Friday night, the General Overseer of RCCG, Pastor Enoch Adeboye, ministering on the topic, ‘Complete restoration,’ said complete restoration is a process. He said every Christian is entitled to miracles, noting that those who are not born again cannot get miracles, because miracle comes from God and God is holy.
    Reading from Ezekiel chapter 3, verse 7 to 10, Adeboye said; “Whenever God wants to begin the process of restoration, He remembers the forgotten and miracles are bound to follow. God also visits the person and something miraculous happens.
    “Anytime God wants to do something there must be a noise; When God arrives, there must be a shaking; nakedness is covered; shame is ended; the wind blows, and whenever the wind blows there will be miracles,” he said.
    He assured that the blessings of God makes rich and adds no sorrow. “When a miracle comes from God, it is clean, with no strings attached and there will be divine protection. When you are child of God your future is secured. Whatever is available to Jesus is available to you,” he said.

  • Ondo APC hails Mimiko

    Ondo APC hails Mimiko

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State has praised Governor Olusegun Mimiko for congratulating governor-elect Oluwarotimi Akeredolu.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Omo’ba Abayomi Adesanya, the party hailed Mimiko for his show of sportsmanship.

    “We accept the congratulatory message of Mr. Governor on our candidate’s landslide victory in last Saturday’s governorship election,” it said.

    The party praised Mimiko for his statesmanship, and urged him to ensure there was  smooth transition and genuine handover devoid of discrepancies and imbalances.

  • Mimiko: Profile in treachery

    Mimiko: Profile in treachery

    A cartoon published earlier by Punch offers perhaps the most prophetic foreword to the political tragedy that climaxed in Ondo on November 26. Someone in an unconscious state is sketched being hustled away from the shelter of the Iroko (big oak tree) as the Good Samaritan mutters, “struck by lightning”. Indisputably, the Iroko moniker is patent for the brand of politics Dr. Olusegun Mimiko has retailed in Ondo State in the past two decades.

    The ill-starred vagrant depicted in the cartoon could only be Eyitayo Jegede, a senior advocate he had anointed to succeed him as governor, only to finish poorly in last weekend’s polls. The cartoonist’s surreal evocation is obviously rooted in Yoruba cosmology, which ordinarily invests the Iroko shrub with some metaphysical prowess.

    But in the event that such powers prove impotent under a tempest, so much that the proverbial lightning could strike so viciously right under its shadow, it is then safe to conclude that such Iroko must have “gba abode” (come under an evil spell).

    What remains therefore is its decapitation as a rite in exorcism. For a man who has more or less dominated Ondo politics in the last decade, so sad that Mimiko would end riotously on a low. Now completely stripped after the November 26 endgame and haunted still by the grotesque shadow of PDP in complete disarray on account of factionalization, it would be entirely surprising today if Iroko is not already filled with nostalgia for the comfort and the peace of mind the old Labour Party had provided him before greed for power lured him to PDP in 2014.

    For an outgoing governor, nothing indeed could be traumatizing as the thoughts of a hostile takeover. For a man obsessed with the affectation of populism over the years and who, by action, seemed forever apprehensive about how future historians would accommodate him, how ironic that Mimiko will have to spend his remaining days in office agonizing more on how to balance the naira and kobo in the financial book, let alone bother about what fate awaits the sundry cenotaphs carved in his image across the state. But let no one shed tears for this prodigal son.

    Alas, the Iroko of perfidy is irreverently toppled by the whirlwind of Karma. Only poor students of history would not have foreseen this calamitous end for Mimiko. In hindsight, it is obvious that the deep fissures in PDP at the national level contributed to Jegede’s defeat.

    But even as the chairman of the PDP Governors Forum, Mimiko acted up his billing as a political sailor without moral compass. All along, he continued to flirt with both the Makarfi camp and the Sheriff faction, perhaps shamelessly hoping to bed one after the other.

    Until Jimoh Ibrahim locked the room and took away the key. To be fair, overall, no one can deny the fallen Iroko credits for modest achievements in the area of improved healthcare (especially maternal welfare) and empowerment of market women through the provision of stalls and soft loans. But with the hostile take-over of last weekend, Iroko has lost the opportunity to have a say in how his story in the last eight years will be officially documented.

    And the stories of his little miracle here and there will likely be completely obliterated when the “enemies” commence a re-write after his exit. Essentially, Mimiko’s tragic flaw stems from the carnal assumption that political success is to be measured only by material acquisitions without subscribing to any enduring moral value.

    To believe in nothing and stand for nothing is the worst cardinal sin. Even common harlots are governed by some ethics – an obligation to keep clients’ confidentiality, for instance. Now, Iroko’s loneliness should be framed in the proper context. In his hey-day, he conveniently chose to believe that politics and politicking could exist in a moral vacuum.

    A psychotic affliction which led my brother and colleague, Sam Omatseye, to memorably characterize him as “whitlow of the South-west”. IN his delusion, the medical-doctorturned- politician forgot that politics is defined by an avowal of a set of values. Without that, the player is perhaps no better than a motor-park tout, scavenging for his next meal ticket.

    To the scion of the otherwise illustrious Mimiko family of Ondo town, politics is all about self and the preservation of narrow interests. That explains why his political odyssey in the last seventeen years would now look more like an adventure in treacheries and infamy.

    As an appointee of Governor Ade Adefarati of Alliance for Democracy (AD) between 1999 and 2002, he was recruited by PDP to undermine his benefactor. When Olusegun Agagu became governor in 2003 through PDP’s now infamous “operation totality” in the South-west, he was compensated with the plum office Secretary to the State Government.

    Barely two years later, he was “promoted” to Abuja as minister. But he wanted something bigger – Agagu’s job! That set him at odds with Obasanjo and Agagu and would ignite a chain of events culminating in his migration to the Labour Party in 2006. His scant regard for loyalty explains why he later felt no scruples in trading the otherwise much cherished Labour badge away for a rickety accommodation in PDP two years ago, thus casually abandoning mid-stream the teeming community of workers across the country who had basked in the illusion of a toe-hold, if not foothold, in political power in Nigeria through Ondo.

    Yet, when it mattered most, when the PDP hyenas callously left him defenestrated in 2006, it was the same Labour that graciously offered him shelter and platform for rehabilitation. Having used the vehicle to gain second term in 2012, he opted to trade with PDP. Without conscience, he owed workers whopping six months salaries, but had money to finance his surrogate’s election bid.

    Without shame, he again attempted to deceive the same labour unions weeks ago by urging them to vote Jegede with a laughable promise to pay after the elections. The same lack of sense of loyalty also explains why Mimiko hardly batted an eyelid three years ago before clamping down heavily on the popular Adaba FM in Akure.

    For airing news items he did not find flattering, he showed naked power by doing the unthinkable – dug a deep valley in the only access road to the station! That punitive action rendered it inaccessible to workers and clients. Yet, when PDP “stole” his mandate in 2007 and he was left alone in the wilderness, the same Adaba FM provided him a platform to speak directly to the Ondo public, at no cost.

    At personal level, the ordeals of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Barrister Jimoh Ibrahim are now public knowledge. For all Tinubu’s moral and financial support during the protracted legal battle to reclaim his stolen mandate, Mimiko, emboldened by his new PDP friends in Abuja, would turn round to publicly call his old benefactor unprintable names during his re-election bid in 2012.

    If Jimoh Ibrahim chose to go dirty and personal against Mimiko and his surrogate, it is probably the only way the maverick businessman imagined he could avenge what he considers a great betrayal. The story is told of how the Igbotako-born publisher of Mirror Newspaper had extended huge financial support as well as legal guidance and counseling to Mimiko while fighting Agagu between 2007 and 2008 even though the latter was supposed to be his kinsman.

    But once Mimiko entered office, as the story goes, one of the early actions he took was to move against Ibrahim’s interest in Ondo’s hospitality sector. In 2010 came a big drama at the Akure airport. On landing from Abuja in a chartered propeller aircraft, Mimiko decided to walk over and say “hello” to Ibrahim nestling in his new Challenger jet.

    But no sooner had the governor stepped onto the aisle than Ibrahim reportedly barked at him, wondering what strange coffee he drank: “Who invited you to my plane?! Get out of my plane!!” With his security details left in a quandary as Ibrahim raised hell, Mimiko quietly left the scene.

    The paths of the two old-buddiesturned- adversaries would again cross in 2011 when Ibrahim first sought to contest the governorship on the platform of PDP, the sponsorship of which he had since taken over. As the story goes, then President Goodluck Jonathan counseled him to wait till 2016 as “Mimiko is working for me even though he’s in Labour Party.”

    Though disappointed at the turn of events, Ibrahim obeyed Jonathan. Thus, “federal might” was put behind Mimiko to overrun APC’s Rotimi Akeredolu in 2012, rendering PDP’s own Olusola Oke a political orphan in the polls. But no sooner had Mimiko been sworn in for second term in 2013 than he, characteristically, decided to officially move over to PDP, thus displacing Ibrahim’s as the party leader in Ondo.

    Extravagantly hoping Jonathan would deliver himself in 2015, Iroko began to see himself as PDP’s clearing-house in South-west and, ipso facto, the new Yoruba leader. Today, the lightning has struck and Ibrahim is obviously having the last laugh.

     

    NNPC, stupidity & Niger crude

    Coming on the heels of perceived “re- Northernization” of the commanding height of NNPC and the presidential marching orders for the resuscitation of oil exploration in the Lake Chad trough, the Buhari administration’s latest pet project to construct 1,000km-pipeline to link the Kaduna refinery with Niger Republic is bound to further inflame the nation’s already tense ethnic relations. Maikanti Baru, the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company, was quoted as announcing at a town hall meeting in Kaduna last week that the decision stems from the perennial difficulty experienced in transporting crude oil from the South-south to the Kaduna Refinery and Petrochemical Company (KRPC).

    His words: “Due to challenges with the aged refinery and crude oil pipelines that had been breached severely, the operations of the refinery have been epileptic. This we’re determined to resolve through various intervention methods, including evaluation of alternative crude oil supply from Niger Republic through building of a pipeline of over 1,000 kilometers from Agadem to Kaduna.”

    In fact, KRPC’s M. D., Idi Mukhtal, added that the plant was already being reconfigured in view of the new supply source, the way a butcher sharpens his knife before the slaughter. For a significant undertaking with such profound implications for Nigeria’s sovereignty, it is quite alarming Baru acts and speaks so casually.

    One, much has been said about Nigeria’s dis-articulated economy being the root of our national poverty in the face of abundant resources: we import what we already have and export what we seriously lack. Baru’s latest gambit provides yet another comic illustration. If the nation is witnessing forex crisis today, it is partly because the bulk of what we earn from crude export is used to offset the importation of refined petroleum products. It is one vicious cycle.

    So, when Baru finished laying his funny pipeline to Niger, how will he be paying the crude import? Two, an argument has raged back and forth on the viability of the nation’s aging refineries in view of new economic realities with a near consensus that government no longer has business running them.

    In fact, experts have suggested outright sale of the nation’s collection to private investors seen as better equipped to run them more profitably and efficiently. That is why the privately owned 650,000 pbd Dangote Refinery expected to come on stream in two years offers some hope. So, how do we reconcile this with Baru’s proposal?

    Three, it is obvious that the 1,000km pipeline is Karu’s own silver bullet to sidestep the “head ache” from Niger Delta militants opposed to the continued flow of crude from their soil to the north over perceived neglect and injustice. But that is being clever by half.

    A more sustainable approach is to summon the political will and address the long-standing fundamental issues verging on fiscal federalism rather than seek cheap escape route.

    In any case, is it not the same South-south that would invariably finance the construction of the proposed 1,000km pipeline through the daily harvest of crude oil?

  • Shocker as Fayose reveals plan to dump PDP

    Shocker as Fayose reveals plan to dump PDP

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose yesterday hinted that he may quit the crisis-ridden Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) before the 2018 governorship election.

    Speaking during a meeting with the state Suppliers’ Association of Nigeria in Ikere-Ekiti, Fayose said  he would stop All Progressives Congress (APC) from taking over the state in 2018.

    The governor told his audience he was studying the situation on which party he would move his political family.

    Speaking on the defeat his party suffered last Saturday in Ondo State governorship poll, Fayose alleged that the electorate sold their votes.

    “The scenario won’t repeat itself in Ekiti,” the governor boasted.

    He said the victory of Rotimi Akeredolu did not confer legitimacy on the election or that the people voted rightly.

    Fayose dumped the PDP ahead of the 2011 general election when he defected to  Labour Party (LP) to run for Ekiti Central senatorial seat. He was defeated by then Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) candidate Babafemi Ojudu.

    Fayose returned to PDP in 2012 ahead of the 2014 governorship election in which he defeated Governor Kayode Fayemi.

    Ekiti PDP is polarised; the exco loyal to Fayose is led by Gboyega Oguntuase, which belongs to Ahmed Makarfi faction.

    The other exco loyal to Senator Buruji Kashamu belongs to Ali Modu Sheriff faction.

    On his political future, Fayose said: “I don’t know the platform I will use for the 2018 election yet and at the appropriate time, I will tell you.

    “We are still studying the situation. We have to play the game left, right and centre and whoever we are going to use and the platform, you will all be part of the process because politics is about the people.

    “You saw how people sold their votes in Ondo State. I am confident that will not happen in Ekiti.  I am close to the people; you are the source of my strength.

    “Even if it requires just 48 hours to any election, if I tell you where to go, you will surely follow me there.”

    At another meeting with civil servants on Grade Levels 01-06, Fayose boasted that he would defeat the APC again in the 16 local governments, just as it happened on June 21, 2014.

    He pledged to give priority to workers’ welfare, carrying them along on receipts from the Federation Account and bridging the communication gap with the workforce.

    The governor added: “APC will be fooling itself if it thinks it will conquer Ekiti as it did Ondo. Ekiti is a peculiar place and I am the man on ground here.

    “I want to assure my supporters and Nigerians that APC won’t win a local government here in 2018.

    Governor Olusegun Mimiko and Eyitayo Jegede might have lost in Ondo State, but that does not mean the people voted rightly.  In 2015, people clamoured for change and what have we got now? Nigerians are becoming poorer than ever.

    “Today, I am the lone voice in Southwest. I am now like the nation of Israel surrounded by enemies, but I shall defeat and triumph over them.”

  • Mimiko to inaugurate 100 projects

    Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko will inaugurate over 100 projects before the expiration of his tenure in February.

    Commissioner for Information Kayode Akinmade said the projects include the International Event Centre in Akure also known as The Dome.

    Stating that the exercise will witness the inauguration of about 35 mega schools, the commissioner added that an ultra modern 18-hole golf course designed to advance tourism will also be inagurated.

    Other projects are the Ondo Township Stadium; Chicken Processing Center; Sericulture unit of the state’s Wealth Creation Agency; the Trauma, Surgical and Kidney Care Centres, Ondo; Comprehensive Health Centre, Igoba; Community Health Post, Adejubu; Doctor’s quarters in Ondo and  Ilaramokin; Basic Health Centre, Isarun; Health facilities in Bajare; Basic Health Centres in Akomowa, Ojumu, Adaja, Ipinlerere  as well as Emergency Medical Services in Ilaramokin and Bolorunduro.

  • INEC unfair to Jegede, says Mimiko

    INEC unfair to Jegede, says Mimiko

    Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo State yesterday said the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has not been fair to the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Mr. Eyitayo Jegede, SAN.

    The governor said the commission was trying to foist injustice on the people of the state by insisting to go ahead with the election.

    Mimiko, who personally addressed a press conference, said the PDP was yet to have agents for the poll.

    It will be recalled that the Appeal Court on Thursday declared Jegede the authentic PDP candidate by dismissing the ruling of the lower court which earlier directed INEC to recognise Mr. Jimoh Ibrahim as the party’s candidate.

    Mimiko also disclosed that the Commission had not released the collation tags for ward collation officers for PDP ward agents.

    He wondered how INEC expected the PDP candidate to campaign round the local governments, raise money for the elections and also screen his agent.

    The governor alleged concerted efforts by INEC and forces within the APC to prevent the emergence of a credible and electable candidate for the PDP in the state.

    Mimiko further disclosed that the voter register which should have been given to the candidate was released only 48 hours to the election, contrary to Electoral Law which stipulates 30 days to the poll.

    According to the governor, the “ungodly process” started when INEC, in disregard of extant laws governing elections, removed the name of Eyitayo Jegede on the basis of a Justice Okon Abang order which has since been declared by the Supreme Court as a fraud.

    His words: “We wonder why INEC could remove the name of a man who emerged from a party primary that was conducted in a free, fair and open environment and by legitimate organs of the party, where INEC itself was represented, with another from a process that is illegal, and by people not known to law and logic.

    “INEC discarded all legal advice not to substitute Eyitayo Jegede by its own chosen consortium of lawyers!

    “Several other hurdles were placed on the ways of the PDP candidate, Eyitayo Jegede, to the extent that he did not become a candidate until about 48hrs to election, on the directive of the Court of Appeal!

    “INEC did not release the list of voters register to the PDP until yesterday, in clear infraction of its own laws and against its advertised ‘Time Table and Schedule of Activities” for the Ondo election.

    “INEC refused to publish Eyitayo Jegede’s name for 30 days as stipulated in Section 34 of the Electoral Act 2010.

    “INEC denied Eyitayo Jegede the right to submit his party agents’ list at least seven days before the election as stipulated in Section 45 of the Electoral Act 2010, among many others!

    “As we speak, collation tags for ward collation officers are not available for PDP ward agents!

    “More than the above, the agents on INEC list are agents submitted by a man already aptly described by the courts as an impostor, who has also openly showed he is working as a fifth columnist in the Ondo election.

    “Every resident of Ondo State knows we are free and fair people who however abhor impunity and open rape on justice. We shall not take this!

    “In this instance, injustice stares us in the face and we are about being treated like slaves and a conquered people in our own country.

    “INEC is being forced to subvert its processes, and imperil the Ondo election. The team it sent to Edo, which it is sending to Ondo, is peopled by rabid supporters of APC who have displayed their brazen disdain for justice and fair play in the Edo election.”

  • Ondo Decides: INEC unfair to Jegede, says Mimiko

    Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo state on Friday said the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has not been fair to the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Mr. Eyitayo Jegede SAN.

    The governor said the commission is attempting to foist injustice on the people’s of the state by insisting to go ahead with the election.

    Mimiko, who addressed a press conference said the PDP is yet to have agents for the poll.

    It will be recalled that the Appellate court on Thursday declared Jegede the authentic PDP candidate by dismissing the ruling of the lower court, which earlier directed the INEC to recognise Mr. Jimoh Ibrahim as the party candidate.
    Mimiko also disclosed that the Commission has not released the collation tags for Ward Collation officers for PDP Ward agents.

    He wondered how INEC expects the PDP candidate to campaign round the local governments, raise money for the elections and also screen his agent.

    The governor alleged that concerted efforts have been made by forces within the APC to prevent the emergence of a credible and electable candidate for the PDP in the state.

    Mimiko further disclosed that the Voters Register which should have been given to the candidate was just released 48 hours to the election , contrary to Electoral Law which stipulated a 30 days to the poll.

  • Provide security, Ilaje youths urge Buhari, Mimiko

    Provide security, Ilaje youths urge Buhari, Mimiko

    The Ilaje Youth Congress (IYC) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to provide security during and after the election.

    In a statement in Warri, Delta State, by Ikuesan Oluwawumisan and Aganmayo Ayodeji, President and Secretary, the youth appealed to Governor Olusegun Mimiko to work with the Federal Government for a peaceful exercise.

    IYC noted that the call became necessary, following a revelation that some persons were making efforts to forment crisis during and after the election.

    The group stated that the impending crisis, if not checked, would breach the peaceful coexistence of the peace loving people, especially the youth of Ondo State.

    “We want to use this medium to plead with Governor Olusegun Mimiko to join hands with the Federal Government in ensuring maximum security of life and property.

  • Mimiko’s rhetoric of violence

    SIR: Governor Olusegun Mimiko’s conjecture on possible pre-election violence which had informed his numerous visits to the President may not be foreseeable for certain obvious reasons.

    First, the main trigger of any likely altercation could be narrowed down to disagreement within the PDP apparatchik which has snowballed into the Ondo candidacy conundrum and this is within the ambit of the judiciary to adjudicate.

    Why must other parties be made vicariously overwrought with election postponement? Does it mean that if another faction of the APC or any other party as it were, decided to aggrandize their differences in spite of the judicial window created for redress, they can also arm-twist INEC through the presidency to postpone the election?

    INEC must be guided by the constitution to be fair to all contestants.

    The sheer number of other political parties that have aligned with the governor to call for postponement doesn’t give the postponement any legitimacy beyond mere political attention seeking, being convinced that they are in the race as mere samples of election statistics.

    Secondly, the violence rhetoric could become the governor’s Achilles heel as any probable violence even tangential to PDP’s crisis could be ascribed to him thereby putting his legacy in arms way.

    Why can’t the governor await the decision of the Supreme Court on his preferred candidate? The issue of who has the highest stake in an election between a candidate and his party has already been decided in favour of the party by the Supreme Court.

    This is a win-win situation for Mimiko and not to fan the embers of riot or violence that can derail constitutional democracy.

     

    • Bukola Ajisola.

    bukymany@yahoo.com