Tag: NURTW

  • NURTW crisis: Ondo drivers’ wives protest over detention of husbands

    The crisis rocking the Ondo State chapter of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) deepened on Saturday following a protest by wives of some branch chairmen of the Union over the continued detention of their husbands at the State Anti-robbery Squad (SARS) in Akure, the state capital.

    It was learnt that the union leaders have been arrested since Monday, with the police allegedly demanding a whooping sum of N20million for their bail.

    The Nation gathered that the suspects were apprehended by security agents from Lagos State following a petition allegedly written by one Kehinde Sunday a.k.a Confidence.

    In the petition, Sunday was said to have accused the chairmen of planning to cause mayhem in the state due to the ongoing crisis in the Union.

    But the wives of the drivers have defended their husbands, while alleging that they were being intimidated by the acting state chairman of the union, Apostle Omobomi Ajisafe.

    A family member of one of the detainees, Mr. Akinwumi Funsho, further alleged that some members of the state executive of the union are allegedly the brains behind the arrest.

    He said, “We were shocked when some officers who claimed to be from the Anti-robbery Squad invaded the chairmen’s residences over a fictitious petition that was not shown to the family members or the detainees.

    “We are not sure where the officers came from. Though we have attempted to see the Commissioner of Police on this issue, but all has proved abortive.”

     

     

    We contacted the Officer in Charge of SARS, but he said he can’t do anything until those officers who arrested them return to the state.”

    The Public Relations Officer of the State Police Command, Mr. Wole Ogodo, when contacted the matter was not under his jurisdiction. He, however, confirmed that the officers who made the arrest are from Lagos State.

    Speaking on his alleged involvement in the arrest of the drivers, Ajisafe denied the allegation, saying he was at the SARS office in order to secure the release of the detainees.

  • NURTW crisis: Ondo govt sues for peace

    The Ondo State government has urged members of the state chapter of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) to be law-abiding and maintain peace in the discharge of their duties.

    The Special Assistant to the state governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko on Labour Matters, Mr. Dayo Fadahunsi, stated this while addressing some leaders of the union on the recent protest over the issue of leadership.

    He called on the protesting NURTW members to adhere to the directives from the national headquarters of the union, asking the former chairman of the union, Chief Obayoriade Oladutele, to step aside pending the outcome of the investigations on alleged improprieties leveled against him.

    Fadahunsi added that an acting chairman of the state NURTW has been appointed in the person of Mr. Omobomi Ajisafe, while assuring that there is no plan to dissolve the state executive council, branches and units of the union in the state.

    He, therefore, appealed to the union members to allow peace to reign, noting that government will not hesitate to deal with any person or group that engages in breach of public peace.

  • Police arrest nine for Oyo  NURTW boss’ murder

    Police arrest nine for Oyo NURTW boss’ murder

    The police in Oyo State have arrested nine suspects in connection with the murder of the Unit Chairman of the Agbeni branch of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Mr. Rafiu Adebayo.

    Adebayo, a.k.a. Ola Ruffy, was murdered near his home on Sunday night at Apaana, Foko in Ibadan, the state capital.

    The suspects are Kazeem Adegbite, Azeez Adebayo, Saheed Ismaila, Ikudaisi Kudus, Abibu Ogundeji, Adio Saka, Aliyu Adejumo, Saheed Dauda and Kasimu Olaniyi.

    Police spokeswoman Olabisi Okuwobi-Ilobanafor said the suspected mastermind of the attack, Moshood Oladokun, is “on the run”.

    She said: “We advise him to turn himself in now because he can only hide, he cannot run away. We will fish him out soon if he refuses to show up.”

    Oyo State NURTW Chairman Taofeek Oyerinde warned members of the union against resorting to violence to avenge their colleague’s death.

    Oyerinde said the union would allow the law to take its course, adding that the police have started investigating the matter.

    The killing of Adebayo marked a break from the relative peace that has reigned in the state capital in the last two years.

    It was gathered that the late Adebayo went to the Obafemi Awolowo Stadium (formerly Liberty Stadium) on Sunday afternoon to watch a ram-fighting competition.

    On his way back around 4:30pm, sources said he ran into a crowd following a popular masquerade, Iponriku, and some hoodlums took advantage of the rowdiness to attack him.

    He was reportedly shot in the thigh and stabbed four times in the head.

    One of the late Adebayo’s associates, simply identified as Fatai, was with him when the incident occurred.

    Fatai said he tried to rescue him, but he was also attacked.

    Adebayo died at a nearby hospital. His remains were deposited at the Oke-Ado Hospital, Ibadan.

  • Police probe assault on Ondo NURTW official

    The leadership of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) in Ondo State has been summoned by the police following the attack on the union’s Deputy Chairman, Mr. Omobomi Ajisafe.

    Ajisafe was assaulted last weekend by hoodlums suspected to be sponsored by a top official of the union.

    Police spokesman Wole Ogodo said the invitation became imperative to get to the root of the matter.

    He said the command would not tolerate any act of lawlessness.

    Ogodo said: “We have invited different factions in the union to the command to guard against a repeat of such attack on members of the union.”

    The embattled NURTW Chairman, Mr. Oladutele Obayoriade, said the union is not factionalised as is being speculated.

    Obayoriade said the union remains an indivisible entity made up of law-abiding individuals.

    He said he had nothing to do with the attack on his deputy.

    However, Ajisafe insisted that Obayoriade was responsible for the attack.

    He alleged that Obayoriade instructed “his boys” to beat him up at a beer parlour beside the union’s state secretariat.

    Ajisafe said: “The chairman was just trying to be mischievous by denying what he personally supervised. He cooked up a story that I came to the secretariat with members of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) but it is a lie.”

     

  • PDP, NURTW in free for all

    PDP, NURTW in free for all

    There was a bloody post Sallah prayer clash between members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers {NURTW} and some members of the Peoples’ Democratic Party {PDP} in Ibadan yesterday.

    It was gathered that the fracas took the intervention of the Aare Musulumi of Yorubaland, Alhaji AbdulAzeez Arisekola in whose private residence the fracas ensued.

    Sources hinted that pandemonium broke out when the PDP stalwarts in company of the former Senate Leader, Teslim Folarin and Azeem Gbolarunmi stormed the Islamic chief’s residence after the Sallah prayers at the Agodi Eid praying ground singing the praises of their party while the state governor, Abiola Ajimobi was still in his office.

    It was learnt that one of the promoters of the pro-PDP song who sat behind the chairman of the NURTW, Taofeek Ayorinde Fele was told to stop the song as it was politically offensive, but the advice was spurned.

    Fele who became infuriated by the action was reported to have hit the PDP stalwart on the chest, prompting his NURTW members who were at the residence to pounce on the PDP stalwarts beating and clubbing them out of the place.

    Arisekola who was not happy with the trend reportedly mounted one of the tables in his sitting room to call the warring mob to order and directed them to leave his house.

    In the ensuing fisticuffs, no fewer than twenty persons were injured, while all the PDP supporters were allegedly beaten blue/black by the NURTW boys

    Shortly after the incident, the caretaker chairman of the NURTW led his boys to the Agodi Government House, where Ajimobi counselled them against taking laws into their own hands and vowed that he would not hesitate to ban the union if they would engage in street fight.

    In his reaction, Folarin denied that his party men precipitated the crisis, clarifying that his supporters were at Arisekola’s residence to felicitate with him on Sallah.

    “Naturally, they were singing PDP songs when the NURTW men at the place became uncomfortable and beat the hell out of them. It is the height of political intolerance,” he said.

  • The Governor as public intellectual

    The Governor as public intellectual

    In states with a history of display of intellect by their leadership, there is the tendency to dismiss the current leadership of Oyo State’s new-found romance with display of the cerebrum as a non-issue. In Oyo, renowned for its acronym as a Pacesetter but which had, over the years, lost both the pace and the setting potentials, as intangible as it may sound that its governor arrests national and international audiences with impeccable intellectual delivery, this is a major celebration for the people of Oyo State.

    In the recent past, Oyo State suffered terribly in the estimation of the world as one administered by a leadership that was everything but deep. Every anti-intellectual story that filtered from the state to the world then stuck as emerging from a familiar terrain. When miscreants of the National Union of Road Transport Workers, (NURTW) reported to have permanent chalets inside the Government House, had their villainy and spillage of blood abetted by the state, this cohered with the perception of Oyo State as a state run by everything but intellectual leadership.

    But Oyo had not always been like that. For a state once run by geniuses like Bola Ige and Omololu Olunloyo to have relapsed that irretrievably became a song on the lips of dirge-crooners. Many analysts bemoaned the fate of Oyo, once administered by Ige, poet and literary icon and Olunloyo, mathematical genius and wizard of polemics, falling into the hands of such a vacant-minded leadership.

    Doubtless, this nostalgia to reconnect with a deep-minded past recommended the election of Abiola Ajimobi at the April, 2011 polls. Engaging polemicist and a man who can answer to a description of French author, Voltaire as one unusual brain homed in a human skull, his rich credentials as Managing Director of a multinational oil corporation persuaded the electorate that his could not be a replay of the vacuity of Oyo’s recent past.

    Having set on an even keel the construction of 199 roads, about 20 fallen bridges in the state, mobile health to the nooks and crannies of the state, treating almost half a million people in the process, Ajimobi, On September 20, 2011 set the ball rolling. His unspoken intention, no doubt, was to rebrand Oyo State as the intellectual capital of South West Nigeria that it had always been. Sitting on the same seat where Obafemi Awolowo sat to proffer those intellectual responses to the post-colony of Nigeria, it would be uncharitable of Ajimobi not to rekindle the flame of an intellectual incubator which Oyo had always been.

    So to Igbinedion University, Okada, Edo State, Ajimobi moored the intellectual boat. The hall was filled to the brim. Could anything good come out of Nazareth, the audience seemed to be asking. From an Oyo State said to be possessed of a leadership that valued necklace and bleaching cream? Decked in the academic hood and gown of a Guest Lecturer, the Oyo Governor went on an academic journey that struck his audience as unique and scintillating. Speaking to the topic, Challenge of Progress In The Midst Of Plenty, Ajimobi pleasantly shocked the institution’s Vice Chancellor, himself a foremost scholar on federalism, Eghosa Osaghae, who listened as the governor cited his journal articles of yore with astonishing rapidity.

    Then Ajimobi went into the nitty-gritty of the topic, dissecting it as a cheetah would an impala. He dissected the concept of crisis, submitting that it is at the core of the Nigerian nation and that it is impossible to take a shuttle into the Nigerian past without giving an ample space to its conflictual background. Indeed, while summarizing the Nigerian situation, Ajimobi said that the country’s post-independence situation was a long drawn-out decay or decline, whose empirical features are political instability, a low level of national cohesion and economic crisis, stating that all these indices, as far as Nigeria was concerned, are mutually reinforcing.

    He went into the post-independence Nigerian situation, especially during the First Republic where crises among the political class tore the republic apart. Thereafter, he went comparative on African experience of crises and expatiating on the interwoven nature of crises in Africa. “What makes conflict or a conflicting situation at the core of today’s globalized world’s concern” he began, “is its tendency to leave its border, making an internal conflict to burst out of its seams, and refusing to be confined within the borders of a single country… A good example of this could be found in the recent conflict situation that sprung up in Liberia in the 1990s. This Liberian crisis sowed the seeds of conflicts that eventually spread to countries like Sierra Leone, Cote D’Ivoire and Guinea.” The audience was enthused.

    And he drew the crises situation home, to the Oyo State example. At this stage, the university audience could not hide its delight at the depth of his analysis. Encouraged by the enraptured silence of the audience, Ajimobi went on: “You will recall the periodic violent skirmishes that our state was renowned for under this regime. Blood was shed at will as if in appeasement of some blood-sucking deities. Politicians became indistinguishable from thugs and motor-park kingpins. Inside this vortex was the state government which was said to be in cahoots with the motor-park kingpins. The very sad episode of the death of a notorious NURTW kingpin, who, with the support of the state godfather, took over our State Assembly in 2006, is still very fresh in our memory. .. Indeed, an NURTW thug moved the motion for the impeachment of the then state governor, hitting the gavel on the table in a manner reminiscent of how it is done in a sane legislative House. And rather than pronouncing the governor, who was the target of his patrons, he “the Speaker is hereby impeached”. The rest, as they say, is history.”

    By the time the governor finished delivering the lecture, the audience gave him a standing ovation.

    No doubt due to the news of his intellectual intervention, Ajimobi was again invited to deliver a keynote address at the Town Hall meeting held at the Dusable Museum of the African-American history, Chicago, United States. “The Need for True Federalism in Nigeria: The Oyo State Example” was the topic he had to do justice to.

    Ajimobi first went into the history of the contiguous territories of Nigeria’s 350 ethnic groups and the constitutional history of Nigeria, from Clifford, Macpherson to the current effort at constitutional amendments. He itemized the four phases of the attempt at federalism in Nigeria which he named to be, one, under colonial rule when Nigerian nationalists struggled for the enthronement of a federal system as an integral part of the political independence agenda; the post-independence era when the political class debated the political architecture bequeathed by the departing colonial power; the third being under military rule when Nigerians rose against elements of military unitary system that ran contrary to their federalist expectations and final phase which began immediately the present democratic dispensation started in 1999.

    The governor then went into the anti-federal nature of the Nigerian federal practice. “Extant laws that are anti-federal include the Land Use Act; the Laws on Petroleum and Gas that give these resources to the federal government; the Federal Inland Revenue Act of 2007 which empowers the Federal Inland Revenue Service to collect revenue for the three tiers of government, the Monitoring of Revenue Allocation to Local Government Act of 2005, which compels states to set up joint local government account committees and empowers the federal government to deduct from funds allocated to States money they failed to pay to local governments in the previous year.”

    He also went experiential in his governance of Oyo State. “From my experience as a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria between 2003 – 2007 and governor of Oyo State since last year, I make bold to say that there are too many responsibilities and resources at the federal level to allow for efficiency. The federal government has become so big that it is theoretically and practically impossible to guarantee efficiency… There is no way, given the capacity of the bureaucracy at the federal level, that efficiency can be guaranteed in the deployment of resources in this circumstance.”

    By the time he ended the address, he had succeeded in drawing the attention of the foreign audience to the wonky federal practice in Nigeria, especially through his conclusion that, “For me, the federal government should be limited to setting policies – after consultations with the states – on areas like road, agriculture, sports, etc. while the states are granted the powers and resources to manage these responsibilities that affect the lives of our people at the grassroots.”

    It was apparent now that Ajimobi’s renown as a public intellectual had reached a crescendo. This must have informed the London Chamber of Commerce and Industries’ (LCCI) invitation to him to address it on the business potentials in Oyo State. Held at the…., the governor, speaking through a power-point presentation, took his audience on a shuttle into the historical greatness of his state, the stasis it relapsed into and the promise it holds for investors. As usual, at the end of the presentation, the audience, which comprised white investors and friends of Nigeria, gave him a resounding applause for his mastery of the turf and his exhibition of high mental acuity.

    Two days after, Ajimobi was at the prestigious Chatham House. Asked to discuss, extempore, the topic, “Review and Reform: Key Elements and Implications of Nigeria’s Constitution Review Process,’’ again, he received a standing ovation of his deep understanding of the issues under reference. By the time, the second day, the governor arrived at the University of Oxford to talk on “Federalism and the Imperatives of Political Restructuring for the Development of Nigeria,” the audience had been convinced that in its midst was an emerging public intellectual who, at lecture podia, theoretically dissects knotty issues, while at home, in his Oyo State enclave, he brings solutions to a people who still have nostalgia for a state that was a complete package of a performer and one they could be proud of his élan.

    Adedayo is Special Adviser (Media) to Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State.

     

  • Peace returns to Lagos NURTW

    Peace returns to Lagos NURTW

    WARRING factions of Lagos State Council of the National Union of  Road Transport Workers (NURTW) have resolved their rift.
    The parties held hands and hugged at a reconciliation meeting at the Council’s office.
    The meeting was at the instance of the union’s National President, Alhaji Najeem Usman Yasin.
    While the dispute lasted, the Council was factionalised, with one faction loyal to former Chairman, Alhaji Rafiu Akanni Olohunwa and the other to the former Treasurer, Alhaji Musiliu Akinsanya (MC Oluomo).
    The crisis led to violent clashes between members.
     Elated by the success of the reconciliation effort, state Chairman Alhaji Tajudeen Agbede,  promised to accommodate all.
    He warned members to desist from rumour mongering, because it was the peddling of unsubstantiated information in the past that caused the Council’s initial problem.
    Olohunwa urged members to forgive each other of past infractions.
    He added:: “I want you people to forgive me of any atrocity I might have committed while in office. To err is human, to forgive is divine” Olohunwa pledged his loyalty to the new administration under the leadership of Agbede.”
    He implored the new Chairman to accommodate everybody.
     Akinsanya also thanked everybody for the role they played in ensuring that peace returned to the Council.