Tag: Obafemi Awolowo

  • Greed, bane of Progressive Politics in Nigeria – Ajimobi

    Oyo State Governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi, has said that the growing incidence of greed and desperation to amass wealth by political players is alien to the progressives’ politics of late Chief Obafemi Awolowo era.

    The governor said this during a condolence visit to the family of a late leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo Central Senatorial District, Pa Samuel Ogundiran, in Jobele, Afijio Local Government Area.

    Ahead of the 2019 general election, he called on political parties to conduct proper scrutiny and integrity check for aspirants jostling for their tickets, while also challenging those that have what it takes to lead to throw their hats into the ring.

    Ajimobi described the deceased politician as “one of the last men standing” among the disciples of Awolowo, who embraced progressives politics till death.

    He said, “Chief Awolowo maintained his stand in politics, despite pressures from the center and his followers, like Pa Ogundiran, would remain resolute on their ideology.

    “Progressives politics is today riddled with greed. It is no more the same progressives we used to know. It is all about money. If you give them money yesterday and you have none to give them today, you will be called names.

    Read Also: Osinbajo, Ajimobi in close door meeting in Ibadan

    “Baba died when his wisdom on progressive politics is still needed. He was a core progressive politician. I urge his children and youths in general to emulate the good deeds of Baba.

    “I also want to say that politicians aspiring for political offices must be thoroughly screened from home to know them better before they can event get the ticket. Most aspirants do not have the discipline and decorum to lead others.”

    Ajimobi, who also described himself as a progressive politics, said his own brand of politics places emphasis on winning elections, just as the leader of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He said this was slightly different from the politics of the Awolowo era that focused more on participation than winning elections.

    The governor advised the children of the late politician to emulate the good deeds of their father, bearing in mind that they could someday also assume positions of leadership.

    The governor prayed for the repose of the soul of the deceased, adding that the void created by his departure would be too difficult to fill.

  • APC will restore Awolowo’s legacies in Ekiti – Fayemi

    APC will restore Awolowo’s legacies in Ekiti – Fayemi

    The  Minister of Solid Minerals and Steel Development, Dr Kayode Fayemi,  on Tuesday said the  All Progressives Congress (APC) would restore  the legacies of  the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, in Ekiti.

    He spoke in Ado-Ekiti at the 109th posthumous  birthday of  Awolowo organised by the Ekiti  chapter of Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG).

    Fayemi,  the immediate past governor of the state, said his administration  had delivered on the four cardinal programmes of  the late sage.

    He identified these as free education, free healthcare for children,  pregnant women and the   old and physically challenged as well as  job creation and rural development.

    Fayemi vowed that the legacies  would be restored back in the state if  the APC emerges victorious in the July 14 governorship election in the state.

    ” If we remember, for the past 11  years,  we have been celebrating Awolowo’s  birthday since 2017

    ” What is most important is that those of us behind who God has given the opportunity to lead  must pay our dues and help our people in Yoruba land.

    “ Awolowo has done a great deal and that is why we are celebrating him since he died in 1987. He is still being celebrated in Ikenne today like we are doing in Ekiti

    ”  A prominent Yoruba leader, Pa Fasanmi,  once told me that Awolowo wished he  had been born in Ekiti because then, his largest followers were from Ekiti and he knew everyone in the state

    ”  If he was alive today, he would have been in APC as his political party. This is because this party was founded on Awo’s political ideals. We are Awolowo’s descendants in Ekiti

    ” We know Awolowo for what we call four cardinal points.

    “From the days of the  Action Group  and Unity Party, these are free education, free healthcare for children, pregnant, old and disabled, job creation and rural development.

    ” If  you remember, all these points were what we ensued  when we were in power in Ekiti, sadly they are no more in the state

    ” In conclusion, don’t let us  lose hope,  all these ideals of Awo, we will ensure we do all we could to return them to Ekiti.

    “I appreciate the ARG for celebrating the late sage,  Awolowo. In truth,  all of us who are of Yoruba race, it is high time we took up our role as leaders. We are the leaders of the black race, ”  he said.

    Also extolling the virtues of the  late Awolowo,  Gov.  Rotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State  said: ” We are celebrating what Awolowo stood for which is the advancement of the Yoruba and African race. Ours is pureness of heart.

    “Awolowo has played his part, it remains for us to play ours.

    “ We cannot all forget the immense contribution of Awolowo,  especially among the Yoruba race.

    “ Afenifere song was composed by Awolowo. The song says that we the Yoruba are the light of the black race, may God not allow us to draw ourselves backwards.

    ” When Awolowo was incarcerated in those days, Hubert Ogunde counselled us to  have a rethink in his popular song.  Yoruba Ronu.’’

    “Celebrating Awo’s legacy would make us remember the great contributions of our great forbears. I urge all Yorubas to have a rethink and reunite. We must all work together for our progress

    ” We are in the quagmire in this country and God will not come down to help us. He would send someone.

    “Once we have seen the person,  we will know with what he has done and what he would do. You know we are the same, I cannot deceive you, we have brought goodies for you in APC, ”  he said.

    Also speaking, Mr  Ayo Afolabi,  who represented the Chairman of  ARG, Wale Osun, said “every society reveres it forbears. We all talk about Awolowo. His works shall not perish.

    “We are here to celebrate Awolowo,  so we won’t forget his legacies. APC is the party that we the Afenifere have embraced.

    “It is the party that can assist the Yoruba race to the promised land. We enjoin all people to vote for the party in Ekiti.”

    The guest speaker at the occasion, Prof. Williams Fawole, lamented that many politicians seeking political office in the country lack germane ideas to lead.

    In his speech entitled, “Obafemi Awolowo and Transformative Politics: Sustaining The Worthy Legacy,’’  the don  urged politicians to imitate Awolowo by being original.

    “What stands Awolowo out as a unique politician and better leader is his original ideas.

    “Anyone who doesn’t have freshness of ideas cannot be seen as a true leader.

    “Awolowo’s legacies cannot perish,  we urge our politicians today to follow his footsteps so their own contributions could be remembered,’’ he said.

    NAN

     

  • Aregbesola warns youth against fraudulent activities

    Aregbesola warns youth against fraudulent activities

    Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun has warned Nigerian youths against quick money syndrome mentality, leading them to engage in fraudulent activities.

    Aregbesola gave the warning on Saturday at the 2018 South-West Conference of the Junior Chamber International (JCI).

    The governor said the youths must champion the virtues of hard work, integrity, honesty, pursuit of knowledge and the quest for innovation and path finding.

    Represented by the Commissioner for Special Duties, Mr Mudashiru Toogun, Aregbesola said that Nigerian youths were the hope of better future for the country.

    He said that for Nigeria to actualize her set objectives, the youths must refrain from acts capable of rubbing the corporate integrity and reputation of the country‎ in the mud.

    According to the governor, for Nigeria to reclaimed its glorious position of providing genuine and outstanding leadership among the comity of nations, her youths must ‎rise to the present challenges and take their historic position to lead the black race.

    He said that youths must wake up from their slumber and hold firmly to their future by being productive and hardworking.

    “The trend in other parts of the world is that young people are increasingly setting the pace.

    “People like Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, the online retain corporation, Mark Zukerberg, who invented Facebook, Jerry Yang, who created Yahoo,

    ” David Cameron, immediate past Prime Minister of Britain and several others who, as young men in their 20s and 30s, have taken direction of the world in business and politics.

    “In our land, we have Anthony Enahoro, who was elected into the Federal House of Representatives in his early 20s, Adeyemi Lawson, who at 24 became the chairman of Lagos Island Local Government, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, who as young men, became political colossus.

    “Regrettably, too many of our youths have been wasted and are also poised to self-destruct.

    “The youths are the hope of our race and they must take their historic position,” he said.

    The governor, however, said that his administration had secured a better future for the people of the state through the provision of quality and functional education.

    Earlier, the National‎ President of JCI, Mr Adeniyi Balogun, urged the youths to continue to use their strength to make the difference towards national development and growth.

    In his remarks, the Executive Vice President of JCI (Southwest), Mr Abiola Olorunnisola, said the conference was put together to awaken Nigerian youths to their responsibilities for national growth and development.

    NAN

     

  • Only true federalism can liberate Nigeria — Ajimobi

    Only true federalism can liberate Nigeria — Ajimobi

    Gov. Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State has said that only the practice of true federalism can liberate Nigeria from its current challenges.

    Ajimobi said this on Thursday while receiving a delegation of traditional rulers led by the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi, at the Government House, Ibadan.

    He said that the nation would have achieved a lot in terms of growth and development, if true federalism was being practiced.

    “We are not practicing true federalism in Nigeria. The last time we practiced it was during the time of late Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

    “The issue of federalism has nothing to do with ethnicity but a fight between the wealthy and poor people.

    “The APC promised to practice true federalism but yet to do so. I believe that a continuous advocacy for true federalism will definitely yield the desired results soon.’’

    On the issue of cattle colony, the governor said his administration would only support ranching.

    “Today, many countries across the world do not engage in cattle herding any longer; they have all embraced ranching which has many advantages.

    Read Also: Oyo CJ to reassign Olubadan’s case against  Ajimobi

    “Herding is a business and everyone who engages in such should make adequate provision for his or her business to grow without involving the Federal Government.

    “If we provide land for cattle colony who will provide land for poultry and pig farmers?  In Oyo State, we won’t allow cattle to roam about.’’

    On the issue of state police, he noted central system of policing was a ruse, adding that most countries have state police.

    He decried a situation where governors were described the Chief Security Officers of their respective states but lacked control of of the security apparatus.

    Ajimobi thanked the Alaafin for being very supportive of his administration.

    Earlier, Adeyemi commended the governor for raising the bar of governance in the state, urging him to ensure the enthronement of a worthy successor.

    “We appreciate the governor for his forthrightness on the issue of standing for the right of the downtrodden, especially the people of his state.

    “Federal Government does not own land; it belongs to the state.

    “If truly we are practicing federalism, the Federal Government should not be collecting Value Added Tax on businesses in Ibadan while the state struggles to provide facilities for the same businesses.

    “Our own people are not cattle rustlers. We vehemently say now that we stand against cattle colony. We support our governor on his stand on ranching and against colony,’’ he said.

    NAN

     

  • World Television Day: A peek at the past

    World Television Day: A peek at the past

    The past is not the past if it is not past. One cannot look back at something he hasn’t walked past, literally. So when we look back in retrospect, what do we often find? Fond memories? Maybe.

    The truth is, our memories sometimes are so distorted that even bad memories are shrouded in good ones so when we look back, we just smile.

    Similarly, as the world looks back in remembrance of the day television was invented, it doesn’t remember the days it lived without the ‘idiot box’, rather it calls to mind the joy and thrill television brought the whole world.

    From the very day Eadweard Muybridge won a bet against the former governor of California, Leland Stanford, a widespread hunger to see motion picture on a device other than what was simply projected on the screen, was born.

    Indeed, the world lived in such high expectations, but it wasn’t about 56 years later, in the early 1920s, that the first mechanical television was demonstrably used to depict films.

    The whole world was happy and mad at the same time. Television was the new gold. They wanted it, they prayed for it, but once it arrived, they could not own it. It was too expensive and only the rich could afford one.

    That was in the past. Now, all that is gone. Television is now so cheap even those widely perceived as poor can afford to have two sets in their homes. No one could have possibly seen this at the time.

    But late Chief Obafemi Awolowo saw it. He was, for a certainty, a seer – a seer of some sorts. He looked and saw beyond the accusation that television was a major cause of indolence. He saw the massive potential that the device had in informing, educating and transmitting cultural heritage.

    Little wonder he wasted no time in helping to usher in the first television station in Nigeria, nay, the first in Tropical Africa. Nigerians started buying the device. Western Nigerian Television ( WNTV ) began broadcasting in the Nigerian South-west region in 1959.

    This was extended to the eastern and northern regions within four years. The result today is the multi television channels we now have.

    We can watch a documentary of the damages done in World War I and II, as well as some important events in the Nigerian history because of television. We can learn how to speak good English and know which behaviour is acceptable and which is not in our locality because of television.

    We learn how to dress well and behave ourselves in social settings because depictions on television tell us so.

    We sit in the comfort of our homes and watch live events in other continents. This forms in part, the basis by which Marshall McLuhan, the communication scholar, was inspired to assert that the whole world has been retribalized.

    In his words, the world is a global village. He was not amiss. TV had shrunk our world and has become to man, an indispensable companion.

    When people come back from work nowadays and are looking for something to relieve them of the day’s stress, most turn to their television sets. Oh, how Integral TV has become in our daily lives! Some people don’t even feel like their day is complete without latching on to one or two programs they follow everyday.

    Yes, TV has become a very important part of our society. What is more important, however, is that television has undergone several changes from what it used to be in the 1920s. First, it went from the black and white version to the coloured version.

    Then it slowly went from analog to digital. It is now slowly undergoing a more profound change in form of little portable gadgets. We now have a ‘TV’ of some sort in our palms and pockets.

    Our smart mobile phones are not only redefining the traditional TV as we know it, but are also serving as a prototype for what future television devices will look like.

    Of course, future television devices will be mind blowing just as we would consider what we have now fifty years ago to be equally mind blowing. Television holds yet, massive potentials. But as we await more mini versions of TV, let us take a peek at the past and appreciate the journey television has made to the present.

  • Secession: Channel your grievances through Ohaneze, Igbo leader advises IPOB

    Secession: Channel your grievances through Ohaneze, Igbo leader advises IPOB

    A leader of the Igbo community in Ibadan, Chief Aloy Obi, has advised members of the Independent People of Biafra ( IPOB ) seeking secession of Southeast Nigeria to channel their grievances through the umbrella body of the Igbo people, the Ohaneze Ndigbo.

    Obi, who is the Onyedu Ndigbo of Ibadan land, gave the advice in a statement yesterday.

    The Igbo leader said though it is obvious that Igbo people are not well represented in the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari, IPOB should channel its grievances through Ohaneze which is made up of elders and experienced people who can manage agitation successfully.

    He, however, criticized the Federal Government for classifying the group as a terrorist organization, saying agitation is acceptable in democracy.

    Obi also joined his voice to the call for restructuring of Nigeria. He said the need to restructure the country is sacrosanct, pointing out that the report of the 2014 national conference could serve as a guide for implementing restructuring.

    He, however, insisted that the unity of the country must not be compromised in attempts to restructure the country.

    He explained that a weak centre will be far better than the current strong centre, adding that the success of regionalism in the First Republic is a confirmation of the need to restructure.

    According to him, regionalism allowed the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo to achieve several feats for the development of Western Nigeria.

    Obi also called on the Federal Government to pay more attention to the economy. He said indices of recession are still with Nigerians. He p, therefore, urged the government to embark on projects and policies that will erase the indices of recession.

  • Fela: ‘Statue without head an insult to the family’

    Fela: ‘Statue without head an insult to the family’

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    Lagos state governor Akinwunmi Ambode  recently unveiled a statue in honour of Late Afrobeat musician, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.

    Professor TAIWO OGUNADE, in this interview with MOSES EMORINKEN, expressed his opinion concerning Fela’s statue and the representation (or misrepresentation) of the legend and what he stood for.

    Do you think it was expedient to erect a statue in honour of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti?

    Yes it is important but not to be represented as a blind man without a head.

    I was a choreography teacher for Fela’s dancers when he resided at Agege Motor road.

    If you go to any system of justice in Nigeria, you will see the statue of a lady holding the sword in one hand and a weighing scale on the other. This symbolises the justice system in Nigeria. On the flip side, we call Fela a liberation artist, yet he does even have a head or even a “clinched” fist.

    His head is not in the statue; therefore, it could be anybody’s head. Majority of today’s generation do not even know Fela, not to talk of associating a face or head with him. Imagine a person born ten years ago or even those yet unborn. Will they be able to relate the statue to Fela? Definitely NOT! This is because of the headless feature of the statue.

    Therefore, it is a waste of money and resources by Ambode and his advisers.

    How can an artist erect a statue without head and call it Fela? That is an insult to his family.

    We hear that his family members seem to be fine with the statue. What is your take on this?

    Even if the family don’t complain about it, it was obvious that they were stunned at the sight. Everyone was wondering probably a head would descend from the sky.

    Don’t you think the artist would have a valid explanation and philosophy behind the headless statue?

    Well, I do not know. The governor said it is a liberation statue of Fela. However, a liberator will always have a clinched fist ready to fight. When he was alive, he always had what is called yabis time.

    It was a time for him to talk about a lot of things, and get divergent replies. Can someone without a head “yabis” anybody? It is impossible! The signature of the yabis is missing in the statue due to its heedlessness.

    It is obvious that the governor and his team were not well advised, or they do not know; I am sure the governor or his advisers never met Fela in their lifetime.

    READ ALSO : Fela’s:  Liberation: A deserved honour

    What do you think the governor and his team should do to remedy the anomaly?

    First, the statue needs to be destroyed. It can’t be left as it is.

    Also, Fela never wore clothes almost 19 hours a day. When you see him playing with his band, he does not wear clothes. Yes, he wears some fanciful dresses sometimes, but he hardly wears clothes. He normally would have only his pants on.

    They therefore, must remedy these by putting a head, a clinched first and nakedness at some point. By nakedness, we know he doesn’t go to stage without his pant. They could use a trouser for him; the important thing is that his chest region is made bare.

    What do you think about the statue of Obafemi Awolowo in Lagos?

    That also is a waste of money. Awolowo was not as fat as the statue portrayed. Also, the statue had him with a running boot. Awo never wore a boot as far as I know.

    I know him well enough because my primary school (Igbagbo Aladura School) in Ibadan was about 50 metres away from his house.

    What is your take on the statue of Jacob Zuma erected by the Imo state governor?

    I think Rochas Okorocha is misdirecting himself. People like Zuma should not be honoured.

    You don’t honour Jagundas (thieves). He is facing corruption serious charges in his country…such a one should not be given a space in our land, not to talk of honouring him with a statue.

    What would be your advice to young artists?

    This is a country that has a healthy pool of the old and young. The old is called “old school” while the young “new school”; therefore, if you want to do anything that belongs to the old, it is important that you seek the advice of the “old school”.

    Fela belonged to the old school, therefore, let the Ambode stop wasting state funds and seek the advice of people from the old school for projects that pertains to the old school. There are old artists who can guide the “new school” artist to do the old school things.

  • Awolowo’s legacies remain benchmark – Ambode

    Awolowo’s legacies remain benchmark – Ambode

    Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos on Tuesday said the legacies and landmark achievements of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo remained a source of inspiration and benchmark for progressive leadership.

    Ambode said this at the unveiling of Awolowo’s statue on Awolowo Road/Lateef Jakande Road Junction in Ikeja, Lagos.

    He said that Awolowo displayed an ability to use leadership as a tool for advancing the people’s welfare.

    “Late Chief Awolowo was a leading voice among eminent nationalists of his time who successfully negotiated our nation’s liberation from colonial masters.

    “Awolowo was a symbol to the aspiration of western Nigeria and Lagos territory during his days.

    “His achievements at the helm of affairs in western Nigeria gave us supremacy, and that is what Lagos has always aspired to be.

    “The unveiling of the statue is, thus, in recognition of all the good legacies that the Awolowo dynasty is enviably known for,” he said.

    Ambode said that the statue was not just about beautifying the environment or serving as a tourist attraction but a reminder of the need to value sacrifices of past heroes and uphold and promote the ideals which they stood for.

    The governor said that the position of Lagos State on restructuring of Nigeria was as stipulated in the manifesto of the APC.

    “APC manifesto states: APC shall initiate action to amend our Constitution with a view to devolving powers, duties and responsibilities to states and local governments in order to entrench true federalism and federal spirit.

    “We as a people are adamant in making sure that this part of the party’s manifesto comes to pass, ” Ambode said.

    Earlier, Dr Tokunbo Awolowo-Dosunmu, one of the children of the late Awolowo, commended Lagos State Government for keeping the memory and legacy of her father alive by installing the statue.

    Awolowo-Dosumu said that her father was able to achieve free education and other laudable programmes because he judiciously utilised revenues from tax.

    She said that the state government followed her father’s footsteps by properly utilising tax payers’ money to implement development projects which directly impacted on the citizens.

    “When my father initiated taxation then, many people were not happy, but when they saw development in terms of education and infrastructure, they believed and trusted his initiative by paying their taxes promptly.

    “With the ongoing infrastructure upgrade in Lagos State, people will begin to support government policies and projects,’’ she said.

    The sculptor of the monument, Mr Hamzat Attach, said that the late Awolowo stood for quality leadership, education and mentorship to achieve effective governance and development.

    In her remarks, Mrs Adebimpe Akinsola, Lagos State Acting Commissioner, Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture, said that the government installed the monument to make the state an attractive destination for visitors.

    Also present at the event are Awolowo’s first grandson, Mr Segun Awolowo, and the Wife of the Vice President, Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo, who is also a granddaughter of the late icon.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Awolowo was the first Premier of the Western Region and later a federal Commissioner for Finance, and Vice Chairman of the Federal Executive Council during the Civil War.

    He died on May 9, 1987, at the age of 78.

  • Ambode revives Awo’s legacy of public finance

    Ambode revives Awo’s legacy of public finance

    Ahead of today’s unveiling of Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s statue by Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, the governor’s Special Adviser on Communities and Communications, Kehinde Bamigbetan, in this piece, highlights the late sage’s policy of welfarism in the Western Region.

    It is forty years and 139 days after he joined the saints on May 9, 1987. Many folks – loyalists and admirers- will flock to the site of his imposing statue Tuesday September 26 to watch the dramatic re-emergence of the philosopher, statesman and politician. A few acquainted with his interest in metaphysics may tarry till the veil has been cast away. As one of Moses Olaiya’s comic offerings remind, the dead may resurrect amidst the celebration!

    That would not be necessary in this instance because Obafemi Awolowo, never died. His works thunder across the landscape of the Western Region in the architectural prominence of pioneer accomplishments. His words speak to the thought systems of mankind and echo to the future the paths lit yet uncharted. Awolowo engaged all the philosophers who contributed to modern knowledge in formulating the principles which guide his politics, culture and economics. Popular democracy from Plato. Dialectics from Hegel. Democratic socialism from Marx and Engels. Metaphysics from Aristotle and the theologians. Public finance from Maynard Keynes.

    The decision of the Lagos State Government led by Governor Akinwumi Ambode to position the sage appropriately for eternal adulation in the precincts of the power corridor of the state and within walking distance of the premier shoppers and tourists rendezvous highlights the need to bring the multi-dimensional impact of this avatar back into our daily narrative.

    Consider, the legacy of taxation as an instrument of planning .Such a didactic exercise should be seen in the context of our current national political economy particularly the increasing state failure to perform basic obligations to workers, grow internally generated revenue to hedge mounting bills and attract loans for long term capital development. The disastrous consequence of a recessed economy is not in the low purchasing power of the citizens, the inflationary spirals and the cuts in production. It is the collapse of the world and culture of work. When days of joblessness roll into weeks and weeks into months, the simple act of waking up in the morning is dis-incentivised by the sheer fact that there is no place to prepare to go.

    The crisis has become a major cause of frustration and produced aggression of various grades manifesting in the clamour to review the federal constitution in the hope that autonomy for the sub-units or component parts (aka restructuring) will restore prosperity and autochthonous development. We are reminded that the period when we had regions was the best as if reversion to regionalism is enough magic wands to achieve stable economy.  The unassailable fact that the men who made it happen in Western, Eastern and Northern region- Awolowo, Azikiwe and Bello- aspired to apply those principles to the country from the centre is comfortably ignored. For instance, the Action Group made it clear that it adopted federalism because it was the best for a country with many ethnic groups and believed that federalism would make it easier for smaller states to join Nigeria to form a United States of West Africa.

    It is clear that the most generous and accommodating structure of appropriation in a confederal or more federal system will only transfer the present patterns of accumulation from the centre to the units, enabling rapacious elite to gain greater access to the gravy while the commonwealth bleeds. Such a prebendal ambition, premised on the tweaking of the rentier state, would inflict serious injury on the memory of Awolowo, who, in his post-1974 period had begun to question the magnitude of the challenge posed to governance by primitive accumulation.

    The fact of history is that Awolowo believed in taxation as the act by which responsible citizens contribute from their means to enable the community meet collective objectives. In his most quoted speech on taxation, delivered during the proceedings of the House of Representatives on August 15, 1954, he said: “; there is that broad, smooth road, with promises of no taxation, and efforts to get money from other places, leading nowhere but perdition, poverty, disease and economic enslavement; and there is the other road people who go therein pay tax. They also have to apply self-help and self-sacrifice to get where they want. But this road, Mr. President, leads to success, prosperity and to the exploitation of natural resources by the people of this country …”

    Awolowo arrived at this conclusion in his quest to discover how to accelerate domestic capital formation to liberate the economy from the foreign domination that the long years of colonial rule established. His strategy was the empowerment of the domestic middle class to emerge as the national bourgeoisie that would create a fully indigenous economy where the production and distribution of goods and services would meet the needs of Nigerians. This was not possible without the creation of surplus funds for investment. Taxation of the dominant productive forces in the colonial economy- workers and farmers- was a key element of that strategy. Hitherto, taxation had been employed by the colonialists to service the metropole. In Awo’s template, this fiscal device will be used to empower the country.

    The heritage of welfarism that the Western region, following the rise to power of the Action Group, bequeathed to the successor regimes was captured by the concept of Freedom for All, Life More abundant. It is based on the taxation of all adults who are rewarded with the implementation of social services such as education for all, health for all,  jobs for all, sound management of public resources and infrastructures to facilitate the promotion of goods and services.

    In April 1953, as Leader of Government Business, Awolowo introduced 10 shillings capitalization tax on all adult tax payers to raise revenue. To reward taxpayers, he introduced Free Health Scheme for all children below 18 same year, the first minimum wage in 1954 and Free Education in 1955. The collection was so efficient that the folktales regale with stories of men who ran into the federal territory of Lagos to evade payment.

    Although the rival National Council for Nigerian Citizens campaigned so negatively that the Action Group lost votes by 19 to 23 in the 1954 polls, the deployment of the revenue to the construction of public projects and programmes made it a temporary setback.

    With these antecedents, the romantic celebration of the historic exploits of the Western Region government must therefore proceed with the admission that taxation and the judicious deployment of its proceeds for development is the template for any truly honest and purposeful government.

    After two years of experimenting with other strategies for generating surplus funds for development, the Ambode administration has returned to the feet of the great master to pay homage to his heritage of public finance. As an administration that hit the ground running as soon as the governor was sworn into office, it began with the low hanging fruits of loans to activate infrastructural renewal. Gradually, the loans gave way to the bonds- longer term instruments- for financing public works.

    Although bombarded by investors and bankers to take more loans and issue more funds, the administration recognizes that the interest sharks are out to post profit for their shareholders. Both windows work as advances on expected inflows. The logic, which Pa Awolowo defined long ago, came to the rescue. It is better to generate the inflows and reduce the interest paid to the creditors.

    Governor Ambode will be relying on the achievements of his predecessors in generating revenue. A key contributor to this legacy is Asiwaju Bola Tinubu who fought tooth and nail to reclaim the taxable items on the residual list of the 1999 Constitution which the central government had hijacked during military rule. He also maximized the opportunities for revenue available on the concurrent list.

    As the world celebrates the resurgence of Awoism in Lagos State today, it should expect a more efficient, hardworking, productive governance powered by the real franchise of development- the tax- delivered by those who have a stake in developing a new Lagos- the taxpayers.

    For Governor Ambode, the unveiling of Awo’s statue comes with a challenge to surpass what was done by a man who put his brains and brawn at the service of the people over six decades yet stands head over shoulders over his peers till today.

  • Vice President Prof Yemi Osinbajo since 2015

    Vice President Prof Yemi Osinbajo since 2015

    Oluyemi Oluleke ‘Yemi Osinbajo (born 8 March 1957) is a Nigerian lawyer and politician who is the current Vice President of Nigeria. He assumed office on 29 May 2015. He is also a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Professor of Law and until his inauguration as Vice President, a Senior Partner with SimmonsCooper Partners, a commercial law practice.

    Yemi Osinbajo was born into the family of Opeoluwa Osinbajo on 8 March 1957 at Creek Hospital in Lagos. Osinbajo is married to Dolapo (née Soyode) Osinbajo, a granddaughter of Obafemi Awolowo. They have three children together.

    Osinbajo

    After the formation of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2013, Prof Osinbajo was tasked, with other notable Nigerians, to design and produce a manifesto for the new political party. This culminated in the presentation of the “Roadmap to a New Nigeria”, a document published by APC as its manifesto if elected to power.

    The highlights of the Roadmap included a free schools meal plan, a conditional cash transfer to the 25 million poorest Nigerians if they enrol children in school and immunise them. There were also a number of programs designed to create economic opportunities for Nigeria’s massive youth population.

    On 17 December 2014 the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Muhammadu Buhari, announced Osinbajo as his running mate and vice-presidential candidate for the 2015 general elections.

    On 31 March 2015 Buhari was confirmed by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as the winner of the presidential elections. Thus Osinbajo became the Vice President-elect of Nigeria. They were both sworn in on 29 May 2015.

    Official Twitter Handle: @ProfOsinbajo