Tag: Ogun

  • Amosun swears in three new judges

    Amosun swears in three new judges

    Three new judges were on Thursday sworn-in by Gov. Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun at a ceremony held at the Executive Council Chamber of the Governor’s  Office  at Oke-Mosan in Abeokuta.

    The newly appointed judges are Mr John Olatokunbo, Mrs Abiodun Shobayo and Mrs Eniola Fabamwo.

    Amosun urged the judges to uphold the principles of fairness and equity in the administration of justice in the state.

    He added that they should see their appointments as a call to service, adding that the assignment was coming with greater dedication and commitment.

    “I appreciate the serving judges in the state for distancing themselves from all forms of attitude that could bring the judiciary arm of the state to disrepute.

    “Even in the face of overwhelming challenges confronting the arm and the nation at large, it is important to be more resolute in discharging justice to all persons without fear or favour, “ Amosun said.

    The new judges, who expressed gratitude to the governor for their appointments, gave an assurance that they would contribute their quota toward  efficient administration of justice in the state.

  • Ogun recalls 12 dismissed workers

    Ogun recalls 12 dismissed workers

    •Ambali’s, three others’ fate uncertain 

    The Ogun State government yesterday recalled 12 of 16 sacked workers in the public service.
    They were sacked for alleged unethical practices during the celebration of the October 5 World Teachers Day in Abeokuta, the state capital.
    In a statement by the Head of Service, Sola Adeyemi, 19 suspended workers were also recalled.
    Thirty-five workers were sanctioned on October 31, following the report of a panel, which investigated alleged infractions of public service rules by the affected workers.
    The panel was set up by the government in response to a petition by “Concerned Members of the Public”.
    Some of the recalled workers were directed to resume duty on January 2, others are to return to work on Monday.
    According to Adeyemi, the workers were recalled following interventions by the national and local leadership of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Trade Union Congress (TUC), Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), traditional rulers, religious leaders, elders and other personalities.
    However, the fate of four, including state NLC Chairman Akeem Ambali; state NUT Chairman Dare Ilekoya, Eniola Atiku and Nola Balogun, are uncertain.
    According to Adeyemi, the quartet’s case is under evaluation.

  • The good problem in Ogun

    We currently have a problem in Ogun State. Yes, we do. But it is a good problem. The problem is that in this season of economic recession, the Ogun State government is embarking on the construction of a 10-lane major expressway.
    The expressway connects Abeokuta, the state capital, with the Lagos-Ibadan expressway through Sagamu Interchange.
    Now, for some people, this is a major problem. They wondered why the state government would bother to expand the existing expressway and not simply toe what appears like the easy path, which is keep patching the road and leave it as it is. Some wonder why the state government would not first complete ongoing projects like the Sango-Ojodu road before venturing into this one. Yet there are those who simply wonder why the state government would bother to fix any road or build any infrastructure rather than spend all the money on maintaining the comfort of civil and public servants, both serving and retired.
    In short, the number and variety of opinion is almost equal and directly proportionate to the number of interest groups within Ogun State with each advancing arguments that solely suit its purpose.
    So what exactly is the interest of the state government in this matter? As far as the Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, is concerned, it is nothing more than the overriding need to continue to improve the state of infrastructure in the Gateway state. “I have heard people ask; why do we want to start another road project again? It is because we are resolute that we need to improve our infrastructure. No sane investor will come here if they know that infrastructure is not in place, if the environment is not conducive to do business. That is why we need to continue to push to make sure that our infrastructure is in place,” the governor said recently.
    Indeed, perhaps unknown to some of the public commentators on the need or otherwise for the 10-lane expressway at this time, is the fact that the project was conceived and awarded in 2013 and the state government only waited until it got development partners willing to assist with the construction.
    Not only that, right now, a considerably large number of international conglomerates, including Coca Cola and SAB Miller, the world’s largest brewer, have concluded plans to locate their factories, including in some cases residential quarters for staff, along that road.
    None of these businesses is investing anything less than $100m in Ogun State. In fact, some are in the range of billions of dollars. For Governor Amosun, now that there is still a considerable land size for road expansion, is the time to think ahead and put a world class road infrastructure in that corridor rather than wait until these factories are fully built and then have course to demolish structures for road expansion.
    Now, that is forward thinking. A good example of such forward thinking is the present day Ikorodu Road, Lagos. When it was built as a six lane expressway over 40 years ago, a lot of people then felt there was no need for such but today, government would pay anything to be able to expand Ikorodu road!
    Besides that, almost 40 years after it was constructed as a 6-lane expressway, the size of the road was one major reason the Lagos State government was able to attract World Bank financing for the construction of the BRT corridor. The World Bank will not support such projects on roads that are less than six-lanes.
    Today, the problem in Ogun State is that Governor Amosun is also thinking ahead by embarking on the construction of a 10-lane expressway that will be an impressive gateway to the Gateway state.
    Perhaps also unknown to many critics of the project is the fact that the size of the road is one of the factors considered by multilateral agencies that have concluded plans to assist Ogun State in financing its construction. So what the state government is doing by starting the project is to show commitment by investing its own counterpart funding while the multilateral development partners would take over from there. Funding for the project is going to be released in phases while the construction of the road would also be done in phases.
    What has just commenced is the first phase, which stretches from around the place known as MTD junction, very close to Government House, Oke Igbein to around the President Muhammadu Buhari Estate layout in Kobape area.
    ‘Did you say multilateral development partners? Is the governor not mortgaging the state through the acquisition of loans?’ These are some of the questions that have also agitated the minds of the people.
    Again, these are good problems. And you will agree with me that they are good problems if only you knew that the sort of fund the Governor Amosun-led administration is using to develop critical infrastructure in Ogun State usually comes for periods of over 40 years and they attract ½ or maximum of one per cent interest rate.
    Interestingly, similar facilities had been used for developmental projects by previous administrations dating as far back as the time of late Chief Bisi Onabanjo, which the Ogun State government is still repaying today at an almost negligible one per cent interest rate.
    As good as such explanations may sound, some are still wondering, why 10-lanes? Well, the answer to that good problem is that two lanes on either side of the expressway are to be built with concrete. Those two lanes are dedicated for trucks and other heavy-duty vehicles thereby reducing chances of collision between these “kings of the road” and smaller cars as well as preserving the road.
    Not only that, the road is also going to host the rail project of the Governor Amosun-led administration which will run parallel to connect the federal government rail line at Sagamu interchange and greatly reduce the travel time between Abeokuta and Lagos while ensuring that a lot more people can live in Abeokuta or Sagamu area and commute to work on daily basis to the Lagos Island. This also explains why a lot of the housing estate development projects of the state, including the likes of AAK Degun Estate, Orange Valley Estate, HID Awolowo Estate, PMB Estate and the new Makun City, to mention a few, are located along that same axis.
    Yet, there are still fears that this road project will affect the chances of the state government completing other ongoing road projects in different parts of the state. Why start this one when you have not completed the existing ones, some people have wondered?
    Although these are well-founded concerns, they however did not put into consideration the fact that the Sagamu-Abeokuta expressway was picked by development partners who are assisting with the financing, based on their independently conducted viability study. Other projects that have attracted the attention of development partners like that include the Sango-Ojodu road, Agbara-Atan-Lusada road and the Ilara-Ijoun road among others.
    Not only that, the construction of the 10-lane expressway will not in any way stop the completion of other ongoing projects in the state. In fact, in the course of the 2017 Fiscal year, the state government will complete many of the ongoing projects while new ones, especially rural roads that will impact on our agricultural output, will also be constructed. And they have all been adequately captured in the 2017 budget, which was recently presented to the state House of Assembly.
    Indeed, in the 2017 Fiscal Year, the state government has budgeted for the following roads among several others: Sango-Ojodu-Abiodun road; Ilara-Ijoun Road; Lafenwa-Ayetoro Road; Mowe-Ofada road; Magboro Road; Brewery–OGTV; Ijebu Ode-Ibadan junction road; Agbara-Atan-Lusada road and at least a minimum of 100 rural roads that will aid the focus of the Governor Amosun administration on the agriculture sector.

    •Soyinka is Senior Special Assistant (Media) to Governor Amosun.

  • Herdsmen warned against violence in Ogun

    National President of Meyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) Mohammed Kiruwa Zuru has warned herdsmen to desist from actions and conduct that could provoke ethnic crisis between them and farmers in Ogun State and other Southwest states.

    Zuru urged members to respect others and not engage in activities that could be injurious to the peace and harmony between them and farmers in Ogun State.

    The president gave this warning in Abeokuta, Ogun State capital, on Saturday at a peace meeting between the association and the state All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) as part of measures to solve the incessant destruction of farm crops by grazing cattle.

    Fielding questions from reporters, Zuru said Nigeria needs peace and unity for real and sustainable development, lamenting that “criminals” use herdsmen as a cover to perpetrate crimes, ostensibly to create ethnic strife in the country.

    “Everybody has a role to play for peace to reign in Nigeria. We don’t want trouble with the Yoruba, we don’t want trouble in Nigeria. We should not give the enemy chance to cause trouble. I don’t want criminals to enter the crisis. Element of criminality have entered.

    AFAN State Chairman Olusegun Dasaolu warned that there could be ethnic violence if herdsmen continued to graze on farmlands unmindful of farmers’ crops.

    “The situation between his members and the cattle breeders is like sitting on a keg of gun powder, as all agreements reached had been flouted.

    “Daily, our farmers record losses as a result of cattle eating up their produce. But, when we got the assurance of the coming of the national president, we decided to calm down and await the step to be taken by the national body,” he said.

  • Ogun warns against reserves destruction

    The Ogun State Commissio-ner for Forestry, Kolawole Lawal, has warned  those destroying its forest reserves to stop or face the music.

    He gave the warning during a visit to sand evacuators at Alakala Communal Zone of Ipake Forest Reserve in Yewa South Local Government Area.

    He warned the sand evacuators to desist from encroaching into the forest reserve, adding that they should keep to the terms of their contract with the government and avoid going beyond the demarcated areas.

    ”We do not intend to victimise or deal with anybody except those found to be economic saboteurs, who through their actions or inactions, deliberately encroach on government reserves to make money; we urge them to immediately desist from such action before government clamps down on them,” he said.

    The Commissioner also cautioned cocoa farmers at Area J4 to desist from destroying the state’s economic trees in the reserves, advising them to replace the ones they have destroyed.

    He explained that the government has been magnanimous enough to allow Taungya farming in its forest reserves, saying that farmers should not abuse the privilege given to them through wanton destruction of economic trees and illegal activities in the reserves.

    Lawal said the government would revamp the depleted reserves.

  • Ogun immortalises Afenifere chieftain

    Ogun immortalises Afenifere chieftain

    Eminent Nigerians eulogise Olaniwun Ajayi

    agos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has said the thoughts and ideas of the late Sir Olaniwun Ajayi proffered workable and enduring solutions to the challenges facing the country.
    Ambode made the remark at a “Night of Tribute’’ in honour of Ajayi, a lawyer and an Afenifere chieftain, who died on November 4. He was 91.
    The governor was represented by Deputy Governor Idiat Adebule at the event held at Civic Centre, Lagos on Monday.
    He said history and posterity would index Ajayi’s contributions to the nation’s socio-economic and political development.
    “His thoughts and ideas on the path which our nation should tread for economic transformation and political emancipation are well captured for these current and future generations.
    “His was a life spent in the service of ensuring that this planet was impacted positively. We, as leaders, need to key into his ideas to move our nation forward,’’ Ambode said.
    The Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, said Ajayi was faithful to the values of his generation.
    Sanusi described him as a loyal, patriotic, honest and disciplined icon, who emphasised greatly on good character.
    He urged political leaders to emulate his exemplary life.
    President of Dangote Group of Companies Aliko Dangote described the deceased as “a fearless and passionate man who fought for Nigeria’s independence”.
    “He was more passionate about his country and his community that he promised to renovate his primary school in Isara, (Wesley Primary School), but unfortunately, he could not get it done.
    “I am donating N60 million to that project in his memory,’’ he said.
    Former Minister of Education Dr Oby Ezekwesili said Ajayi lived and passed on his values.
    “We have to keep up with the values and legacies he left behind by living the values we believe in. His legacies will endure for all times,’’ Ezekwesili said.
    Pastor Tunde Bakare of Latter Rain Assembly described the deceased as “a statesman, technocrat and philanthropist”.
    Bakare said the late icon was a father-figure with valuable life lessons that he passed on to others.
    Prof. Oladipo Akinkugbe said the late Ajayi was a diligent, transparent and visionary politician who was concerned about the poor, vulnerable and downtrodden in the society.
    Akinkugbe described the late politician as a great thinker and doer, who was allergic to mediocrity and practised the tenets of democratic socialism.
    In his tribute, a former Chief of Army Staff, Gen. Alani Akinrinade, said as a patriot, the deceased never failed to live by example in enthroning federalism, democracy and the rule of law.
    “That spirit should be entrenched as a guiding principle for our leaders of today to make Nigeria better,’’ Akinrinade said.

    The Ogun State government has named one of its model schools at Isara-Remo after the late legal luminary and Afenifere leader, Sir Olaniwun Ajayi.
    Governor Ibikunle Amosun announced this at the farewell and commendation programme at the Abeokuta/Sagamu Interchange on the Lagos–Ibadan Expressway, where Sir Olaniwun’s remains were officially received by the government.
    Amosun, in his tribute, described the late Ajayi as a great leader who lived an eventful and exemplary life worthy of emulation.
    He added that the deceased had left an enduring legacy which every Nigerian must build on.
    “This honour is a lesson for all of us to do well. If you’ve worked diligently, you’ll surely be recognised.
    “He fully espoused the ideals of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, which we have all strove to build on.
    “We are celebrating him not because of age but because of what he had done. You have only succeeded if you have served your root. This is what Pa Ajayi had done.
    “Death has, once again, robbed Ogun State and, indeed Nigeria, of a knowledgeable mind and it’s a huge and irreparable loss for Nigeria,” Amosun said.
    Afenifere Secretary Yinka Odumakin said the late Sir Olaniwun worked for the unity of the Yoruba.
    He urged the audience to build on his legacy, saying “we are not here to mourn but to celebrate a great man who lived a worthy life.
    “What Baba laboured for is coming to fruition and we must strive to sustain it,” Odumakin said.
    A bosom friend of the deceased and an elder statesman, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, said the deceased had always lived by the dictates of the late sage, Obafemi Awolowo.
    He added that he was a great family man, who was fully dedicated to his nuclear and extended families.
    According to Senator Banji Akintoye, the late Sir Olaniwun was one of the greatest men who had led the Yoruba in recent times.
    Akintoye, an emeritus Professor of History said: “Our father deserves this honour. He has served meritoriously. We always cherished him. He will live on amongst us.”
    Mrs Tola Oyediran, speaking on behalf of the Awolowo family, said the deceased left a strong legacy for all to build on for the progress of the Yoruba, pleading for all to keep the legacy.
    One of the sons of the late Adekunle Ajasin, Tokunbo, said the deceased devoted his life to the loyal cause of Afenifere.
    “He was very knowledgeable looking at all the books he wrote, and he was a very hardworking person.
    “We need to emulate his integrity, which is what we need in Nigeria today,” he said.
    The eldest son of the deceased, Ola, thanked the government for organising the event.
    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that some of the dignitaries at the event include Deputy Governor Mrs. Yetunde Onanuga, Speaker of the House of Assembly Suraj Adekunbi and Prof. Theophilus Ogunlesi.
    Others were Prof. Biyi Afonja, Jimi Agbaje, Mrs. Tokunbo Awolowo-Dosunmu, commissioners, House of Assembly members and clerics.
    Most of them were dressed in white and yellow attires while the children and other family members wore the white and blue “asoebi”.

  • Ondo Polls: Amosun congratulates Akeredolu

    Governor Ibikunle Amosun has congratulated the candidate of the All Progressives Congress, (APC), Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu, on his emergence as the governor-elect in Ondo State.

    In a statement on Sunday by his Senior Special Assistant (Media), Adejuwon Soyinka, Amosun hailed Ondo people for choosing Akeredolu and the APC, saying the choice would usher in real progress in the Sunshine state.

    “This is one choice that will bring unprecedented progress, infrastructural development as well as social and economic growth to the sunshine state.

    “The victory of Akeredolu in the Ondo polls also portend a good omen for the collective development and progress of the Southwest geo political zone under the progressive socio-political and economic ideals of the APC,” Amosun said.

    The Ogun State governor urged Akeredolu to see his emergence as an opportunity to unite the entire people of the state, regardless of political affiliation or tendency.

  • Moving against land grabbers in Ogun

    An insurance executive in Lagos who sought to relocate to Ota, Ogun State and probably bring along foreign partners for a new firm was held back by reports of the violent activities of land speculators. He gathered that these land grabbers otherwise called Omo onile were a force to reckon with if you wanted to develop your legitimate property either for business or for residential purposes. He told me he had acquired the land and was ready to move to Ota but was scared that heavily armed rival gangs of these indigenous speculators would stall the project and frustrate his expatriate partners. Eventually he spiked the idea.

    Who lost? A superficial verdict would be that our man lost the opportunity to open new frontiers in business in Ogun. Really? The ultimate loser was the Ogun State government which had left the vandals unchecked. It lost the taxes that the projected insurance firm and its employees would have paid into its treasury; it also blew the chance to depopulate the labour market; it gave the impression Ogun was not habitable nor was it safe for investment, business and tourism, all massive revenue earners and employers of labour.

    But last week, good news came when Governor Ibikunle Amosun took a firm step to outlaw that perception of his state as the den of the criminal activities of the Omo onile. He signed the anti-land grabbing bill into law with quite stiff penalties for its infringement. Imprisonment for 25 years or death sentence awaits anyone found guilty of the offence of land robbery.

    The law prohibits “forcible entry and occupation of landed properties, violent and fraudulent conducts in relation to landed properties, armed robbery, kidnapping, cultism and allied matters incidental thereto…” According to the law, death sentence applies when a life or lives are lost in such forceful take-over of land. Kidnappers also risk life sentence.

    After signing the bill into law, Amosun said the state would not be a “comfort zone for criminals.” He had tough words for them. He declared: “We want to let people know that Ogun State would not be comfort zone for any criminal or so-called Omo onile (land grabbers). They have engaged in maiming, killing and lawlessness. But now the law will go after them. We are now having enabling law to prosecute and anybody that runs foul of this law of course will have himself or herself to blame… I want to believe that with the operation of this law, criminals will run away from the state.”

    The state Commissioner of Police Ahmed Iliyasu said at the signing of the law in Abeokuta: “This is a clarion call to all criminals, armed robbers, kidnappers, cultists and so on that there is no place for them in Ogun State. They should relocate because there is no room for them. We are ready to enforce the law.”

    The birthing of the new law taming the land grabbers has excited residents, investors and tourists with Ogun notably Ota as their destination. Ota in particular has been economically and developmentally been stagnant for decades due to the reign of terror put in place by the vandals called Omo onile. They sell and re-sell the same land many times over to a thousand and one persons. They encroach upon occupied property and break down perimeter fences to make way for new and exorbitant transactions. They exact outrageous levies when you start to develop your property. And during construction they move in again to demand even more killer sums. They form violent gangs that disturb the peace of the community. They maim and kill when resisted. In a word, they are a law unto themselves, forming parallel governments where they operate.

    Their existence has retarded the development of Ogun State. For a state contiguous to Lagos, Nigeria’s most populous boasting the largest economy, Ogun ought to be benefiting immensely from this proximity. But investors do not want to come in, fearing they would be grounded by the land robbers. They are apprehensive about their personal security and safety. They fear for their families and what might happen to the enormous capital they would be pumping into their planned undertakings.

    The economic weights of their businesses in Ogun would lead to the resurgence of the economy and the empowerment of the citizens. In turn, these would enlarge the purse of the government to enable it attain massive social and economic renaissance. This is what Ogun State needs in this era of economic recession. The activities of the Omo onile are particularly harmful to two of Amosun’s Five Cardinal Programmes, namely Increased Agricultural Production/Industrialization and Rural and Infrastructural Development/Employment Generation, respectively the third and fifth objectives. Pray, how do you achieve these strategic programmes when land, the major ingredient for the success of these ventures, is in the killer grasp of criminals?

    Those who want to heed Amosun’s call to move into the state to reside there or run their businesses are now assured that they have a government that would use the rule of law to shield them from murderous marauders. A good government is known by its ability to protect and secure its citizens as well as save them from the fear of those who would prey on them and their legitimately earned money. Indeed the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria states this unequivocally in the early lines Chapter 2 of the document. Providing “security and welfare of the people” is the “primary purpose of government,” according to the sacred scroll.

    The next step of the Amosun administration is to establish a task force statewide to patrol the inner communities and enforce the law. The presence of members of this task force will check the gathering of the land grabbers as they are wont to do when planning to molest the citizens. The government should also set up active helplines to reach when there is a violation of the new statute. That is how the neighbouring Lagos State is implementing its own anti-land gabbing law it promulgated in August this year.

     

    • Ojewale, a writer sent in this piece via bmrtbo@yahoo.com.
  • Buhari, Amosun meet in Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday met with Ogun State Governor, Ibikunle Amosun at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Amosun arrived the Presidential Villa around 4 p.m.

    Journalists waiting to know the purpose of the visit dispersed when many staff in the President’s office closed for the day.

    The governor was believed to have followed the President to his official residence.

    As at the time of filing this report, Amosun did not pass through the main entrance on his way out of the President’s office.

  • As Ogun declares war on land-grabbers

    SIR: On Monday, November 14, , a law against land-grabbing became operative throughout the length and breadth of Ogun State. The sentences imposed against violators of the law range between 25 years of imprisonment and death sentence.

    These gangsters wield dangerous weapons and demand obedience or capitulation from their victims. They operate like a mafia, “by fire, by force”. They are found in virtually every developing communities or new towns, where construction work is a defining feature. Their leaders live big.

    Sometimes they operate as rivals groups where there is a conflict of interest but their ultimate goal is the same – fleece their victims! Sometimes there is mutual collaboration. What you observe from one community to the other is only a variation in their degree of bestiality. Some of them come with documents, pasting them all over your new building or ongoing construction work with the same authority you could only have expected from government officials. The usual claim is that the land belongs to their family and that you had paid the wrong person or party. And for any resolution, you will have to repurchase the land! Any attempt to argue with them may leave you battered, maimed or butchered, in the worst scenario.

    And once there is construction work going on, they or another insatiate gang still reserves the right to be “settled” so they could allow workmen to continue else they seize all the tools in sight after some thorough beating. You have to abide by their terms willy-nilly.

    The government of Ogun State has done all within its power to tame these monsters. And some of them, we must acknowledge, have been tamed. But the position of the state governor is not to condone illegality in any form. It does not matter their largely restricted locations, reduction in the degree of their violent conducts or numbers. Any form or degree of illegality must be extirpated from the polity. This position of the governor is quite commendable and in line with the constitution. One is not really surprised because since assumption of office in 2011, Amosun has made security of life and welfare of all residents’ top priorities.

    According to Governor Ibikunle Amosun, “We want to let people know that Ogun State will not be comfort zone for any criminal or so-called omo oniles (land grabbers). They have engaged in maiming, killing and lawlessness. But now, the law will go after them. We are now having an enabling law to prosecute and anybody that runs foul of this law will have himself or herself to blame.

    “To the kidnappers, they know that this is their end. Anybody that involves himself in kidnapping, armed robbery and all these social vices will not be allowed in Ogun State. I want to believe that with the operation of this law, criminals will run away from the state.”

    The state Commissioner of Police, Ahmed Iliyasu, equally has a word for the violent syndicates: “This is a clarion call to all criminals, armed robbers, kidnappers, cultists and so on that there is no place for them in Ogun State. They should relocate because there is no room for them. We are ready to enforce the law.”

    We commend the Ogun State House of Assembly and the state governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, for the new law and congratulate the people of the state for the further reprieve the new legislation will provide. It is, however, their responsibility to report any breach of the new law to the police, who must act with deliberate speed to prosecute offenders. Security of life and property is the responsibility of all.

     

    • Daniel Olakunle

    Akute, Ogun State