Tag: Ogun

  • Ogun pays August salaries, deductions

    Ogun State government has paid August salaries to all categories of civil and public servants in the state as well as pensioners in fulfillment of its commitment to the welfare of its work force and pensioners.

    The state government also paid  part of the outstanding cooperative deductions due to the workers.

    The State Commissioner for Finance, Adewale Oshinowo, said the payment of the deductions is “a promise kept by Governor Ibikunle Amosun,” adding that, “it is a further demonstration of the commitment of the administration to the welfare of its workforce.”

    “The Ogun State government has fully paid all categories of staff, including local government and pensioners. The state has also paid part of the outstanding cooperative deductions. This is in a bid to ensure that our workers enjoy the coming Eid-el-Kabir holiday.

    “It is in fulfillment of this, that the governor ordered the payment of part of the outstanding deductions,” the Commissioner for Finance said.

  • Ogun to spend N927 million  on council poll

    Ogun to spend N927 million on council poll

    THE October 8  chairmanship and councillorship elections  into the 20 Local Government Areas and 37 newly created Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) in Ogun State  will cost N927 million.

    Chairman of the state Independent Electoral Commission (OGSIEC) Alhaja Risikat Ogunfemi said this yesterday when members of the House of Assembly Committee on Special Duties, led by Viwanu Ojo, visited the commission at its Abeokuta Office.

    She said in preparation for the election, a stakeholders’ forum was also organised in the state’s three senatorial districts last July, ostensibly to sensitise the electorate on the  polls.

    Mrs. Ogunfemi added that OGSIEC is also  partnering with other relevant stakeholders, including the security agencies, to ensure the success of the exercise.

    Ojo hailed the commission for its efforts and urged it to partner with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ensure that eligible voters that were yet to collect permanent voters’ cards accessed them.

    Also yesterday, the House Committee on Community Development and Cooperatives has stressed the need for a synergy between the Ministry of Community Development and Cooperatives and lawmakers to promote effective service delivery.

    Its chairman, Olujimi Otukoya, made this known  while appraising the 2016 budget performance of the ministry in Abeokuta yesterday.

    Otukoya  noted that there was the need to rally round relevant stakeholders in community growth with a view to putting in place effective templates.

    The ministry’s Permanent Secretary, , Dr. Oludaisi Odeniyi, in his presentation, said it garnered N4 million as revenue between January and July.

  • Blackmail won’t help Zhongfu over Free Trade Zone, says Ogun

    Ogun State has explained that lies and outright blackmail will not help the case of an investor,  Zhongfu International Investments (Nig.) FZE, regarding  the Ogun Guangdong Free Trade Zone contract.

    Secretary to the State Government Taiwo Adeoluwa, who refuted claims by the company that the government unilaterally and arbitrary terminated its contract with them, said: “There is no truth whatsoever to the allegations”.

    Zhongfu International Investments (Nig.) FZE Managing Director Dr. Jason Han had  petitioned President Muhammadu Buhari, a copy which is being circulated on some online news media.

    But explaining the government’s position yesterday, Adeoluwa said: “The Chinese government, through a Diplomatic Note 1601, dated March 11, 2016, notified the Ogun State government that the Guangdong New South Group (rather than Zhongfu International Investments) are the ones authorised to manage the Ogun Guangdong Free Trade Zone.

    “The Chinese Consulate stressed further that to continue to allow Zhongfu International Investments to manage the zone would amount to encouraging and abetting a private company to perpetuate fraud on the government of Guangdong Province, China (the original joint venture partners to Ogun State on the project) and its lawful successors in title, the Guangdong New South Group.

    “And given  the weighty nature of issues raised in the Diplomatic Note, the Ogun State government called for explanations from both the New South Group and Zhongfu International Investments.

    “The New South Group provided evidence, which was corroborated by the Chinese Consulate, that they bought 51 per cent of the equity of China Africa Investment Limited, the official representative of the Guangdong Province of China on the zone and with whom the Ogun State government originally signed a Memorandum of Understanding.”

  • Ogun shines as NUJ summit recasts Nigeria’s unity quest

    For three days, journalists from across the country gathered in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, to brainstorm on the myriad of challenges facing Nigeria and proffer lasting solutions. It was the first National Media Summit organised by the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) and critical segments of the society latched on to give their verdict.

    By all standards, the largest convergence of journalists on the Gateway State, the event with the theme “The Media and National Unity” also exposed the host state and its government to media critique and considerable scrutiny, especially in the area of socio-economic growth and infrastructural development.

    That the press played significant role in the political evolution of the country cannot be over-emphasised. From the nationalists struggle for independence to the Civil War era; military rule to eventual enthronement of democracy, the Nigerian journalists have been at the fore of championing noble cause of unity and cohesion.

    Despite cultural diversity and ethnic differences that sometimes threaten peaceful co-existence, the Nigerian media have always risen above primordial sentiment and kept faith with its watchdog responsibility.

    But it appears the press have subtly derailed and now joined the fray of national disintegration. Although media owners and professionals may not readily admit such failing, stakeholders and consumers of media practice have cogent reasons to believe journalists have taken sides lately by amplifying the discordant voices of dissent and division over and above the promoters of national integration and cohesion in the country.

    Taking into cognizance several factors, the summit opened up the journalists’ fold and allowed various assessors to freely touch on those things crucial to Nigeria’s unity vis-à-vis the role expected of members of the Fourth Estate of the Realm. The event was held at the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL) complex, Abeokuta.

    The first day, August 16, shortly before the meeting formally opened, Governor Ibikunle Amosun received the NUJ National Executive led by its President, Comrade Waheed Odusile, at the Governor’s Office, Oke-Mosan Abeokuta.

    Amosun was visibly happy to be host of the maiden edition of the media summit. He said the theme was “key and apt.” The governor noted that the journalists were at home since, historically, journalism had roots in Abeokuta with the advent of Iwe Irohin newspaper. He also recalled that two eminent journalists–late Chief Olabisi Onabanjo and Chief Olusegun Osoba– had once served as governors in the state.

    “Indeed, our greatness is in our diversity. The earlier we all come to the conclusion, the better. Yes, there may be differences. We should dwell more on those things that bind us together as against things that divide us. We are better as a united, indivisible nation,” he said.

    Describing journalism as “a very important profession,” Amosun challenged journalists to channel their energies and resources towards promoting the cause of unity and fighting corrupt practices in the country. He also said journalists should always be on their guard against forces that seek to take advantage of their profession for selfish ends.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo delivered keynote address at the opening ceremony. He was represented by former Executive Secretary, National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof Peter Okebukola. He urged journalists to place emphasis on investigative journalism and always set good, altruistic agenda for the nation.

    “One of the greatest countries of the world is the United States of America. It is also one of the most diverse in ethnicity, race and religion. Its greatness is rooted in its diversity which is being utilised to advantage and actively promoted by the American press. I believe we can learn a lot from them in this regard,” Obasanjo added.

    Apart from Amosun, Governors Akinwunmi Ambode and Abdulfatah Ahmed of Lagos and Kwara states respectively also delivered speeches. Ambode was represented by the Secretary to the Lagos State Government, Mr Tunji Bello, while Kwara State Commissioner for Information, Mahmud Ajeigbe, stood in for Ahmed.

    While expressing concern that the nation’s unity was under threat, Odusile said in his address that the media cannot afford to keep quiet and watch as agents of destruction attempt daily to tear the country apart.

    “We are bothered because we have a stake in this country as patriots, and considering the role the Nigerian press played in securing independence from our colonial masters, championed the cause of unity when we were threatened by civil war and enthroning the democracy that all are now enjoying, keeping quiet would amount to a disservice to the labour of our heroes past,” he said.

    The NUJ President, however, drew attention to the challenges and constraints facing Nigerian journalists, noting that the earlier such problems were addressed, the better for the country.

    “The media industry in Nigeria is in crisis,” Odusile said. “As I speak, many media houses are on their knees and struggling to continue as business concerns. The operating environment is so hostile.

    “Just as the media houses are struggling, the fortune of journalists is not improving either. Many media owners are defaulting in the payment of salaries to their workers with some in arrears of one year and above.

    “A journalist not paid by his employer for months is hungry and vulnerable to corruption and therefore, is a danger to the society. He could call black ‘white,’ depending on what is on offer. Make no mistake about it, this is unethical and the NUJ as a responsible professional body frowns at it, but our jobs are being made difficult by these debtor employers.”

    The second day August 17 was dedicated to summit presentations bordering on germane issues. The topics were “The Media and National Security;” “Financing the Economy for National Unity;” “Social Media and National Cohesion” and “Building a Strong Union.”

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Tukur Buratai, who was represented by Col. John Agim; former Director-General State Security Service (SSS), Col. Kayode Are (retd); former Minister of Information, Prince Tony Momoh; as well as former NUJ Presidents, Mohammed Sani Zorro and George Izobo, were among the speakers.

    On the last day of the summit, a project tour of Ogun State was undertaken by the contingent of media professionals. They had a feel of the performance of the Amosun administration. The participants were conveyed round the three senatorial districts to physically experience some of the developmental projects executed by the governor.

    The state Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Chief Jide Ojuko, led the team that toured projects in Ogun West Senatorial District. Places visited included the Ilo Awela Road, Iganmode Road, Oju Ore Roundabout, proposed flyover at Sango, Ahmadiyya Road and the newly refurbished Ado-Odo/Ota Local Government secretariat.

     

  • PDP faction to challenge exclusion from Ogun poll

    Ogun State Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) faction under the leadership of Adebayo Dayo has vowed to challenge the decision of the State Independent Electoral Commission (OGSIEC) not to accept the list of its chairmanship and councillorship candidates.

    The electoral body had last Thursday said it accepted the list of candidates from Sikirulai Ogundele-led group.

    The Dayo-faction has the support of Senator Buruji Kashamu, the lawmaker representing Ogun East Senatorial District. The Ogundele group is backed by a member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Oladipupo Adebutu.

    Speaking with reporters yesterday after  an emergency stakeholders meeting held in Ijebu Igbo, Ogun State, Dayo said the party would fight till justice is done.

    He said the party was familiar with what he described as “OGSIEC’s antics”.

    Dayo said: “It was not the first time OGSIEC will be involved in this kind of illegality and injustice. It happened in 2012 and we dealt with them.

    “OGSIEC’s action is a clear travesty of justice that won’t stand the test of time. We have submitted all the genuine, legally binding documents in our possession to OGSIEC – a final judgment concerning the Ogun State Exco that has also been registered in the Ogun State High Court and automatically becomes a binding court judgment in the state has been served on OGSIEC. All the INEC reports on the congresses, including the cover letter from INEC was served on them. A letter from the caretaker committee that gave some percentage of the delegates to those parading themselves as the parallel group was also submitted to them.

    “What is more, OGSIEC on its own wrote to INEC asking it to clarify which is the authentic Ogun State PDP Exco and INEC in a letter dated August 9, 2016 replied, saying it recognises and relates only with the Engr. Adebayo Dayo-led Exco.

  • Ogun varsity lecturers to begin strike over N3.5b subvention arrears

    •Govt: we’re still giving education pride of place 

    The two-week sit-at-home by lecturers at the Olabisi Onabanjo University(OOU), Ago-Iwoye, in protest against unpaid subvention, may transform into a strike if the state failed to address the issue tomorrow.

    Since three weeks, OOU lecturers have been observing the  “sit-at-home” directive following a decision of the Congress of the institution’s Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) on August 8.

    The semester examinations at the time, came to an abrupt end, forcing hundreds of students, who had come to school for their papers to return home in disappointment.

    OOU-ASUU Chairman Dr. Deji Agboola told The Nation yesterday that the university’s management, reeling from paucity of funds, would be unable to pay them July and August salaries because the government had not paid OOU subventions in the last 24 months.

    Agboola, an associate professor and head of Department of Morbid Anatomy and Histopatology in the university’s teaching hospital (OOUTH), Sagamu,  said the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), which the university management had been using to pay workers’ salaries, had “dried up”.

    He said the lecturers might be compelled to embark upon a strike this week, if the government failed to implement the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) it signed with them in December 2015.

    The MoU, he added, recommended adequate and regular funding of OOU through payment of subventions, among others.

    He lamented that the government owes the institution  subvention arrears of N3.5 billion as at last July.

    Recalling that they were last paid in June by the management, Agboola said there was also no assurance that his members would be paid July and August  salaries soon.

    However, attempts to reach the Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Mrs. Modupe Mujota, was not successful.

    But in June, the Governor Ibikunle Amosun administration said “it’s giving education a pride of place in the scheme of things in Ogun State.”

    Mrs. Mujota, who spoke during the conference of Pro- Chancellors of State Universities in Nigeria, hosted by Tai Solarin University of Education, Ijagun,  last June, said the government was committed to continually providing infrastructure for its educational institutions to enable them deliver on their mandates.

  • Kano, Ogun shine in 2016 COWBELLPEDIA

    A pupil, Master Abdullahi Shuaibu Maje, representing Nigerian Turkish International College (NTIC) Boys High School, Kano State, has  excelled, reaching the semi-final stage in the on-going Cowbellpedia Mathematics Television Quiz show.

    The lad, after surviving the two preliminary rounds, picked a semi-final ticket for his school, and became the first from any state in the north in the competition.

    Maje, a 13-year-old JSS 3 pupil was up against Efosa Osagiede of Obafemi Awolowo University International School, Ile Ife; Nyemike Atoh of Loyola Jesuit College, Abuja; Glory Okoli of The Ambassadors College, Ota, Ogun State; Victor Mgbemena of Graceland International School, Port Harcourt, Rivers State; and Muhammad Hasimu of Government Junior Day Secondary School, Dangikka Bakaro, Bauchi, Bauchi State.

    He scored 97 per cent in the qualifying examination to represent his state, Kano, and he with Okoli made it to the semi-finals.

    Maje, a first timer in Lagos and in the competition, is optimistic about his chances in the competition.

    “I want to excel and win the ultimate prize. The competition is a good experience for me. Winning it will be a fantastic achievement for me and my school. My parents and my teacher will be very happy, even my state governor too,” he said.

    While Maje appeared as the star for his state, Ogun State also put up a star performance by picking up the remaining three semi-final tickets through Ambassadors College, Ota.

    Apart from Okoli, who qualified in the junior category, Blessing Udoh and Ayooluwa Oguntade are also in the semi-final.

    Udo and Oguntade dedicated their success to their teachers and promised to sustain the tempo.

    “We have gone past two stages; two more to go before the crown. It will be good for us to be in the finals and for one of us to win the ultimate prize,” Udo said.

    Oguntade added that he is looking forward to wining the competition and promised to work more on his speed before the next stage. “I pray I win. That will be lovely. My mummy will love it. She has been praying hard for me,” he said.

    The ultimate prize for this year’s edition is one million naira and an all-expense paid educational excursion outside the country. The teacher of the winning student will receive N400,000.

     

  • Respite for Ogun cotton producers

    SIR: Cotton and its production is central to the economy of Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital and the cottage industry in the state with mainly women but also men producing Adire, the local tie and dye fabric which they sell in the state’s markets and beyond to make a living.

    Unfortunately, during the Goodluck Jonathan’s led administration, the government banned the importation of cotton though with right intention to increase employment, but the policy seems to have been unevenly implemented because while the dyers could no longer get cotton in the south, they could in the markets of Kano up north and this brought about great setbacks to the cottage industry in Abeokuta due to the troubles often got into with customs officers when trying to move it into Ogun State.

    The confiscation of cotton worth millions of naira, the stress of trying to reclaim their seized products, and other untold hardship they experienced for over four years, all combined to convince the dyers that they desperately needed a way to buy cotton fabric locally and this desire got answered when the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment mooted the idea to establish a ginnery factory in the South-West.

    A cotton trade show was held in India in 2012 which was attended by all cotton producing states in Nigeria and the event gave all cotton growers and producers the opportunity to meet with buyers with samples of cotton staple grown in their states. This staple samples were then put through rigorous tests to ascertain the strength of the cotton staple and its length, factors which affect the range, as well as the quality of the fabric that could be produced with it. It was at this event that the political considerations that often stand in the way of merit-based selection processes in Nigeria was removed and Ogun State was declared as “the best cotton producing state in Nigeria”.

    Apparently, its long staple cotton which is a by-product of the soil type and rainfall pattern is a rarity that Ogun cotton shares with Mali and Egypt who are among the best cotton producers in the world. These factors taken together with the thriving Adire industry in Abeokuta, which represented potential off-takers of cotton produced by a regional ginnery made a strong case for Ogun State giving the Gateway State the privilege to house the ginnery factory in the South-West.

    With one masterful stroke by the Governor of Ogun State, Senator Ibikunle Amosun yesterday, August 24, the state is now positioned to exploit the entire cotton value chain, from growing the plant, to spinning and weaving in a ginnery, to production of textiles for clothing, furniture and other uses by the final consumer and you can be rest assured that this one project offers the opportunity to open up at least tens of thousands of jobs for the state’s teeming youths, women and even men.

     

    • Femi Osipitan,

    Abeokuta, Ogun State.

  • Mother, daughter found wandering in Ogun

    Mother, daughter found wandering in Ogun

    A woman, Mrs. Ibeh Pauline Chioma, and her daughter, Nwokedi Rita have been found wandering on the streets of Owode community in Obafemi-Owode Local Government Area of Ogun state by a traditional ruler .

    The woman who hails from Anambra State and suspected to be mentally unstable was  found along with her six year old  daughter on Sunday night at Ijaiye area of Owode-Egba  by the Olu of Owode Egba, Oba Kolawole Sowemimo.

    According to Oba Sowemimo, the woman appeared a bit confused, lacking orientation to time and location, while her daughter was also crying when they were found around 11:pm on Sunday.

    The monarch said woman claimed to come from St. Anthony Catholic Church, Oji River in Enugu State and that document found in her luggage indicated the item belonged to one Mr Ibeh Lebeogo Augustine.

    The traditional ruler said he found them while going to the Celestial Church, Ijaiye where he was invited as the Royal Father of the Day at their Harvest, and was moved with pity to help them.

    According to Oba Sowemimo, he has drawn to the attention of the state’s Ministry Women Affairs and Social Development to the plights of the mother and daughter.

    He  added that he would take the woman in a mental home for treatment if nobody comes forward to claim her.

    “It is my habit to always drive around in the evening. It was around 11:pm in the night that I saw them. The girl was crying and the mother was just talking and I noticed she is not mentally stable. I took them into the car and took them home.

    “When we got home, my wife  gave them food and clothes because their clothes were dirty. I came here so that the press people will help me flash their pictures so that their families can come for them.”

  • Ogun, Julius Berger and Lagos/Ibadan Expressway

    By all accounts, the Ogun State government’s directive to Julius Berger Plc not to work on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway during the rush hours is a welcome development.

    According to the Secretary to the State Government, Barr Taiwo Adeoluwa, “The objective of this directive is to mitigate the man-hour losses as well as socio-economic disruptions occasioned by the ongoing reconstruction work.”

    That Lagos-Ibadan Expressway has been a source of agony to thousands of commuters on a daily basis is a well-known fact. The highway is a huge drain on the economy of Nigeria, especially residents of Ogun State, as the most productive hours of the day are lost on the road due to traffic gridlock.

    Therefore, it is not surprising that Nigerians have commended the Ogun State government for ordering the construction company to work on the road between 10am and 4pm and from 10pm to 6am. Nigerians, who will benefit from the reconstruction, should not die due to stress on the road before the work is completed!

    The practice in developed climes is for such work to be undertaken in the night and during such hours that would impose the most minimal inconveniences on commuters.

    I travelled to Lagos recently. Between the Redemption Camp at Mowe and Berger in Lagos, I spent five hours. Initially, I thought there was an accident or an articulated vehicle had broken down. But to my chagrin, I discovered that it was the road contractor that had blocked the long bridge before Berger leaving only one lane for thousands of vehicles on the road.

    To make matters worse, the construction company was not on the highway on that day and no work was actually going on the largely blocked bridge.

    We seem to have this notorious backward mentality in this country, which is that the people must suffer unnecessarily for services they should enjoy. You go to a public or private institution, and you are told, remorselessly, to “come back tomorrow”, most often, for services that could be delivered there and then, forgetting that that “come back tomorrow” will cost money, time and energy and the productive hours that should otherwise be contributed to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). There are countless instances where hundreds of applicants will arrive by 7am for job interview as demanded by a (recruiting) company only to be told by 7pm to “come back tomorrow!”

    Time is money. Indeed, time is life. And I dare say that the good news emanating from Ogun State in recent years is a product of the value the state government has placed on time. No economy develops by wasting time. Economic development is a function of time management. No investor or business man wants his or her time wasted. To underscore the importance placed on time, at the recently concluded Investors’ Forum, Ogun State governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, declared: “We have expanded the Bureau of Urban and Physical Planning into a full-fledged Ministry and have adopted reforms that fast track the process for obtaining development permits from six weeks to two and land clearance permits to one week… To make it easier for investors to take full advantage of the vast opportunities in Ogun State, we are further expanding the services offered by the One-Stop-Shop that was launched in 2012. The One-Stop-Shop will enable potential and existing investors to go to only one office in order to process Urban and Physical Planning permits; to access the Bureau of Lands to conduct transactions such as land title searches, to purchase land and obtain certificates of occupancy/Governor’s consent; to access the Internal Revenue Service; to acquire land for agriculture; and finally to access the Legal Advisory Desk – all under one roof.”

    This obviously is the mindset of a government consumed with passion for economic development.

    From day one in office, Amosun has been concerned about the state of Lagos-Ibadan road. It’s a federal road but it impacts more on the economy of the state. This is what has led to the state government’s constant intervention on the highway in repairs, maintenance of security and traffic sanity. The media are suffused with stories of Amosun alighting from his car to personally direct traffic or bring a chaotic situation under control.

    Adeoluwa was therefore on spot when he opined that, “The public will recall that we confronted these challenges headlong. We set up a taskforce to checkmate the excesses of the trailer drivers so much so that the governor personally led regular enforcement teams on the expressway. We also invested heavily on redesigning the security architecture of the state by deploying Armoured Personnel Carriers, elite Quick Response Squad, QRS; Operation MESA and the state Traffic Enforcement and Compliance Agency, TRACE, etc. We have also repeatedly intervened by undertaking major repair works on bad stretches of the road, not minding the fact that it is a Federal government highway.

    “Additionally, we took responsibility for clearing traffic, maintaining security and cleaning after the departure of our monthly religious visitors. These efforts ultimately restored relative sanity on the road and greatly reduced robbery incidents. But that was until this recent intervention by Julius Berger. The objective of this directive is therefore to mitigate the man-hour losses as well as socio-economic disruptions occasioned by the ongoing reconstruction work.”

    We hope the construction company will take maximum advantage of night time when the highway is virtually free of vehicles and work at the speed of light to meet the expectations of President Muhammadu Buhari, who has made the reconstruction of the economically-strategic highway a priority.

     

    • Soyombo writes from Abeokuta via densityshow@yahoo.com