Tag: Oke-Ogun

  • Adesina, Oke Ogun and Oyo 2019: On the cusp of history?

    As the 2019 general elections draw near, the quest of the people of Oke Ogun axis of Oyo State is assuming interesting dimension, writes OLUKOREDE YISHAU

    Soji Akanbi, the Senator representing Oyo South in the upper chamber of the National Assembly stirred the hornets’ nest in Kishi the other day when, on the occasion of Kishi Day, a celebration of the people of that ancient town in Oke Ogun,  in the northern part of Oyo State, he asked the people of Oke Ogun to tidy up their house or, if they are unable to do so, consider him for the governorship of Oyo State instead.

    In response to the passionate appeal by Dr Zacceus Segun Ajuwon, President of the Oke Ogun Development Consultative Forum (ODCF), to all citizens of Oyo State to support the people of Oke Ogun in their quest to produce the next governor of Oyo State, Akanbi said no one had any objection to the quest.

    But, in a fairly long speech, he delved into what could be deemed a poor coordination of the Oke Ogun agenda especially the fact that there are too many candidates from the region already in the race.

    Ile ni e o ba ko tun se, he thundered!

    With about 10 candidates, he said, Oke Ogun needs to put its house in order first before reaching out to other areas of the state for support!

    And he went dead serious when he added: Just in case you are unable to do that, consider me as one of your own and make me the governor. Speaker after speaker after that, of course, took his statement more than lightly and insisted the Oke Ogun agenda must be fulfilled.

    That was a direct jab from Akanbi but, in truth, Oke Ogun region of Oyo State certainly has a herculean task in its hands as far as the 2019 elections are concerned.

    Perhaps as a result of the sentiment that the region should produce the next governor, too many persons have come out of that area to struggle for the seat. And, so far, the elders are yet to successfully persuade them all  to yield ground to one.

    Among them are the current Minister of Communications, Adebayo Shittu, a former permanent secretary and coordinator of the state’s intervention agency, Oyo State Roads Maintenance Agency, OSROMA, My Remi Olaniyan, A former aide of the current governor, Adeolu Akande, current commissioner, Ajiboye Omodewu, Serving deputy governor, Moses Adeyemo Alake and the famous journalist and Editor-in-Chief of The Guardian group of Newspapers, Mr Debo Adesina.

    For one obvious reason, however, Adesina’s candidacy has been an intriguing one. Perhaps the least politically exposed of the lot, Adesina is winning the hearts of people as a result of what an insider calls ‘political innocence a persona that public office has not contaminated.’ Hence there is a general talk of looking in his direction because of his non-susceptibility to blackmail and his wide appeal across the state. Apart from serving briefly as a Federal Commissioner in the Fiscal Responsibility Commission under President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, he has largely been a private sector person, distinguishing himself in his profession.

    Very well-regarded at home on account of his service to the people, his humility and accessibility; and supported by many who see in him the combination of brains, hard work and passion for the state, Adesina himself has not only been going round stating his case to the people, his champions are permanently on the move.

    He speaks passionately about his plans at every stop and is uncompromising in his stand that the contest should be of ideas and not money or anything else.

    The other day, he hosted a few people in his Okaka, Itesiwaju Local Government Area, home to review one of his social and economic plans for Oyo State.

    Experts from within and outside Oyo State converged on the sleepy town to discuss ideas and designs for the state. A former Central Bank Governor led a team that both briefed and also queried Adesina on some of his plans as well as how a new government might hit the ground running in 2019.

    Questions flew all over. And there was no shortage of fireworks.

    How might we do this? Where would the money for that come from? Where is the current government getting it right and where could there be improvements? If you were an investor, would you come here? Where would you go instead, if not here? What would be the attraction? What can we do and what is right? Where are the people in this or that?

    With charts, slides and power-points, a review session that was meant for a few hours practically took the whole day. Fiery in his queries or submissions when unsatisfied with a certain point and exultant when he hit what he called breakthroughs on a particular plan, he cut the picture of a man in a hurry to govern.

    Whether he would get the chance is another matter. But, certainly, Adesina is in full preparation mode.

    The Okaka session was the climax of a state-wide tour by him and his top advisers with a view to having a feel of what the state has and feel the people’s pulse. “I took my friends round for them to verify some of the claims I have made, so the geophysicists can fault the plan if it is wrong, so the economists can burst my bubble if I am being unduly optimistic, so the agriculture experts can tell me what the state’s rich, vast land can be used for.”

    And as facts and figures were reeled out, Adesina spoke again of the need to take the government to the people.

    “Poor understanding of the job of the leader, misuse of power and lack of vision will automatically breed poverty and underdevelopment. The people have a duty to change the story of our state by getting involved and asking the relevant questions.  What kind of state do we want and how do we create it? Once again, being put in office is good, but what would you do with it?”

    He insists the next leadership must be one that can meet the immediate needs like paying salaries, building roads and digging boreholes as most governments do, no doubt, “but the future has to begin today.” Therefore, “the foundation for a sustainable prosperous future has to be laid with a comprehensive plan to maximize for Oyo its solid mineral and agricultural resources.”

    He then brought out a compilation of the solid minerals in Nigeria and mapped out what abounds in Oyo State, even in his own native Itesiwaju Local Government area, that can be leveraged upon in the immediate, medium and long term.  Shaking his head, he lamented that the bulk of these minerals is either not being explored, being illegally mined and exported without any revenue accruing to the people of the state. ‘’This simply has to change.”

    “The dependence on free money from the federation account has not helped anyone and will end someday. We have all become lazy in Nigeria, waiting for the monthly handout from the central government. Our job in this state is well cut out for us. There is money in our soil and we must dig it out. I know it is not a day’s job and it is not easy. But we must seriously begin the work today”

    He also talked on why the state must look for the resources and invest massively in education of its citizens. “I have said it before and I am repeating it now: When roads are tarred and infrastructure is built without building the minds that will generate wealth and maintain the infrastructure, the future is doomed.”

    While he sounds well prepared for the job of leading his state, with the large number of candidates especially from his own Oke Ogun region and within his party, the All Progressives Congress, APC, what about the politics of getting the job?

    Again, Adesina said it is a democracy and the people will decide. His only plea is that the people should ‘change their own story by changing their attitude to the leadership selection process.’

    “I am repeating something I have told our people at every turn, that the people of Oyo State must avoid the curse of failing to see that one man can make all the difference in the destiny of this state.

    They must avoid the curse of failing to see a direct relationship between themselves, who they put in power and the decisions that will be made by the government on their behalf. They must avoid the curse of putting so-called experienced politicians and office seekers in power.

    They must stand up and be counted on the side of history by doing it differently this time around.”

  • N100m work tools for 1,000 constituents in Oyo

    N100m work tools for 1,000 constituents in Oyo

    Many residents of Oke-Ogun and Ogbomoso areas of Oyo State will always be grateful to their representative at the National Assembly. They will continue to be thankful to him because Senator Fatai Buhari, who represents Oyo North Senatorial District at the National Assembly, enhanced their economic life by giving out several empowerment items to some members of his constituency and supporters.

    The items, which included 32 cars and buses, 230 motorcycles, 14 electric transformers, power generating sets, sewing machines, grinding machines, scholarship awards and cash were estimated at a whopping N100 million.

    Buhari, who has a knack for generosity and grassroots politics, grinned continuously as he received Governor Abiola Ajimobi and the leading traditional rulers across the senatorial district at the permanent site of the National Youths Service Corps (NYSC), Iseyin where the programme held.

    Just as the people were empowered with tools to boost their economic well-being, all the major palaces in the district also received cars for logistic purposess. The palaces were those of the Soun of Ogbomoso, Aseyin of Iseyin, Onpetu of Ijeru, Baggi of Saki, Olokakaa of Okakaa, Onjo of Oke ‘ho, Sabi Iganna of Iganna, Alago-Amodu, Onitede of Tede, Iba of Kisi, Onigbeti, Onigboho, and the Secretariat of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) in Ogbomoso.

    Other beneficiaries included the League of Imams and Alfas in Oke-Ogun and its counterpart in Ogbomoso, the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in both areas, Arewa Community in Oke-Ogun, Federation of Oyo State Students and the Ogbomoso branch of NASFAT.

    Addressing the gathering, Senator Buhari pledged that the entire All Progressives Congress (APC) would not disappoint Nigerians, even as he appreciated their patience, steadfastness and resilience in the last 32 months. He recalled that the current administration inherited serious economic, social and security challenges which were being gradually addressed.

    He said the items of empowerment were continuation of the first which he undertook in 2016 in Saki during which 1,125 people were beneficiaries of different tools and cash gifts.

    “Our commitment to quality representation and empowerment of people of Oyo North Senatorial District is the thrust of the mandate you gave me in the 2015 National Assembly election; and I want to reiterate our resolve to always strive to represent you like never before and put smiles on the faces of the people,” Buhari assured the constituents.

    He further explained that he could not make anyone wealthy but could only put smiles on their faces. The senator urged the beneficiaries to put the tools to good use.

    Governor Ajimobi commended Buhari for his contributions at the floor of the Senate as well as the quality empowerments he has been carrying out for his constituents. Judging from the quality and quantity of the tools in addition to his law-making acumen, Ajimobi declared Buhari as the best Senator the state has ever produced.

    He said the party did not regret handing over the Senatorial ticket to him in 2015 because he has performed beyond expectation.

    Earlier, the Chairman, APC in Oyo State, Chief Akin Oke, hailed Buhari for always connecting with his constituents, stressing that he was a good representative of the party.

    At the event were the Onitede of Tede, Oba Rafiu Adebimpe; Onigboho of Igboho, Oba John Oyekola; representative of Bagi of Saki, Chief Rasheed Kasali; Olokakaa of Okakaa, Oba Abdulazeez Ogelende as well as Muslim and Christian clerics.

  • Ibadan youths oppose power shift to Oke-Ogun

    Ibadan youths oppose power shift to Oke-Ogun

    The Ibadan Progressive Youth Forum (IPYF) has called on all political parties to create a level-playing ground for aspirants in the 2019 governorship election.

    According to it, a deliberate zoning of the governorship slot to Oke-Ogun will only polarise indigenes of Oyo State.

    The forum, in a statement by its President, Seun Abiodun, said zoning is dangerous to the future of the state as the five zones had always worked together.

    The forum argued that Oke-Ogun was part of all previous administrations, but they ended up as deputy governors mostly.

    It said zoning the slot to Oke-Ogun will deprive other qualified aspirants from Oyo, Ogbomoso, Ibadan and Ibarapa.

    The forum argued that the political parties should rather sustain the culture of creating a level-playing ground for all aspirants to ensure that they present their best candidates in the next election.

  • 2019: Ibadan indigenes back Oke-Ogun governorship ambition

    2019: Ibadan indigenes back Oke-Ogun governorship ambition

    A group of Ibadan indigenes, the Ibadan Equity Forum (IEF), has expressed support for power shift to Oke-Ogun area of Oyo State, ahead of the 2019 governorship election.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Mr Sola Adio, the forum said its decision was borne out of the need to promote equity, fairness and justice among the various communities in the state.

    Since the creation of Oyo Stat in 1976, no indigene of Oke-Ogun has been elected governor.

    Oke-Ogun has 10 local government areas; it is located in the northern part of the state.

    Its land mass covers about 60 per cent of the total land mass of the state, but the area has about 20 per cent of the state’s population.

    IEF urged indigenes of the area to present a credible candidate who can offer excellent leadership in office.

    It advised Ibadan and other indigenes to support any candidate Oke-Ogun may present ahead of next year’s governorship election.

    The statement reads: “Following our emergency meeting last Thursday at the palace of the Olubadan of Ibadan at Oja’ba, we resolved that we are solidly behind the idea of a candidate from Oke-Ogun in the 2019 governorship election. For the purpose of fairness, equity and justice, we want the next governor to come from the region. We implore all Ibadan indigenes – home and abroad – to support the decision.”

     

     

  • Adeyemo: Oke-Ogun to present single candidate

    Oyo State Deputy Governor Moses Adeyemo has said there will soon be a consensus governorship candidate from Oke-Ogun.

    Adeyemo spoke at the weekend in an interview on Southwest Political Circuit, a political programme on Ibadan-based Fresh FM.

    The power shift to Oke-Ogun in 2019 is gathering strength.

    Adeyemo, who hails from Igboho in Oke-Ogun, is one of those aspiring to succeed Governor Abiola Ajimobi.

    Other aspirants from the area include Communication Minister Adebayo Shittu; Commissioner for Lands, Ajiboye Omodewu; Prof. Adeolu Akande, and Aderemi Olaniyan.

    Indigenes are pushing for power shift to Oke-Ogun. Ajimobi has backed their aspiration.

    The governor has described them as loyal and appreciative, adding that they contributed greatly to his re-election in 2015.

    But about eight aspirants from Oke-Ogun have signified their intention for the top job.

    Asked if he was not worried about the number of aspirants and the difficulty of having a single candidate from the area, Adeyemo said the leaders were meeting with all aspirants.

    The deputy governor assured the people that a consensus candidate would be chosen to represent Oke-Ogun.

    He pledged to support any aspirant the leaders choose.

    Adeyemo added that the interest of the area is more important than his personal ambition.

    Asked to explain the reason for the agitation for power shift, Adeyemo said the principle is practised to prevent domination.

    The deputy governor noted that rotation also applies at the federal level for peaceful co-existence and harmonious relationship.

    He said: “A candidate will soon be presented among the aspirants. That’s what we are working out. But I will not tell you how the candidate will emerge. Just expect our candidate soon.”

    Adeyemo berated the opposition, saying only the blind will fail to see the impact of the Ajimobi administration.

    He said the administration, which restored peace, was also rebuilding infrastructure and transforming the economic landscape.

  • Ajimobi backs Oke-Ogun for 2019 governorship race

    Ajimobi backs Oke-Ogun for 2019 governorship race

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has reaffirmed his support for the aspiration of Oke-Ogun indigenes to produce his successor in 2019.

    In 2016, the governor expressed his support for their ambition to produce the next governor while addressing guests at the burial of a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Okeho.

    He reaffirmed the same position while addressing a crowd of supporters and beneficiaries of an empowerment programme organised by the senator representing Oyo North Senatorial District, Fatai Buhari, in Iseyin.

    Ajimobi, who extolled the virtues of Oke-Ogun indigenes, recalled that he got the highest number of votes from the area in the last election.

    The governor said Oke-Ogun indigenes are reliable and loyal to worthy causes.

    He added: “I love Oke-Ogun people because they are extremely loyal and grateful. I think we should all support Oke-Ogun governorship candidate in the 2019 election. I know you have many qualified candidates. Just make sure you pick the best among them and work with Ibadan and other zones. I will support Oke-Ogun cause but if you don’t work with Ibadan, you may not realise your ambition.”

    Underscoring the importance of Oke-Ogun to the state and Nigeria, Ajimobi said the area accounts for about 60 per cent of the land mass of the state, adding that it could serve as the food basket of the state and the South.

    He also acknowledged that the population of the area is about 20 per cent of the state, making it compulsory for the residents to work with other zones to realise its governorship ambition.

    Ajimobi said his belief in Oke-Ogun and its people was the reason his administration was directing investors in agriculture-related areas to the area.

    The governor stressed the need to ensure that his successor is also a member of the APC, saying it would help to sustain developmental efforts in the area and other parts of the state.

    To further strengthen harmonious relationship in the area, Ajimobi said he would convene a meeting of traditional rulers and to make them work together. Buhari hailed Ajimobi and party leaders in the state for holding the party together.

  • Oyo 2019: How far can Oke-Ogun go?

    Oyo 2019: How far can Oke-Ogun go?

    Ahead of the 2019 governorship election in Oyo State, the people of Oke-Ogun zone have renewed their agitation for power shift. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN examines why the coveted seat has eluded them for long and suggests how they could realise their ambition of producing a successor to Governor Abiola Ajimobi in 2019.

    INDIGENES of Oke-Ogun in Oyo North Senatorial District of Oyo State have for long been complaining of marginalisation by successive administrations.

    Oke-Ogun is an area with 1.4 million people, according to the 2006 census. It occupies 60 per cent of land mass in Oyo State and it has 10 out of 33 local government areas in the state.

    The grouse of Oke-Ogun people is the monopoly of the governorship seat by Ibadan indigenes.  Since the creation of old Oyo State in 1976, Oke-Ogun has not produced a governor. The late Chief Bola Ige, from the Ijesha axis, was the first civilian governor of the state. He was elected on the platform of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) in 1979. He was succeeded by an Ibadan man; the erudite scholar and mathematician, Dr Omololu Olunloyo in 1983. After nine years of military interregnum, another Ibadan man, Chief Kolapo Isola, became governor in 1992. At the return of democracy in 1999, the late Alhaji Lam Adesina, an Ibadan man, took over the mantle of leadership. He was succeeded by another Ibadan indigene, Senator Rasheed Ladoja, in 2003.

    However, in 2007, Chief Adebayo Alao-Akala, an indigene of Ogbomoso, was elected as the governor. His emergence was attributed to providence, because the Ogbomosos are minorities. Not surprisingly, Alao-Akala lost his re-election bid to Senator Abiola Ajimobi, another Ibadan indigene in 2011. Ajimobi was re-elected in 2015.

    The highest position an Oke-Ogun man has ever occupied is that of the deputy governor. An Oke-Ogun man, Chief Iyiola Oladokun, was elected deputy governor during the tenure of Adesina. The current deputy governor, Chief Moses Adeyemo, is also from Oke-Ogun.

    Many pressure groups from the Oke-Ogun area have decried the system that limits the governorship slot to a particular area, saying that it marginalises them, because it does not provide an opportunity for an indigene of the area to emerge as governor.

    As the state gradually prepares for the 2019 general elections, these pressure groups, with the backing of traditional rulers, have started mobilising the political class, to ensure that an indigene emerges as a governorship candidate of one of the major parties.

    A political activist and an Oke-Ogun indigene, Hon. Adekunle Sulaiman, lamented that the area is not being fairly treated in Oyo politics. He said the time has come for the people to fight for their right. He said: “The existing political equation appears to have put a ceiling to the office to which a citizen of the region can aspire to attain, as if perpetually restrained to second-in-Command to the highest political office in the state; budgetary allocation has consistently been below 10 per cent of the state’s total budget while lack of infrastructure is synonymous to Oke-Ogun zone.

    “It may interest you to know that most of the roads traversing the region were constructed by the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo administration during the First Republic they have neither been rehabilitated nor reconstructed. Successive administrations in the state have concentrated development along the Ibadan, Oyo and Ogbomoso axis to the utter neglect of Oke-Ogun.

    “There is no federal or state university in Oke-Ogun, no tertiary health institution, no good roads and no pipe borne water in any part of the region. We are not ignorant of fifth columnists in our midst that prefer to serve the interests of their pay masters, rather than support the struggle for the political emancipation of the area. As a result of the neglect and injustices meted out to our people, they are now unified in the agitation for power shift in 2019. We have resolved not to play second fiddle or third position in Oyo State come 2019. Politicians cannot continue to deceive us with impromptu projects in 2019. Enough is enough.”

    The Chairman of Oke-Ogun Consultative Council Forum (OCCF), Dr Olusegun Ajuwon, agrees with Suleiman. He said in a bid to produce the next governor of Oyo State the Oke-Ogun people have agreed to queue behind only a candidate from the Oke-Ogun axis, irrespective of the political platform.

    He said: “In 2019, nothing will divide us, we understand the essence of unity in this game and at the appropriate time we shall endorse a candidate and all of us will queue behind that person. He reaffirmed that it is achievable because our people are ready to do all that is necessary to ensure Oke-Ogun person occupy the exalted office that has eluded them since 1976 when the state was created.”

    Ajuwon argued that a situation where only a zone in the state produces successive governors is not in the best interest of the people. He believes rotation should be a factor determining who becomes governor. He said: “If you have followed the politics of the voting pattern in Oyo State since 1999, you will see that nobody will emerge governor without the votes from other zones. Ibadan votes alone cannot produce a governor in Oyo State.”

    He said the Ibadan zone make up over 50 per cent of the voting population, while Oke-Ogun, Ogbomoso, Oyo and Ibarapa constitute 21 per cent, 15 per cent, eight per cent and three per cent respectively. Ajuwon it is only fair, in the interest of justice, equity and fairness, for the zone that constitutes 21 per cent of the voting population and next to Ibadan in electoral strength to be allowed to occupy the governorship seat in 2019.

    But, a political analyst from Ibadan, Mr. Lasun Oyedeji, disagreed. He said politics is a game of numbers and that the voting strength of a people determines what they get.  He argued that the Ibadan people would continue to leverage on their voting population to produce governor in the state. He added: “Beside the political supremacy, over 90 per cent of internally generated revenue (IGR) in Oyo State comes from Ibadan. Ibadan is responsible for over 90 per cent of the IGR in Oyo State.”

    Oyedeji advised the people of Oke-Ogun to be cautious in their quest for the governorship position and that they should not hold their Ibadan counterparts responsible for their political woes. Oyedeji said Oke-Ogun people had the opportunity to elect one of their sons as governor in 2015, when the current Minister of Communications, Alhaji Adebayo Shittu, from Saki within the Oke-Ogun axis, contested the governorship election. But he lost the election. He got only 2,000 votes; meaning that even the electorates did not vote for him.

    Public Affairs analyst, Dr Rasaq Adedeji, has predicted that the 2019 governorship election in Oyo State will be a straight battle between the Ibadan/Ibarapa and the Oke-Ogun zones. He said the election may not be fascinating, because the political gladiators from Ibadan might outwit their Oke-Ogun counterpart with monetized politics.

    Adedeji said: “Given the history of winners who have occupied the governorship seat by the circumstances and the population, nobody has won governorship election in Oyo State from the Oke-Ogun axis; not because there are no qualified candidates from the zone, but due to political calculation which has been essentially opportunistic against the zone. The governorship seat has always been occupied by the Ibadan people; the exception is Alao-Akala who won the seat by accident, through the influence of the late Alhaji Lamidi Adedibu; with the support of the then President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    “Ajimobi broke the myth of governing Oyo State for two straight terms in 2015 and this brought to fore once again the agitation to present a new candidate from another zone, apart from Ibadan. In this regard, Oke-Ogun is favoured, because Ogbomoso, apart from having produced Chief Ladoke Akintola as Premier in the past, has also produced Alao-Akala.

    “The bid to occupy the Agodi House, Ibadan, come May 29, 2019 will raise the stake for whoever is being presented against Oke-Ogun candidates. The race will not only be tough, but seriously competitive. It will be quite interesting again, because politicians from the Oke-Ogun are moving towards uniting efforts to present a single candidate to win the election and the zone seems to be where the votes will come from. The winning votes that helped Senator Ajimobi to break the myth of second term came from Iseyin, a town in the Oke-Ogun area in 2015.

    “There are two strategies on game plan which might be the joker that will produce the next governor for Oyo State from outside Ibadan in 2019. One is the suggestion to use the rainbow coalition being built between the old PDP under Alao-Akala/Raji Rasaki/Teslim Folarin on one hand and majority of Accord Party defectors aligning with the APC to present Alao-Akala for governor in 2019. This arrangement might spring a surprise on the other splinter parties which are not popular in the state. However, as fascinating as this strategy might look, it will not please the Lamist (the Lam Adesina group) and majority of the APC members who are from the CPC, the ANPP and the ACN. This could be another albatross against the APC winning eventually.

    “The second strategy is that whoever is supported by the Governor Ajimobi political machinery for sustainable regiment from any zone might be the winner given the party structure being built for the 2019 elections. By the time the election will be conducted in 2019, only governor will be controlling the chairmen of local government councils in the 33 local governments and the 35 LCDA in the state. All the 350 councillors will also work for the governor and vote for whoever the governor supports. The declaration of his preferred candidate by Governor Ajimobi in 2018 will give an indication of the zone that the APC candidate will come from.”

    The agitation for a governor of Oke-Ogun extraction has received a boost from the Ibadan axis. For instance, Ajimobi has expressed support for the agitation. He, however, counselled that they must seek the support of other zones for the dream to be actualised, adding that Ibadan alone constitutes 52 per cent of the entire population of the state. He recalled that during the 2015 governorship election that he won in nine out of the 10 local governments in Oke-Ogun and “this aided my emergence as the first governor to secure a second term in office in Oyo State. I am using this opportunity to assure you that I will reciprocate your love for me”.

    He added: “Without prejudice to the competence and legitimacy of aspirants from other zones nursing the ambition of succeeding me, I can say the people of Oke-Ogun deserve my support. But I will advise you seek the support of people from other zones. You must win them over to win a governorship election”.

    Oke-Ogun indigenes that have so far declared their interest in running for the position in 2019 include: the Minister for Communication, Alhaji Adebayo Shittu; former Chief of Staff to Governor Ajimobi, Professor Adeolu Akande; the Editor-in-Chief of Guardian newspapers, Mr Debo Adesina; a legal luminary, Alhaji Ahmed Raji (SAN); and a former Permanent Secretary in the State, Remi Olaniyan.

     

  • Oyo 2019: Oke Ogun makes case for zoinng

    Oyo 2019: Oke Ogun makes case for zoinng

    In this piece, Folake Aderounmu examines the agitation of Oke Ogun in Oyo State for power shift in 2019.

    The politics of the 2019 governorship race in Oyo State began to take shape on July 07 when the people of Oke Ogun addressed a press conference to stake a claim to the governorship of the state come 2019.

    It was a colourful event as men and women, regale in traditional outfits, filed into the Dapo Aderogba Hall of the NUJ Press Centre, Ibadan, to address the press. The National President of the Oke Ogun Development Consultative Forum, Dr Segun Ajuwon addressed the press. Although a medical doctor and former Chief Medical Director of the National Hospital, Abuja, Ajuwon’s working in the company of politicians had obviously rubbed off him given the dexterity with which he presented the case of his people. Ajuwon had worked as Personal physician to former President Olusegun Obasanjo throughout the latter’s tenure as President between 1999 and 2003.Ajuwon was in the news lately when Obasanjo disclosed that he was the medical doctor who saved him from being poisoned by General Sani Abacha while he was incarcerated in Yola Prison. He has worked with personalities at a very high level of government and he knows the facts about the marginalization of the Oke-Ogun people through the years.

    Ajuwon, leading the cream of leaders from the Oke Ogun area of the state, explained that the people from the area are staking a claim to the governorship of the state because they have been marginalised in the occupation of the number one position in the state. History bears him witness. Since the creation of Oyo State in 1991, no indigene of Oke Ogun had been governor of the state. This is in contrast to Ibadan which had produced many governors of the state. In 1992, Chief Kolapo Isola was elected the governor of Oyo State on the platform of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) though the government was truncated in 1994 when General Sani Abacha sacked democratic institutions at the height of the June 12, 1993 crisis.  When the nation returned to democracy in 1999, another son of Ibadan in the person of Alhaji Lam Adesina was elected governor on the platform of Alliance for Democracy (AD). Yet again, in 2003, another Ibadan son, Senator Rasidi Ladoja, was elected governor of Oyo State on the platform of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). Ladoja’s tenure was crisis- ridden and he was eventually impeached and replaced by Otunba Adebayo Alao Akala. Akala was removed after 11 months when the Supreme Court ruled that Ladoja was wrongfully impeached. Akala, with the support of the Obasanjo Presidency won his way back to power in 2007 on the platform of the PDP. His tenure as governor had been widely attributed to providence because of the minority status of the Ogbomosho area where he comes from. If anyone disagreed, this interpretation of history was confirmed in 2011 when Akala, the incumbent lost his re-election bid to Senator Abiola Ajimobi, an Ibadan indigene, who contested on the platform of the Action Congress of Nigeria(ACN). Ajimobi, like other indigenes of Ibadan, leveraged on the majority votes locked up in Ibadan. Ibadan singularly controls over 50 per cent of the votes in Oyo State. This contrasts with Oke Ogun that has 21 per cent, Ogbomosho 15 per cent, Oyo 8 per cent and Ibarapa 3 per cent. It is for this mathematics of politics that except for Akala, whose ascendancy to the governorship was predicated on the impeachment of Ladoja, no other part of the state except Ibadan has produced the governor of the state. And, according to Ajuwon, political fair-play necessitates that the zone next to Ibadan in electoral strength should be allowed to occupy the governorship position in 2019.

    Ajuwon also discussed the implications of the absence of Oke Ogun indigenes at the helm of affairs in the state and the paucity of infrastructural development projects in the zone. This, according to him, includes the absence of state and federal institutions that could hasten the socio-economic development of the state. In his words,” the roads linking us to the state capital are all very bad and have remained so forever, I dare say. We do not have a single federal institution except for the Nigeria Police and a few other uniformed law enforcement agencies whose presence is to collect taxes and other revenues without any compensation in the form of derivation as other sections of the country that are earning resources for government through Oil and Gas. This is despite the equally huge returns from Customs, Duties and taxes daily accruing from Oke Ogun that habours extensive stretch of the nation’s international borders. We are also lacking in federal schools, hospitals or establishments. The absence of government presence has come with great deprivation for us as a people. It is therefore fair and equitable for us to be given the chance to produce the Chief Executive of the state.

    He explained that it is for this marginalisation and the consequence that the people of Oke Ogun feel it is time for them to produce the governor. “We believe as the people of Oke Ogun that the time has come to ask for and to get this coveted position of the Executive Governors of our dear state. There are reasons to justify this clamour for power shift to Oke Ogun. We are a people located strategically in 10 out of the 33 Local Government Areas of the State”. Ajuwon exhibited his understanding of politics in a democratic setting when he volunteered that the people of Oke Ogun are going to work for the understanding and support of other parts of the state in their quest to produce the governor of the state. “We, as a people, however duly acknowledge that we certainly cannot win the governorship by ourselves in Oke Ogun as the incumbent Executive Governor of the State, our dear friend and brother, HE Sen. Ishaq Abiola Ajimobi, has counselled. We are therefore soliciting for the understanding and support of our dear compatriots in Ibadan, Oyo, Ogbomosho and Ibarapa. We urge you all to join hands with us in this quest and push. Democracy is a game of numbers. We need as many friends as we can get to accomplish this goal”.

    Ajuwon explained that the Oke Ogun agitation is a replay of the Nigerian history wherein the northern part of the country conceded the presidency to the southern part in 1999, despite the superior electoral strength of the north. The argument is that the Ibadans should show understanding to promote equity and fairness in the state. The agitation for a governor of Oke Ogun extraction has received a boost lately when Governor Ajimobi again and again announces his preference for a governor from the area. His position has widely been seen as principled and has won him respect and applause not only in Oke Ogun but across the state.

    As   Ajuwon and the leaders of Oke- Ogun are clamouring for a shot at the number one seat in Oyo State, some indigenes of Oke Ogun area already in the field mobilising support for their gubernatorial ambitions They include the Minister for Communication, Alhaji Adebayo Shittu, former Chief of Staff to Governor Abiola Ajimobi, Professor Adeolu Akande, the Editor in Chief of Guardian Newspapers, Mr Debo Adesina and a former Permanent Secretary in the state, Engr. Remi Olaniyan. The months ahead will tell whether the Oke Ogun will get the governorship this time around. What is however certain for now is that the elite and people of the zone are fully braced for the challenge of a shot to occupy the Agodi Government House come 2019.

  • 2019: Oke-Ogun insists on producing Ajimobi’s successor

    2019: Oke-Ogun insists on producing Ajimobi’s successor

    The Oke-Ogun Zone of Oyo State yesterday insisted that now is the time for it to produce a governor.

    Its socio-political group, the Oke-Ogun Development Consultative Forum (ODCF), which addressed reporters in Ibadan, said denying the zone the chance to produce the next governor in 2019 will amount to a disservice to Oke-Ogun people.

    A prominent son of the area,Dr. Olusegun Ajuwon, who is  a former chief medical director of the National Hospital Abuja,  seized the opportunity of the conference to formally announce his interest in occupying the Agodi Government House in 2019.

    Ajuwon, who is a former physician to former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, gave reasons for the clamour by the zone.

    He said: “Oke-Ogun as a distinct segment of Oyo State is hereby announcing formally that for the governorship of Oyo State, it is our turn, come 2019.

    “We believe as the people of Oke Ogun that the time has come to ask for and to get this coveted position of the executive governor of our dear state. There are reasons to justify this clamour for the gubernatorial power shift to Oke-Ogun.”

    Corroborating Ajuwon’s view, a frontline politician and grassroot mobiliser who is also from the region, Engr. Raufu Aderemi Olaniyan, said if the state would be fair to the axis on power distribution in 2019, Oke-Ogun, with 10 out of the 33 local governments in the state should provide the next governor.

    He noted that Ibadan, which is the state capital, with 11 local governments, has produced governors many times and Ogbomoso with five local governments, has produced governor for the state once.

    “We are a people located strategically in 10 out of the 33 Local Government Areas of the state. However, because of the physical distance from the capital of the state and the Federal Government, we have been practically forgotten and neglected.

    “The roads linking us to the state capital are all very bad and have remained so forever. I dare say, we don’t have a single federal institution except for the Nigeria Police and a few other uniformed law enforcement agencies whose presence is to collect taxes and other revenue without compensation in the form of derivation as other sections of the country that are earning resources for government through oil and gas.

    “This is despite the equally huge returns from Customs, duties and taxes daily accruing from Oke-Ogun that harbours extensive stretch of the nation’s international borders.

    “We are also lacking in federal schools, hospitals or establishments. The absence of government presence has come with great deprivation for us as a people, though  we are the food basket of the state. It is therefore fair and equitable for us to be given the chance to produce  the next chief executive of Oyo State”, Ajuwon lamented.

  • Oyo 2019: Four Oke-Ogun politicians for governor

    Oyo 2019: Four Oke-Ogun politicians for governor

    As the people of Oke-Ogun intensify their agitation for power shift in Oyo State, four governorship aspirants from the sub-zone are the frontliners. BISI OLADELE examines their chances at the primary.

    Oke-Ogun, one of the five zones in Oyo State, is intensifying its agitation for power shift to the zone in the next governorship election. To demonstrate its seriousness, many indigenes of the zone are already speeding up their campaigns to gain advantage as they fight for the governorship ticket of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The zone is expressing dissatisfaction with the position of deputy governor or Secretary to the Government (SSG), which it has always got in political power sharing.

    Comprising 10 out of the 33 local government areas in the state, Oke-Ogun is a homogenous group of agrarian communities. Though the zone perches on a wide land mass, its population is not proportionate with the land mass when compared with Ibadan zone, which has about 50 per cent of the voting population. The city has 11 local government areas.

    For this reason, Governor Abiola Ajimobi, who benefitted immensely from the support of voters from Oke-Ogun zone in the last election, has advised the zone to seek the support of other zones, if it is determined to realise its ambition to produce the next governor in 2019.

    The governor defeated his opponents in nine out of the 10 local governments in the zone in the last election.

    The other zones are Ibadan, Oyo, Ibarapa and Ogbomoso.

    There have been eight civilian regimes in the history of the state since 1979. Ibadan has produced governors six times. Only the late Chief Bola Ige, who hailed from Ife-Ijesa zone in the old Oyo State, and Chief Adebayo Alao-Akala, who hails from Ogbomoso, made the list.

    Oke-Ogun has been agitating for power shift to the zone since 2003.

    Traditionally progressive in political orientation, Oke-Ogun has been a major focus for developmental project in the Ajimobi administration since 2011. As expected, the zone has its strengths and weaknesses, which could help or hinder its indigenes from realising their ambition for power shift.

     

    Strengths and weaknesses

    Oke-Ogun is made up of 10 local governments, accounting for 30 per cent of the councils in the state. It is a zone that can not be ignored because it could threaten a candidate’s ability to meet the minimum score of 25 per cent in at least two third local governments in the state as prescribed in the electoral law.

    Due to its homogeneity, Oke-Ogun has the ability to produce bloc votes for the candidates of their choice. This was what Ajimobi enjoyed in the 2015 election. Out of a total of 204,056 votes cast for the five major governorship candidates, the governor polled 87,254, representing 43 per cent.

    But, the low population strength of the area, when compared to Ibadan, can make it difficult for a candidate that is only rooted in Oke-Ogun to win the governorship. This perhaps accounted for why Ajimobi advised the zone to build bridges with other zones, if it was serious about power shift.

    The governor gave the advice in Okeho, headquarters of Kajola Lacol Government last week at the fidau for a stalwart of the APC in the town, Alhaji Salami Oloola.

    Ajimobi said: “I can recall that during the 2015 governorship election, I won in nine out of 10 local governments in Oke-Ogun. This aided my emergence as the first governor to secure a second term in office in Oyo State. I cannot thank you enough. I will forever cherish you my people from Oke-Ogun. I assure you that I will reciprocate your love for me.

    “Without prejudice to the competence and legitimacy of aspirants from other zones nursing the ambition of succeeding me, I can say the people of Oke-Ogun deserve my support. But, I will advise that you seek the support of people from other zones. You must win them over to win a governorship election.”

    Out of 906,870 votes cast for the five top governorship candidates in the 2015 election, Oke-Ogun had 23 per cent, Ibarapa had six per cent, Oyo had nine per cent, Ogbomoso had 15 per cent while Ibadan had 47 per cent.

     

    The gladiators

    Among the major gladiators are the Minister of Communications Adebayo Shittu, Commissioner for Lands and Urban Development Ajiboye Omodewu, former Chief of Staff to Governor Ajimobi Adeolu Akande and a former permanent secretary, Aderemi Olaniyan.

     

    Shittu

    Shittu, a lawyer, is at the forefront of the campaign to emerge as the first man from Oke-Ogun to occupy the Agodi Government House. He first registered his ambition in 2011 when he emerged as the governorship flagberarer of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC). He lost to Ajimobi.

    Shittu consistently expressed his discontent with Ajimobi’s style of governance until he was appointed minister in November, 2015. But, he has resumed his criticism again in recent times in a move many observers believe was borne out of his ambition to succeed him.

    A former member of the Oyo State House of Assembly and former Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, it is believed that the Ibadan-based legal practitioner will use his privileged position to prepare for the election.

    Analysts believe that he recently resumed his criticism of Ajimobi to earn more popularity, ahead of the 2019 election. He is determined in his governorship ambition.

     

    Omodewu

    Omodewu is the Commissioner for Lands and Urban Development. He is one of Ajimobi’s close supporters from Oke-Ogun. He has been a member of the State Executive Council from 2011 till date.

    It is not clear if Omodewu will enjoy Ajimobi’s backing. Omodewu is one of the major contenders from the zone.

     

    Akande

    Prof. Adeolu Akande is a media strategist and political scientist. He teaches Political Science at Igbinedion University, Okada, Edo State. The former media adviser to former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, is also said to be in close touch with Ajimobi, having served as his Chief of Staff from 2011 to 2013.

    The 50-year old politician is one of the most futuristic politicians in the state.

     

    Olaniyan

    Olaniyan, an engineer, was the pioneer General Manager of the Road Maintenance Agency (OYSROMA). A former Permanent Secretary, farmer and business man, Olaniyan recently dumped Accord party for the All Progressives Congress (APC). He is a grassroots politician from Ignoho, a town that APC has been finding it tough to break.

    Olaniyan hopes to leverage on his many years of political experience and contacts across the state to vie for the governorship election.