Tag: Olusegun Mimiko

  • Bayo Fatusin’s lifelines  for the underprivileged

    Bayo Fatusin’s lifelines for the underprivileged

    BAYO FATUSIN might not readily ring a bell in the social circle, but even prominent socialites in the South-West know that the Ondo State-born businessman is a master in the art of philanthropy. For the chairman of Joseph & Abraham Company, giving back to the society has become a culture.

    The founder of Bayo Fatusin Foundation recently rolled out an empowerment programme in which millions of naira were doled out to hundreds of youths and women for small and medium scale businesses. The event, which held at the secretariat of the foundation in Ondo town, had Ondo State governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko; his deputy, Alhaji Ali Olanusi; former governor of Abia State, Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, among others, in attendance.

    Many of the beneficiaries were full of praises for Fatusin as they danced round the town singing about his good deeds.

  • Ogun road projects cost N166.7b

    Ogun road projects cost N166.7b

    Road contracts worth N166.7 billion were awarded to contractors in Ogun State in the last three years.

    The roads span 306.55km and cut across the three senatorial districts.

    Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure Olamilekan Adegbite stated this yesterday in Abeokuta, the state capital, during a ministerial press briefing marking the third anniversary of Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s administration.

    Adegbite said many jobs were created through the road projects, adding: “A lot of information is flying around on the social media about how much we have spent on roads. Some people alleged that the budget was bloated, instead of asking questions about things they do not know.

    “The amount spent on road construction is N166,715,880,490.79 billion. Some people may decide to divide this amount by 36 months, but it does not work like that. There are bridges on these roads and the cost of constructing a bridge is different from that of a road.

    “I urge people not to politicise the issue. Please go round and see what we are doing. They are standard roads that will stand the test of time, not shoddy projects.”

    On statements credited to former Governor Gbenga Daniel and Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko on the cost of the road projects, Adegbite said: “They are mere political statements. Mimiko should know better, except if he is not building roads in his state. As for the former governor, the wonders done by this administration are a shock to him. He is still sleeping and someone needs to wake him. I do not want to join issues with them.”

     

  • Lagos wrong on regionalism

    Lagos wrong on regionalism

    Whether by reading its lips or by observing its body language, we now understand that Lagos State has become indifferent, if not entirely opposed, to the idea of recreating the Western Region as a political and economic zone. However, few knew how virulent the state’s opposition to regionalism was until last week when it publicised its position on the matter at the ongoing national conference. Ondo State is also quite contemptuous of regionalism which, in one of its obfuscatory masterpieces, the Olusegun Mimiko government described as either unessential or at any rate not the exclusive preserve of All Progressives Congress (APC) states. But where Ondo was evasive and tentative, Lagos was trenchant, adamant and conclusive. Since the idea of regionalism took root a few years ago, both Lagos and Ondo have pussyfooted dexterously. In fact both states have remained unfazed by the inspiration the Southwest’s embrace of regionalism has given to other regions, particularly the South-South.

    The Lagos position is mercilessly frank on regionalism. Hear the state: “We do not support, nor do we think it feasible, to return to creation of regions as governing sub-national units in Nigeria. We also do not recommend the creation of new states at this time or in the foreseeable future; viability and cost are two of the immediate reasons that militate against the creation of states. There are said to be six geopolitical zones in the country: this nomenclature is unknown to the Constitution and yet it continues to feature in national discourse. We do not recommend that the said zones as a feasible structure for government for Nigeria. It is folly to believe that the coincidence of geography dictates anything but convenience; we recommend that Nigeria should adhere to constitutional federalism which to date only prescribes states, and desist from the use of zones for planning or execution of constitutional authority.”

    Declaring that its opposition to regionalism goes beyond merely refusing to support it to doubting its feasibility, Lagos suggests that the creation of states during the Yakubu Gowon years ended the era of regionalism. It does not say why it thinks that that era could not be recreated or why the post-states creation era is cast in granite. Perhaps it believes that the issue of viability and cost that militate against the creation of more states also affect the recreation of regions. Viability is of course no deterrent to regionalism, for in fact all the defunct regions were viable. And if cost, what says that the regions must retain the present states structure within their boundaries? Lagos, it must be admitted, did not directly tie its opposition to regionalism to cost and viability; nor could it, for it can indeed be argued persuasively that regionalism may even lower the cost of running not only the regions but the country itself.

    It is shocking that Lagos describes anyone who thinks that “the coincidence of geography dictates anything but convenience” as foolish. The state has exercised its right to oppose regionalism, and cannot be described as foolish in doing so. Why must the state describe those who support the idea, who see substantially and creatively beyond geographical coincidence, as foolish? I am persuaded that those who think regionalism holds a lot of promise have given the idea much thought. Even if they were misguided – and I don’t think they are – they are certainly not foolish.  On the contrary, it is actually Lagos that has shown a surprising inability to understand the advantages of regionalism. The state has never been enthusiastic about regionalism, perhaps because it erroneously thinks the idea imposes certain obligations on the coastal state, compelling it, like Germany to the European Union, to bear a disproportionate burden for the region’s sustenance. Instead, it appears to prefer isolationism for reasons other than cost and viability, and meanwhile has only reluctantly participated in regionalist activities. Lagos, I believe, is short-sighted.

    I suspect that under Mr Fashola Lagos has begun to see and cultivate a distinct identity for itself different from the rest of the Yoruba people of the Southwest. The well-travelled governor probably envisions Lagos as a megacity, massive, multicultural and great by dint of its own attributes. He envisions a state that stands on its own, holds its own, and is not encumbered by others or beholden to others. If the governor and the elite of the state who carved the state’s opposition to regionalism had expanded their vistas a little beyond the unpopular revisionist view of Lagos held by some non-Lagosians, they will recall the unsuccessful battles leading Southwest elites fought before and during the First Republic to incorporate Lagos into the Western Region. While those elites acknowledged the avant-gardism of the city and its role as a cultural melting pot of limitless possibilities, they also saw it as an effervescent conglomeration of the Western Region’s politico-cultural liberalism. To them, Lagos was not just a secular city growing phenomenally, as the current Lagos government appears to think, it was a philosophical representation and manifestation of the civilizing attributes of the days of empire.

    While Ondo is a normless aberration in regionalist terms, Lagos, the navel of the Southwest, now seems to think its shared history with the region/zone is less important than its future goal as an individualistic and multicultural megacity. This is a misreading of what the state represents. Much of the present Lagos State was of course a part of the Western Region. Its nascent individualism, or if you like, aspiring multiculturalism, is not, therefore, mutually exclusive of its regionalist credentials. Given the fragmented nature of African politics, not to say the evolution or unraveling of Nigeria, Lagos needs the cultural and political sinews of the Southwest both to survive and to thrive in a harsh and unjust country. It is inconceivable that Kaduna and Kano, for instance, would opt out of regional arrangements in the north should the need arise; or Maiduguri deny its historicity as a northeastern avatar; or Enugu and Port Harcourt deny themselves as southeastern and South-South entities respectively. Lagos was once federal capital, and it seeks a special status. Does its place as a regional city make it ineligible for that special consideration?

    Cities and states need thinkers and statesmen in order to keep renewing themselves: the former to open up new theoretical vistas for their states, and the latter to forge the skills to trudge, navigate and give a practical feel to the new paths. Many Nigerian cities, apparently including Lagos, struggle to find men who can help them bridge the chasm between the past and the future, and in particular to help them formulate a great identity that incorporates the inspiring elements of the past and the ennobling virtues of the future. They have not always been successful.

    I do not know where Lagos got the idea that Nigeria has outgrown regionalism. This is not only a fallacy; it distorts history in ways that make the lessons of that troubling history intellectually inaccessible. Regionalism is of course not incompatible with federalism, seeing that it stands between confederation and unitary government. It doubtless suffered problems and experienced many setbacks in the past, but successive constitutional arrangements have suffered even worse setbacks. Lagos, like many others, inappropriately uses federalism in other parts of the world as a yardstick to condemn regionalism in Nigeria. But have they asked why the developmental synergies needed to grow the economy, create wealth and narrow the gap between the rich and the poor have proved difficult to forge in these parts? No one who has perused the regionalist programme of the Southwest states can fail to appreciate the tremendous social, economic and political lift it would bring to the zone. Why Lagos is unable to understand the great leap forward that regionalism could foster is hard to explain.

    It is impractical to expect that the many nations existing in Nigeria can be subjected to the kind of federalism practiced by, say, the United States, where an amalgam of people was grafted upon a new land, so to speak, or by Germany of essentially one nation whose homogeneity and enlightenment have made its federalism fairly easy to practice. Lagos is wrong to denounce regionalism, and wronger still to dissociate itself from the Southwest’s call for regionalism. The Lagos position is short-sighted and counterproductive, and it ignores the dangers of stripping itself naked and vulnerable in a country where social, political and economic fair play counts for nothing.

  • APC demands Ondo’s  financial accounts

    APC demands Ondo’s financial accounts

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State has urged the state government to account for its spending since it assumed office.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Prince Abayomi Adesanya, APC said: “It is inevitable and sacrosanct to ask the Governor Olusegun Mimiko administration why it has not told the people how much has accrued to the state’s purse and how it was spent since inception of the administration.”

    It said past administrations gave monthly financial account to guarantee transparency.

    The APC urged Minister for Finance Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN); the Revenue and Remuneration Fiscal Commission and other authorities in charge of revenue allocation to states, local governments and the Oil Derivation Funds to make public the amount that has accrued to Ondo State from the Federation account since February, 2009, till date.

    It lamented that since the Mimiko administration assumed office over five years ago, it has not rendered any financial account.

    The APC said: “How much accrued to the state’s purse from the Federation Account from February, 2009, to May, 2014? How much was paid to the 18 local government areas from the Federation Account from February, 2009, to May, 2014?

    “Ondo State is an oil producing state. How much has it received as 13 per cent oil derivation funds from February, 2009, to May, 2014?

    “Is the 13 per cent derivation paid directly into the state’s coffers or into the account of the Ondo State Oil Producing Area Development Commission (OSOPADEC)?”

    The party urged the government to answers these questions and keep the people abreast of the state’s financial situation.

  • Akure LP members join PDP

    Akure LP members join PDP

    Some Labour Party (LP) members in Akure South Local Government Area of Ondo State defected yesterday to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The defectors, led by Mr. Kunle Adeloye, said they dumped LP because Governor Olusegun Mimiko “failed to fulfil his electioneering promises to Akure people in 2012”.

    Adeloye said Mimiko allegedly told them before his re-election that the number of votes from each local government would determine how much the council would benefit from his administration.

    He said the governor promised to appoint an Akure indigene as the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), if he got maximum votes from Akure, but reneged on the promise.

    Adeloye said: “I am interested in what will benefit Akure people. Ondo people are angry with the government because it has failed them. Those who were not around when we were struggling to retain Mimiko are the ones benefiting from his administration.

    “We invested in the LP. Akure people have always supported Mimiko, but his recent attitude towards us forced us to turn against him. We have an Akure agenda, whether they like it or not. Since Akure is the state capital, we should be given priority.”

    He said he joined the PDP to have a platform where the yearnings of Akure indigenes would be met.

  • Mimiko’s wife’s mother’s funeral May 30

    Mimiko’s wife’s mother’s funeral May 30

    The remains of Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko’s mother-in-law, Mrs. Felicia Adeniyi (75), will be buried on May 30 in Ondo.

    A Christian Wake will hold on May 29 at the Oba Adesanoye Civic Centre in Ondo.

    A funeral service will hold on May 30 at St. Stephen’s Cathedral Church, Anglican Communion, Oke Aluko, Ondo. The deceased’s remains will be interred after the service and this will be followed by a reception at Oba Adesanoye Civic Centre.

    Yesterday, the Head of Service, Toyin Akinkuotu; Chairman of the State’s Waste Management Board Shina Fadamitan and Pastor Segun Ayerin visited Mimiko and his wife, Olukemi, and expressed their condolences to them.

     

  • Between Mimiko and Akure youths

    Between Mimiko and Akure youths

    Thursday April 17, would for sometime remain unforgettable by the sons, daughters and residents of Akure. It was another day their ‘beloved’ governor, (sorry, sole administrator) Olusegun Mimiko successfully undermined the interest of the people. This expectedly, was not the first time the Ondo State governor would do that but he has always played smart and the people have always allowed the sleeping dog to lie. But that Thursday, the youths resisted, protested on the streets and briefly exposed the antics of the governor.

    The state governor had suddenly cancelled a carnival which would have brought so many people, the young and old of the town together to enjoy themselves, garner resources for the development of the town. The youths became so worried because preparations had been concluded and the musician to thrill on the occasion was already in Akure. Beside this, Ondo youths (from where the governor hailed from) had their own carnival, a week to that time without the governor stopping it. Yet, Akure youths that had earlier sought and got permission of the state government were teargassed and harassed by the state government.

    Governor Mimiko’s activities and style of administration since he took over in Ondo State February 2009 are beginning to be clearer to the people particularly the people of Akure, the state capital. Shortly, after he took over, he cancelled all the people-oriented projects already embarked upon by the late Dr Olusegun Agagu’s administration in Akure. Some of the projects included the Alagbaka GRA intra estate roads, Odo-ikoyi street road, Ajipowo-Abe cocoa road, Akure-Igbatoro-Ala electricity resuscitation and so on. This is not to mention the way he always humiliates any Akure indigene aspiring to the position of governor or senator. A good example is Honourable Ifedayo Abegunde, whose political machinery he crushed with state apparatus. All the SUBUB primary schoold under Agagu administrator from Akure to Ikare Akoko and from Ore to Igbokoda were abandoned since then. The most painful aspect of it is that primary schools that have been roofed or those at roofing stage were never attended to by his government till date. Notable examples are Etioro Primary School Akoko and Anglican Church Primary School, Akungba Akoko. Even two faculty complexes (science and education) embarked upon by Agagu’s administration at the state university, Akungba Akoko were promptly thrown overboard. His younger brother, Professor Femi Mimiko who has been shouting 21st century university, has not thought it fit to reactivate the complexes not to talk of constructing hostels and staff quarters on the campus for students. One therefore wonders in whose interest the governor is serving?

    Akure people have a political culture and belief. The culture is the number of physical and beneficial projects you can do in the town to aid her development. So far, the governor has only constructed a three- kilometre Arakale road in Akure which took him three years. His claim to street light along Oba-Adesina road is not new. There have always been street light on the road since the time of Chief Michael Adekunle Ajasin. What Mimiko can rightly lay claim to all over the state is market. There is modern market everywhere and the markets are always constructed in conspicuous places where visitors entering any town could see them. Akure is currently suffering from intra city roads. Granted that water is now a luxury, Mimiko also cancelled the second phase of the multi-billion naira Owena dam project which Agagu had paid counter part fund for. If that project had been completed, there would have been pipe borne water for the six local government namely Akure South, Akure North, Ondo East, Ondo West, Idanre and Ifedore.

    The second term of Governor Mimiko was spearheaded by Akure people particularly, Chief Sanya Oyinsan. Where is the man today? After the controversial election, Oyinsan and his group were never remembered for any good thing by sole administrator Mimiko. All the appointments promised Akure indigenes before the election never came to passs. Everything is not for Ondo people. Even the only major street laid with asphalt in Akure after hhis second term election is named after his younger brother, Femi Mimiko.

    Every where in Akure and other parts of the state, residents are groaning over bad intracity roads. The road projects cancelled at the wake of his assumption of office in 2009 have not been revisisted. Alagbaka GRA which is a stone throw to the Government House in now in a terrible shape. Drive to any street, you will his and ask if there is government in the state. To show his disgust for other sections of the state, the tree nominees of Ondo State to the National Conference are all from his (the governor) area. The governor nominated his vice-chancellor younger brother, two serving commissioners, one a woman who is married to an Ondo indidgene and another one from Irele. The same thing he did when he was to nominate people to the federal government for appointment as minister and special adviser to the president. The two nominees are from his home town, Ondo and Ile Oluji, a suburb of Ondo township. What stops an Akure indigene from being a minister when the governor is from Ondo and his deputy of from Akoko? Whereas, there are three senatorial districts in the state. There  was no slot for Akoko and the already forgotten people of the copastal area. The governor’s siblings are in charge of contract, government parastatals  and agencies. The governor has neglected it to put tangible infrastructure on the ground. Only God knows millions of naira he took to Ilaje-Ese Odo during the last inconclusive House of Representatives election.

    Local government administration is no longer in existence in Ondo State. We don’t know how much goes to the local government council areas. How on earth isit that a so-called democratic government hates to entrench democracy at the local government? There has not been election at the local government council areas look famished, unkempt and helpless. In January when I visited three local government in Oke Ogun area of Oyo State, I wept for Ondo State. Every street in the headquarters laid with asphalt. That is one of the reasons why I will forever support autonomy of the local government. This is not obtainable in Ondo state and development os far away from all the 18 local government. I just hope one day the president, Dr Jonathan will, just as he did in Kano State recently, announce how much money has accrued to local government in Ondo State since 2009. We understand that our state ‘sole administrator’ has been taking sides with the president so as to cover his tracks. As a matter of fact, Ondo State is not in darkness, the state is suffering. It is high time we began to tell the governor that enough of market, enough of tricks, enough of egoism.

    • Williams sent in this piece from Akure.
  • Mimiko launches taskforce on evacuation of destitute

    Mimiko launches taskforce on evacuation of destitute

    Ondo State Governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, has inaugurated a taskforce on the evacuation of illegal immigrants, destitute and other social miscreants from the state as part of the state government’s efforts to enhance public safety.

    While inaugurating the taskforce on behalf of the governor, the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Dr. Aderotimi Adelola, noted that the government has noticed the influx of immigrants into the state and the worrisome behaviour of some residents in recent times, hence the need to strengthen security all over the state.

    While noting that the taskforce will be functional in the three senatorial districts of the state, the governor urged its members to respect the human rights of those to be apprehended and be committed in the discharge of their duties.

    The taskforce, which membership comprises  men of the Nigerian Army, Police, Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDS), Immigration, Department of State Security (DSS), is to begin work immediately across the state.

    In her address, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Women Affairs, Mrs. Foluke Owoseni, said the taskforce would assist the ministry to fish out people who may constitute a threat to the security of the state, adding that the state government is determined to evacuate miscreants and destitute from the state.

    She stated that citizen’s right to life must be secured, so that peaceful coexistence can be guaranteed in the state.

    In his remarks, the representative of the State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Tajudeen Bakare, an Assistant Commissioner of Police, assured of the commitment of the security agencies to ensure the security of lives and property across the State.

    Responding, the Chairman of the Taskforce, Mr. O. Aladesuyi, assured of the readiness of the body to deliver on its mandate.

     

  • Why Ondo has not conducted LG elections -Mimiko

    Why Ondo has not conducted LG elections -Mimiko

    A case instituted by the Ondo State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) which is before the Supreme Court is stalling the conduct of the local government elections in the State.

    The State Governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, made this disclosure at a workers’ forum held in Akure, the state capital.

    While giving an assurance that the LG election will be conducted as soon as the apex court delivers its judgment on the case, Mimiko added that the state government was doing everything possible to restructure the local government administration in the State.

    Stressing that the impact of workers on the economic growth of a nation cannot be underestimated, the governor further restated his commitment to the welfare of workers in the State.

    He added, “We decided to make a deliberate investment in the development of our human capital, because of the magnitude of workers’ contributions to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of our nation.”

    He said the restructuring of the Public Service resulting in the appointment of Administrative Secretaries in the Local Government Service, Tutors-General in the teaching service with the status of Permanent Secretaries was a deliberate policy action to ensure stability in the various cadres in government service.

     

  • Mimiko advocates increase in corp members allowances

    Mimiko advocates increase in corp members allowances

    THE Ondo State Governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, has called on the Federal Government through the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) Governing Council to increase Corp members’ monthly allowance.

    The governor made this known when the NYSC Governing Council led by Alhaji Tijani Adekanbi paid him a courtesy visit in Akure, the state capital.

    Mimiko assured the council that the state would remain committed to the social welfare and security of the Corp members.

    He maintained that the state has been at the forefront of enhancing the objectives of the NYSC, particularly in its efforts at promoting national integration and youth development.

    Mimiko, who was represented by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Dr. Aderotimi Adelola, pledged the readiness of the government to liaise with relevant government parastatals in order to prioritise the welfare and security of the corp members in the state.

    Speaking earlier, the chairman, NYSC National Governing Council, Chief Gordon Bozimo, who was represented by the leader of the delegation, Alhaji Tijani Adekanmbi, lauded the state government for promptly releasing its subvention to support the Scheme.