Tag: Omisore

  • LIVE UPDATES: Osun Election

    LIVE UPDATES: Osun Election

    05:23: APC’s Aregbesola wins Osun Election capturing 22 out of 30 LGAs in the state with PDP’s Omisore winning in 8 LGAs

    05:20: The Osun INEC returning officer Professor Bamitale Omole, announced that Aregbesola won majority of the poll with 394,684 votes against Senator Iyiola Omisore of PDP who polled 292,747 votes.

    04:56:The Returning officer has now declared a break in the announcement to collate the total result

    04:45:LGA announcement of results completed. Final tally being calculated

    04:45: Ejigbo: APC: 17, 700 PDP: 12, 495

    04:39:IFE South APC : 7325 PDP: 12811

    04:35:Atakumosa East  : APC 9287 PDP6294 LP120

    04:27: APC 26,551 PDP 8483 LP 410

    04:20: Osogbo:APC 39,983 PDP 11513 LP 673

    04:15: Iwo : APC 20827 PDP 15493 LP 790

    Ayedire: APC 7724 PDP 7813 LP 423

    Egbedore :APC 10615 PDP 7024 LP 157

    04:00: APC18328 PDP 10330  LP 117

    03:52:Ayedaade APC 12801 PDP 11255 LP 137

    Obokun APC 11696 PDP 8618 LP 84

    03:49: Odo Otin: APC: 11, 950 PDP:  12, 902

    Irepodun APC 13314 PDP 7386 LP 343

    Ifelolodun APC 17447 PDP 12442 LP 96

    Ife  East APC 13821 PDP  20831 LP 29

    Ife central APC 9670 PDP 24,555 LP 102

    Olaoluwa APC 7927 PDP 2476 LP 2476

    Ife North North APC 8603 PDP 9841 LP  265

    Isokan APC 9758 PDP 1028 LP 197

    Ede North north APC 15403 PDP 10427 LP 54

    03:30:Ola Oluwa LG APC: 7927 PDP: 4963

    02:55: Atakumosa West – 6,128  PDP 5,142

    02:54:Oriade APC 12523 PDP 10214

    02:51:Orolu APC 8558 PDP 6786

    02:27:Boripe APC 12723 PDP 9344

    02:25: Odo Otin: APC: 11, 950 PDP:  12, 902

    02:22:Ilesa West APC: 15, 427 PDP: 5449

    02:19:Ilesa East APC 16106 PDP5913

    02:15: Boluwaduro APC: 4891, PDP: 5035

    02:10: Ifedayo APC  4225 PDP  3982

    01:50:Vice Chancellor of Obafemi Awolowo University, Professor Bamitale Omole is Chief Returning Officer

    01:07: Local Government collating officers confirming their results.

    00:30: Candidate of the PDP,  Iyiola Omisore has petitioned the INEC over the Osun State gubernatorial election.

    The petition titled: Protest on the August 9, gubernatorial election said candidate of the APC, Rauf Aregbesola flouted provisions of the Electoral Act 2010 by announcing results.

    00:14:INEC officials to begin the announcement of results soon

    23:20:Tight security as INEC begins collation of final results

    20:17:Atiku urges Osun people to guard their votes jealously

    20:15:APC has won in 23 LGAs, says Senator Babajide Omoworare

    20:00: INEC commends Osun voters

    19:37: Aregbesola in early lead,Osogbo erupt in jubilation

    16:37: In Osogbo, counting has begun in some units like Unit 3 Ward 4. The counting has been transparent with the voters monitoring it.

    16:30: In may wards in Osogbo, voting still ongoing at 4PM. In Unit 1 and 2 Ward w, more than 100 people were still waiting to vote

    16:09: Collation of results commence

    14:51: Aregbesola: “150 leaders, chieftains and supporters molested, brutalised and incarcerated, says Aregbe. Fed Govt and PDP want to stage a civilian coup. Osun under military siege”

    14:15: The All Progressives Congress (APC) has raised the alarm over the mass arrest and intimidation of its members in Osun on Saturday as the state’s governorship election continues, saying over 250 of its members have been arrested so far in Osun.

    14:12:  Former APC Interim Chairman Chief Bisi Akande has described the handling of the poll by INEC as a disservice to democracy. He said this may be the worst election since 1966. He complained that accreditation was even flopped in some areas. He also flayed the arrest of the PDP leaders and supporters.

    14:05PM: Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has urged voters to vote, wait at polling booths and defend their votes.
    He condemned the arrest and detention of APC leaders across the local governments.

    14:00: About five aides of the former governor of Osun State were picked just now by security operatives armed to teeth with one of them in a black mask. The man in mask is the one that is pointing to whom to be picked. They were all driven to an unknown destination.

    13:55: Ward 4 Unit 1 Osogbo, voting is yet to commence, REC not happy. Voters complain Of electoral officers slowness. There are 518 accredited voters in unit 1 and 2 out of 1, 041.

    Osun Election

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    13:47:   Lai Mohammed: “We were being driven to the Government House when we were stopped at a military check point by men in military and DSS uniforms, all hooded and armed to the teeth with AK-47 assault rifles, pistols and other weapons. Since there was no curfew in Osun State and people were moving around freely, we felt it was a routine check.

    13:26: LP candidate Fatai Akinbade on the queue to cast his vote at Ward 3 Unit 1 Ogbaagbaa , Ola-Oluwa LGA
    LP Candidate

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    13:22: The two polling units at Oba-Laoye Grammar School, Ede, similarly recorded an impressive turnout of voters. The atmosphere at Ede North Local Government was also calm and peaceful. Voting commenced simultaneously in all the polling units at about 12: 30 pm.
    13:20: At ward 10, units 5 (Isale Osun), 6 (Saint George) and 7 (Oke Osun), Offa-Tedo, enthusiastic voters patiently took their turns to cast their ballots in a quiet and orderly manner. Similarly, the voting process at polling unit 08, ward 7, Sabo Agbongbe 11, Ede, was went smoothly.
    13:15: The former Governor of Osun State, Alhaji Isiaka Adeleke, narrowly escaped assassins’ bullet on Friday in his home town Ede.
    13: 03: Aregbesola: “They have been arresting, harassing and molesting our people for no just reason. The democracy is about making your choice freely without being hounded.”
    13:01: Aregbesola voted at exactly 10.45am at Ifofin ward 8, unit 1 polling centre in Ilesa, the governor condemned the clampdown on chieftains and members of the APC across the state by security agents.
    12: 58: Senator Omisore voted at Unit 13, Ile Ife.
    12: 55: In Okinni towards Ilobu in Irepodun LG, suspected thugs invaded a polling booth and attempted to distrupt the accreditation process by shooting in the air. But men of the NSCDC same on hand to calm the situation.Also in Obokun ward 3, Boluwaduro Local government and Odo Otin, armed thugs stormed some polling booths but were repealed from causing mayhem by the NSCDC.
    12:52: The Resident Electoral Commissioner, Segun Agbaje has been touring the state said from Osogbo ,to Ilesa to Ife, accreditation has been smooth. He told The Nation ” we have seen people patiently waiting to start the voting process, the people understand the process and democracy is working”
    12: 35: Voting has commenced in all the polling booths in Osogbo. According to the Commandant of the NSCDC, Engr. Felix Gbolade,  there has been calm despite initial reports of skirmishes” We are fine, we are still deploying our men as the situation demands,” Gbolade said. Also the state Director of Security, SSS Andrew Iorkyar said some polling booths have requested for additional security due to large turnout of voters.
    12:30: PDP spokesperson, Prince Diran Odeyemi, said that one Adelani Owoeye,  PDP man in Ilahun, Obokun Local Government, was picked by the soldiers for complaining that different people were used by the APC.
    The following APC leaders, party agents and members were arrested by suspected fake security operatives from Oba-Ile at 3am. Alhaji Tijani Oladosu (aka Tilad), Hon. John Abioye, Fagbemi Jacob, Fagbemi Segun, Amodu Isiaka, Aminu Adamo and Akinyemi Abioye. Some of the operatives are busy facial hairs while some wore face masks. Their whereabouts are unknown.

     

     

     

     

  • ‘Omisore, PDP circulating  fake survey result’

    ‘Omisore, PDP circulating fake survey result’

    The Director of Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Office of Osun State Governor, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, has debunked an alleged falsehood being spread by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate, Iyiola Omisore, on a purported poll survey.

    Okanlawon, in a statement yesterday, said the PDP and Omisore claimed that a survey conducted by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) put him ahead of Governor Rauf Aregbesola.

    He alleged that a short message being circulated on telephones and the social media claimed that the USAID had conducted a pre-election survey which favours Omisore.

    He said: “The latest claim coming from the PDP represents another fraudulent claim aimed at gaining undeserved advantage.

    “The short message reads thus: USAID opinion poll conducted across the state between 12-21, July put your honour ahead PDP, 58/ APC 42. Such poll may have 2 or 3 error margin.”

    Okanlawon described the alleged poll result as “the manifestation of the falsehood for which the PDP and its candidate are well noted.”

  • Omisore evades internationally organised debate

    Omisore evades internationally organised debate

    In all known contests, debate is probably the best interaction to adjudge a candidate, since there is no other better known scientific method. The best democracy in the world, the United States of America, USA, is well known for making use of debates as a means to present candidates and their manifestoes to the electorates. There is no alternative to this simple, entertaining and educative gathering in the credible democratic electoral process.

    The International Republican Institute (IRI) is a UN-partnered organisation, partially funded by the U.S. House of Representatives. It conducts international political programmes, sometimes called democratisation programmes with special emphasis on promoting good governance. This organisation invited all candidates for the August 9,  2014 governorship election in Osun State to a public debate billed to hold on the State Radio. This was seen as a window of opportunity for the citizens to assess all the candidates, most especially the leading ones like Governor Rauf Aregbesola and Senator Iyiola Omisore. It would have afforded voters a good opportunity to make informed choice on Election Day. This would not in any way have been a bad idea, judging from the fact that both candidates have been engaging in attacks and counter-attacks. There have been accusations and counter-accusations. For example, the PDP candidate had alleged that the administration awarded contracts to godfathers, relations and party leaders, especially persons from outside the state without executing the projects.

    “Let us go to the so-called opon imo. This is an N8.4 billion scam handled by his own biological son. Now, they are withdrawing them from the pupils. The device is valueless and it is just for profit-making and nothing else.

    “In opon imo, we have 17 subjects and 87 per cent errors precisely. I went through it and I analysed it. For instance, in opon imo, there is no single graph in Mathematics, no single illustrative table and no single diagram. You can’t teach Mathematics without graphs, without histograms, without tables and without diagrams,” Omisore alleged.

    The above and others are very weighty allegations which a face-to-face encounter would have resolved and which would have afforded the citizens the opportunity of knowing the truth, first hand. These are not the types of allegations which a media aid would be competent to respond to. It needs clarity from the governor himself and vice-versa.

    True to his words that he would not appear in a public debate with the incumbent Governor Aregbesola, Senator Omisore refused to turn up. How then do we assess a candidate if such refuses a public debate which would have afforded Osun indigenes an opportunity to know him and his party’s manifesto?

    The debate would have normally afforded citizens to know their candidates better and make informed choice. Omisore would have thrown light on his stewardship as a distinguished senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, how many bills he sponsored in favour of his state and so on; he would have led us on a journey of the stewardship of the PDP when the party was at the helm of affairs in Osun between 2003 and 2010. How the tribunal refused them the opportunity to complete their legion of projects in Osun; he would have find it interesting reminding us of how many roads, hospitals, fly-overs etc they provided us.  But Omisore bungled it.

    With his reported refusal to attend the debate on ground of insecurity for his person, it becomes clear that Omisore has something to hide, nothing concrete to offer and is deliberately refusing the people an opportunity to know the kind of person he is.

    The position of the governor of a state in Nigeria is a highly exalted post such that the occupier ought to be above board in reasoning and in verbal comportment.

    If a potential occupier of the post is afraid of the citizens, claiming that he may be attacked at the venue, then it throws out a question at us: how acceptable he is? Is it not a question of a man running away from his shadows? Or is he on a thought journey that the day of reckoning for the murderous criminality of his past is at hand? Is he insinuating that the governor would throw caution to the wind and physically attack him? These are questions begging to be answered.

    Well, we should not be too surprised. We know where the senator is coming from. The PDP is known as a party of Janduku – trouble makers. There’s hardly any public outing of the PDP, anywhere in Nigeria, which will not end in blood-shedding. If that is what he thinks the ruling APC in Osun is about, he is clearly mistaken. The Omoluabi mantra of the administration would not allow the governor or any of his followers to engage in disgraceful acts.

    Sometimes in November 2010, when Ogbeni was being sworn-in in Osogbo Technical College field, I drove to the venue from my Lagos base to witness history. As impromptu and as the event was, with tumultuous crowd to witness, there was not a single record of violence or molestation. This was in clear contrast of what obtains in any gathering of the PDP. It does not matter how sparse the population, such gathering would almost always end in chaos.

    This was captured mildly by an elderly woman who was soliloquizing by my side as we walked away at the end of the swearing-in ceremony of Aregbesola. She captured it succinctly in Yoruba language when she said, “awon Omoluabi lo gbajoba yio, ti o ba se awon tibi ni, won ati maa sara won lada”, which literarily translate to “these are virtuous people that have now taken over governance. If it were the other ones, they would have engaged themselves with dangerous weapons”.  With this elderly woman’s comment, one is not surprised where Omisore is coming from, for him to have insinuated violence at the proposed debate venue.

    We appeal to the distinguished senator to at least respect the wishes of the people of Osun by attending any subsequent debates he might be invited for. He is a leading candidate. The Nigeria Election Debate Group led by the veteran journalist, Chief Taiwo Alimi may soon extend the same invitation to candidates.

    Omisore must come out to debate with Aregbesola. We want him to come and insist on his accusations so that Osun people will know who, among the two of them, is the friend and who is the enemy of the people; so that he will show himself as a reliable and credible future governor; so that he will have all the opportunities to discredit the incumbent and possibly disgrace him out of power with his power of oratory. We need him. We promise his safety to and from the venue. But if he refuses to honour his people, then it shows how contemptuous of them he is.

    Omisore, please come. We are expecting you!

     

     

  • Between Aregbesola and Omisore

    One of the several intrusive short messages that invade my phone regularly says that potential employers spend only six seconds to scan through the curriculum vitae (CV) of applicants. The message therefore asks an applicant to make the most of the opportunity by learning how to write an arresting CV. With respect to voters, what is it that propels a voter to make his choice? Does a voter, as an employer (well that is what it should be in a functional democracy) spend just six seconds to look at the CV of a candidate for election, who actually is not different from an applicant?

    So on August 9, 2014, how much effort will the people of the State of Osun, expend before they make the critical choice of who governs their state for the next four years? Will they like impatient potential employers inattentively gloss over the CV of the candidates, or will they take time to critically examine the antecedents of the candidates and with the information garnered, make that critical choice. Luckily for the Osun electorate, the two major candidates, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, the current Governor of the state and the candidate of the All Progressive Congress (APC); and Senator Iyiola Omisore of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), have curriculum vitae, out in the public domain.

    For Ogbeni, as the Governor is popularly called, his record of performance is there for the public to see. A critical appraisal shows that he has delivered on his current mandate in terms of infrastructure, like rural roads, urban renewal projects, housing, rural electrification, schools rehabilitation and a host of others. He has also done well in developing the human capital, whether by way of massive youth employment programmes, that has been copied by many states, the innovative ‘tablet of knowledge’ in schools, which has also been copied by many states, and his efficient reform in the judiciary and the state civil service. One intriguing aspect of Aregbesola is his grassroots politics.

    As a Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, has no airs about the grand illusion of high political office, even as he doggedly contends that he and his state, as a Governor and a federating unit respectively, deserves respect from the federal authorities. On this score, the Governor of the State of Osun has my full support, and I suppose that of the majority of the people of Osun. As I have consistently argued on this page, Nigeria as it is currently configured can only make little progress, and so I support the courageous advocacy of officials like Governor Aregbesola, in asserting his official rights and that of his state in the federation. No doubt, that is the only way to develop a productive federation, rather that a consumptive and dependent federation, with states in the country, not any different than a hapless appendage of the Federal Government.

    Of course Ogbeni Aregbesola has had his disagreements with the Federal Government because of his fierce opposition to the obtrusive interference of the Federal Government in the affairs of the states. As I argued in my only intervention on the affairs of sate on this page, sometime in the past, Aregbesola acted within his capacity as governor of a state, when he decided to refer to his beloved state, as the ‘State of Osun’, created totems for his state, and celebrated them.  Despite the harassment and innuendoes from the Federal Government, those acts have nothing to do with interfering in the exercise of the executive powers of the President or any other federal authority acting within the confines of the provisions of the 1999 constitution, as amended.

    Notably, Governor Aregbesola’s main albatross is that he loves his religion, Islam. That is no crime. But his opponents like to insinuate that his passion is responsible for the realignment of schools in the state, which generated a lot of controversy. Interestingly, the preponderance of opinion by those who should know; is that, that argument is a bogey, to tar the governor as a dangerous extremist. For me, the Yoruba represent a good model for religious tolerance, with several notable Muslim personalities marrying Christian spouses, and vice versa. So, it was surprising those insidious commentaries where trying to cast Aregbesola as a bigot, despite that he is an associate of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Governor Babatunde Fashola who are quintessence models of religious tolerance.

    On the other hand Omisore is a Senator, representing one of the senatorial zones, in the state of Osun, in the National Assembly. He is not reputed as a radical law maker; instead being a member of the ruling party at the center, the PDP, he tag along, to ensure the maintenance of the status quo. In a free and fair election, a PDP platform would have been a death knell for any person in the politics of south-western Nigeria. The reason being that majority of the people of the region has always fought for an authentic federal system of government, which no government at the center since independence has shown any predilection towards. So, it is strange that Senator Omisore, on the platform of a national status-quo driven PDP government is considered a strong contender, in a state regarded as the fountain of the Yoruba race.

    Even more confounding, is the albatross on the neck of Senator Omisore. I am talking of the well known fact that he was detained and tried for the murder of late Bola Ige, a former Governor of the old Oyo state, which included the present Osun state. Even though he was acquitted by the court; the fact that there was enough evidence to charge him, ordinarily was enough tar; where the upcoming gubernatorial elections to be free and fair, devoid of the prevalent unconstitutional militarisation by the Federal Government.

     

  • Omisore’s excuse for absence at debate lacks wisdom, says APC

    Omisore’s excuse for absence at debate lacks wisdom, says APC

    •Group flays candidates’ nonappearance

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has decried the reasons adduced by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, Otunba Iyiola Omisore, for not participating in the pre-governorship election debate in Osogbo last Saturday.

    It described the PDP candidate’s arguments as “the wisdom of a fool.”

    Omisore had reportedly claimed that he was supposedly superior to Governor Rauf Aregbesola, which made it a match “between two unequal parties.”

    He also inferred that the “weaker of the two parties may resort to physical assault and harassment.”

    But the APC observed that it was disheartening that Omisore’s remark came after the event, which it said “Aregbesola was majestic and at home with facts and figures on how his administration had prudently managed the state’s economy.”

    It added: “Omisore sounded mean and shallow when he tried to denigrate Aregbesola’s academic qualification that the governor ‘presented O’Level (certificate) to INEC’. Again, that’s the wisdom of a fool; but for the foolishness embedded in that piece of information is that Omisore’s current certificate presented to INEC was a court affidavit in place of his primary and secondary school certificates.

    “In particular, we challenge Omisore to produce his certificates from St John’s Grammar School, Ile Ife and Owo Polythecnic, Ondo State.

    “What moral authority then has a man who till today presented court affidavit to show that he went to primary and secondary schools to denigrate another person who he said presented his O’Level certificate to INEC?”

    Omisore, the APC said, has missed his chance to convince the world that he was mentally and intellectually mature enough to handle difficult situation under pressure in a robust and critical debate.

    “The truth of the matter is that, like all inadequate personalities, Omisore was and continues to be afraid of confronting Aregbesola who can expose his lies with incontrovertible facts. That was why he ran away from the debate – simplicita!” it stated.

    An association, Oranmiyan Support Group, has condemned the actions of Omisore and others who refused to attend the debate organised by a United States (U.S.)-based organisation, the International Republican Institute (IRI).

    The group also decried candidates who rely on material inducements to woo the electorate rather than intellectual engagements.

    The group’s leader, Mr. Ayo Akinola, who spoke in Osogbo, said: “Debates are used all over the world to sell political programmes and manifestoes to the electorates.

    “It also provides opportunities for candidates to argue and correct erroneous impressions about themselves and even foster bond of friendship among contending political figures, as this is about the only opportunity that enables candidates to meet one-on-one.”

  • How we broke into Omisore’s house,raped his maid -Chadian robbery suspects

    How we broke into Omisore’s house,raped his maid -Chadian robbery suspects

    Four suspected members of a robbery gang made up of Chad nationals have been arrested by operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) of the Lagos State Police Command after allegedly carrying out an attack on the Ikoyi, Lagos home of the governorship candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun State, Senator Iyiola Omisore.

    A police source told our correspondent that the suspects stormed the senator’s house at No. 11, Thomson Avenue, Ikoyi at about 2 am on June 18, 2014 and used an iron cutter to cut the electrified wire on top of the fence before they jumped into the compound, raping a housemaid and stealing valuable items.

    Once they had gained entry, they were said to have bound the two security men that guided the house with ropes and told a member of the gang named Musa to watch over the security guards. With one of the iron cutters in their possession, they cut the burglary proof on the door and gained entry into the house.

    They were also said to have pointed a gun at the housemaid and ordered her to undress. The hapless housemaid was said to have been reluctant in carrying out the invaders’ instruction, following which they became angry and beat her mercilessly, tearing her clothe and stripping her naked before assaulting her sexually.

    The poor housemaid was said to have been left unconscious by the robbers who also ransacked the rooms. The Senator, who is based in Abuja and currently campaigning for the governorship seat of Osun State, was said not to be at home at the time the robbers struck. A member of his domestic staff was said to have made a distress call to the Ikoyi Police Station whose men responded promptly and got to the house before the invaders could escape.

    Noticing the arrival of policemen, the robbers were said to have opened fire to scare them away and facilitate their escape, but the police responded with superior fire power, wounding one of the robbers and arresting him while the three others escaped.

    The police were said to have the suspect with bullet wound for treatment, after which he was transferred to SARS on June 19 for discreet investigation. The Commissioner of police, Mr. Umar Manko, was also said to have instructed the officer in charge of SARS, Mr. Abba Kyari, a Superintendent of Police, to ensure that the fleeing suspects did not escape from the state or the country.

    Kyari and members of his special squad were said to have swung into action immediately, tracking down one of the suspects named Mohammed at Epe, a suburb of Lagos. Mohammed then led them to the hideout of another member of the gang named Ibrahim Abdulahi.

    Upon interrogation, Abdullahi was said to have disclosed that a member of the gang had escaped to Ibafo, an Ogun community not far away from Lagos. He was said to have led some SARS operatives to Ibafo but the suspected member of the gang opened fire on the policemen as they were approaching their hideout. The police again responded with superior fire power and cordoned off the whole area. Unknown to the police team, some other robbers lived in the house and had hid themselves in the ceiling.

    Upon entering the house, the policemen notice some strange noise in the ceiling and opened fire on the ceiling, wounding one of them in the process and arresting another without any bullet wound. The one without injury, Jidoh Sale, was immediately put in handcuffs while the one with injury was rushed to the hospital where he gave up the ghost.

    A search carried out on the uncompleted building was said to have led to the recovery of three big iron cutters, two red hand gloves, assorted charms, a chisel, a machete, a nail remover, two screw drivers, a torch, three different identity cards, voter ID cards, two Man O’ War ID cards belonging to Mohammed Yusuf and Ali Yawarb, a pen knife, a hammer and two locally made pistols.

    Confessing his involvement in the operations of the gang, one of the suspects, Ibrahim Abdullahi, said: “I am 29 years old. I am a foreigner from Amtima village in Chad. I came to Nigeria in 2010 in search of greener pastures. After three months, I secured a security job in a company in Anthony Village (Lagos). After few months, I was sacked and I went to stay with my brother at Ajah, a suburb of Lagos. I later returned to Chad to take a second wife with the little money I had saved from security work.

    “My problem started when I came back from Chad and there was no money for me to eat and feed my wives. I was thinking about how to survive when Mohammed Sale, who is still at large over his involvement in several robbery operations in Ajah and its environs, came to me with thousands of naira on him. I saw the money on him and begged him to help me, even if it was with a small amount as loan.

    “He promised to help me to get out of my financial problems. But he said he would not give me fish but will take me to the high sea to fish and eat as much fish as I wanted. I told him that a hungry would not understand riddles and that he should speak to me in plain language so that I would understand him. He then asked me to follow him.

    “He took me to Senator Omisore’s house, saying that he would put me at the gate. He said that two other people would join us later. He also told me that as soon as the work started, they would tie the two security men in the Senator’s house and that my role was to guard the security men and be the gang’s eyes while they would go inside the house to work.

    “At about 10 pm, we went to Obalende area and hid ourselves in the flower. There the two others came to join us. Around 2 am, we trekked to the Senator’s house at No.11, Thomson Avenue Ikoyi, armed with two guns, cutters and charms, among other items.

    “When we got to the house, we used a cutter to cut the electrified wire on the fence, climbed the wall and jumped inside the compound. Two dogs wanted to harass us but one of us, Mosale, pursued them. That made the two security men to wake up, as they wondered why the dogs were barking. The dogs continued to bark, showing that there were strangers in the compound, but they did not know what to do. It was while they were thinking of what they would do that Musa and Jidoh used guns to order the two security men to lie down and tied them with ropes. We then went inside the house and ransacked all the rooms.

    “We carried clothes, shoes and other things. We only spent 20 minutes. We collected a fine wrist watch and a phone. There were four of us: myself, Mosale, Idris and Mohammed Sale, but I did not join in raping the housemaid. I have two wives and three children. I cannot rape. I only wanted to get money to feed my family.

    “If I had got enough money to do business, I would not have been interested in armed robbery. Look at me, I cannot rape. If the housemaid recovers and we go for identification parade, you will see that I am telling you the truth. Not every armed robber is a beast. I don’t take hard drug. I am conscious and mentally alert every day. I don’t drink or smoke too much because it is very risky to lose control of your senses during a robbery operation. So, count me out from those who raped the housemaid.

    “Idris and Mohammed are still at large. One of our members died when we exchanged fire with SARS operatives at Ibafo.”

    Asked why Chadians enter Nigeria in droves, he said: “Our people come to Nigeria to do one job or the other. Nigeria is our best hope of greener pastures abroad. Some come with their cattle while some come to do security work in private homes and companies.

    “About 50 Chadians come to Nigeria every day to do one thing or the other, but half of us engage in armed robbery because Nigerians have many rich people and they keep big money in their cars and in their houses.

    “Whatever work we do in Nigeria gives us money with which we do reasonable things like building houses, farming and educating our children. There is a lot of money in Nigeria. Those who engage in armed robbery do so to get quick money and go back to Chad. Some do it because it is faster, but they do not kill their victims unless there is exchange of fire, because they do not carry gun for fun. They carry guns so that they can escape if they are challenged.

    “The primary aim of carrying gun is not to kill their victims but to protect themselves and to enable them escape from serious danger during and after operation. Nobody likes to kill his fellow human being just like that.

    “If I am released, I will relocate to Chad and do farming and other jobs to feed my family. I will not rob again. It was financial problems that made me to join them to rob. We are all from Chad.”

    The second suspect said: “My name is Mohammed Musa. I am 26 years old from Amdam village in Chad Republic.

    “When I came to Niegeria some years back, I secured a security job at Living Word Church, Ajah on a monthly salary of N15,000. I was on temporary appointment with the church. When I finished the job, I went to live with Ibrahim at Ajah..

    I was facing hard times in Ajah because I had no work. I had no money while Ibrahim was going out to rob and come back with a lot of money and handsets. I became jealous and begged him to allow me to follow him to his money spinning work.

    “I was still owing the Igbo man who helped me to cross to Nigeria and get security work in the church. When I was working in the church, he used to help me to get manual jobs that fetched me N1,500 every day, out of which he got a commission of N500. When I left the church, he did not know that I had relocated to Ajah, so he was still calculating the money I was supposed to be giving him every day.

    “Later, Ibrahim permitted me to follow him to do armed robbery and I celebrated it. Our gang leader is Mohammed Saleh, who is still at large.”

    Asked how he managed to get somebody to help him to cross from Chad to Nigeria without the necessary papers, he said: “If you have the papers, you can cross. But if you don’t have them, is it not somebody who will help you to cross? Money is involved at every step and I did not have the money.

    “Even when somebody helps you to cross, getting work and accommodation in Nigeria is not easy because you don’t know the country you are going to very well. You can be arrested for wandering.

    “I am not yet married. I had planned to get married after two or three robbery operations but luck was against me. I put my trust charms, not knowing that I would be confronted by SARS operatives. They rendered my charms useless.”

    The third suspect, Jidoh Sale, said: “I am 31 years old. I came with cattle from Chad. My wife is in Chad. I was arrested from one room in Ibafo. I have a room there in an uncompleted building. Area boys used to come there to collect money from every tenant. We do not know the landlord of the house till date.

    “I know that criminals live in the house. But for me to continue to live there, I have to mind my business. It is highly risky to report criminals to the police when you are living in the same place with them.

    “It was Zachariah who came into my room and told me that policemen were everywhere with powerful rifles and that their eyes could scare even a lion, so I decided to run. Unfortunately, I ran into one of the SARS operatives who had a rifle. He ordered me to stop or he would shoot me dead. I fell short of words and fell down in shock.

    “I shouted and pleaded with him not to kill me when he told me that I was playing tricks the way I fell down. He came closer to me and ordered another operative at my back to handcuff me and take me to their vehicle, which they parked near the road.

    “I know Ibrahim Abdullahi. We entered the ceiling together and jumped down together. We took different directions. I would have escaped if I had followed him.”

    Contact for comment, the Media Director, Omisore Campaign Organisation, Mr. Diran Odeyemi confirmed that the robbery took place in June. But he said it had not come to the knowledge of the governorship aspirant that the perpetrators of the act had been arrested.

    “You are the one that is just telling us about their arrest,” he told our correspondent on Thursday.

  • Fayose denies making negative comment on Omisore’s chances

    Fayose denies making negative comment on Omisore’s chances

    The Ekiti State governor- elect, Mr Peter Ayodele Fayose, said he did not  make a damaging comment on the chances of the Osun State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate, Iyiola Omisore, to win the August 9 governorship poll as reported by social media recently.

    According to a statement issued in Ado Ekiti yesterday by Fayose’s Chief Press Secretary, Mr Idowu Adelusi, and made available to the press, Fayose said his “preoccupation for now is for Omisore and the PDP to win the election and I am doing everything possible to see that it becomes a reality.”

    He said the PDP would take over Osun State after the August 9 election .

    He urged the Osun PDP members to remain united and ignore any negative news item, particularly on the social media, with the intention of causing disunity among the PDP leaders.

    Fayose urged all voters in Osun State to secure their permanent voter cards in order to have the opportunity of casting their votes for Omisore in the election.

  • Party, Omisore’s group differ over plan to militarise poll

    Party, Omisore’s group differ over plan to militarise poll

    The Osun State All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Omisore Campaign Organisation differed yesterday over plans to deploy military personnel for  the August 9 governorship election.

    Interim Chairman of APC, Elder Adebiyi Adelowo, at a media briefing yesterday at the party’s secretariat, said the election was supposed to be a civil exercise devoid of soldiers.

    He said at the event, which was also attended by APC State Interim Secretary, Prince Gboyega Famodun and a chieftain, Alhaji Fatai Diekola, that the APC had no evil plan during the election, but want an environment devoid of use of security agents to intimidate the electorate.

    The APC chieftain said it should be made compulsory that the soldiers and police as well as other security agents to wear name tags and hang their identification cards to prevent infiltration of fake security agents during the poll.

    He raised the alarm over alleged plans by the PDP to rig the election with the collaboration of the Presidency and security agencies.

    Adelowo appealed to President Goodluck Jonathan to caution the leaders of the party over their alleged desperation to take over power through fraudulent means.

    According to him, President Jonathan should caution the Ministers of State for Defence, Senator Musiliu Oobanikoro and Police Affairs, Alhaji Jelili Adesiyan, over their alleged desperation to ensure that PDP captures the Southwest.

    He said: “Information at our disposal shows that the PDP has perfected plans to rig the August 9 governorship election. They want to use various machinery, including the security agencies, especially the soldiers and police. Apart from this, the PDP is planning to use the police to pick some of our members, particularly stalwarts before the poll.”

    But  the Director of Publicity for Omisore Campaign Organisation, Prince Diran Odeyemi, described the APC’s allegations as baseless.

    He said the PDP would win the election without rigging and without the influence of any individual or group of people.

    Odeyemi, who said the APC resorted to the allegations having realised that its days are numbered in the state

    He said the allegations would not make the PDP lose focus on its determination to take over government from the APC.

  • Aregbesola to Omisore: your lies won’t give you victory

    Aregbesola to Omisore: your lies won’t give you victory

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate Iyiola Omisore’s lies would not ensure his victory in the August 9 governorship poll.

    Aregbesola, through a statement by the Director, Bureau of Communications and Strategy, Semiu Okanlawon, said Omisore should tell the people his manifesto, instead of  trying to discredit the landmark projects of the Aregbesola administration.

    “We acknowledge his capacity for lies, fraudulent claims, innuendoes and fallacies. We, however, note that this is only the last resort of a candidate who knows the degree of the rejection he has suffered from the good people of Osun.

    “Omisore must take the people for being daft to believe they will embrace his lies. In recent times, he has woven a litany of lies around the projects of the Aregbesola administration such as Opon Imo, road contracts, school reforms, financial engineering, youth empowerment schemes, environmental development projects and others.

    “But what Omisore appears to forget is that the people are at the centre of these programmes, therefore they are the direct beneficiaries. Any attempt to discredit them will fail,” the statement further said.

    It asked the PDP candidate how he intended to explain his almost one year of dubious claims of heavy indebtedness after the Debt Management Office came from the Presidency and faulted his claims.

    “In other countries that revelation and confirmation are enough reasons for Omisore to back out of the contest, having been found not to be credible in his  claims on the so-called Osun debt.

    “But his shamelessness knows no limit. He has moved from one lie to another as if lies are all it takes to win an election,” the statement said.

    The statement reminded the people that all the PDP candidate had done since he began his campaigns was to muddle up facts and figures.

    “He has sought to set workers against the government. The workers, who have witnessed changes in the conditions of service since the Aregbesola administration came on board, would take the best decision by re-electing Aregbesola.”

    Advising Omisore to tell the people what ideas he had to improve their condition, the statement said it is not enough to tell lies at rallies and rely on the proposed militarisation of the state to capture power.

    “This arrogant reliance on the power of the Federal Government-controlled forces to subjugate a people in order to rob them of their rights to choose their leaders and endless lies will not help Omisore. At best, they will make him enter the hall of infamy in the politics of our land,” the statement concluded.