Tag: ONDO

  • Ondo Speaker accuses Aiyedatiwa of ignoring APC peace moves

    Ondo Speaker accuses Aiyedatiwa of ignoring APC peace moves

    Ondo Speaker Hon Olamide Olajidi has blamed refusal of Deputy Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa to withdraw cases in courts for the failure of the All Progressives Congress(APC) peace moves to materialise.

    Speaker Olajidi said Ayedatiwa, was not ready for genuine reconciliation.

    Olajidi stated that the APC reconciliation committee headed by Aminu Masari, in its bid to resolve the crisis asked Aiyedatiwa to withdraw the court cases

    Speaking in Akure at the weekend, Oladiji said: ”We met the National Chairman, and he specifically asked me how do we commence reconciliation. I told him that the reconciliation process has to start from the Deputy Governor. He is the one that took us to court, we cannot be reconciling ourselves when we have cases in court.

    “Let him go to the court, withdraw all these cases, then we would know that we are now in for genuine reconciliation.
    But the deputy governor has not done. He has appealed some of the rulings of the lower court.

    “As far as the House of Assembly is concerned, we are not doing anything. The cases are in the court and we would follow due process. We are following up the cases in the court.”

    Read Also: Motion on injunction: Court fines Aiyedatiwa

    On the division among the lawmaker, the Speaker said: “At times, when there is a political tussle like this, there can be insinuations, rumours, but in the House of Assembly, we are together. We told ourselves that it is an institution, and the institution must be protected. So, we are together”.

    Aiyedatiwa had said he remained committed to the ongoing reconciliation efforts of the National leadership of the APC.

    According to him: ” I affirm my commitment to the ongoing reconciliation efforts of the National leadership of our party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) on the political situation in our State which are already yielding the much needed tranquility in the State.”

  • Robbers killing motorcyclists at night, says Ondo Amotekun

    Robbers killing motorcyclists at night, says Ondo Amotekun

    Over 20 commercial motorcyclists popularly called Okada riders have been killed across Ondo State in the last three weeks by armed robbers.

    The motorcyclists were killed at locations, but the majority of the killings took place in Akure.

    Commander of Ondo Amotekun Corps, Akogun Adeleye Adetunji, who made this known in Akure at the launch of Ember Border Patrol activities, said the killings took place at night.

    He said the ban on commercial motorcycle operations from 6pm to 6am remained in place to avoid further killings of motorcyclists.

    Adetunji said the robbers also stole motorcycles from the slain owners, adding that it was risky to ride motorcycles at night.

    Read Also: Robbers kill 20 motorcyclists in Ondo

    The Amotekun commander said the Ember Border Patrol activities were aimed at reducing criminal activities during the Yuletide.

    He said the patrol would be conducted in synergy with other security agencies, noting that security personnel would be stationed at access points to ensure security of lives and property.

    Adetunji said: “We appeal to commercial motorcyclists to go and rest if they work for 12 hours so that we can identify the criminal entities.

    “It is also no longer permitted for vehicles to ply the road without registration numbers, and all vehicles with tinted glass should obtain police permit for them.

    “Dealers should use dealer numbers ND not stickers because all vehicles with stickers only will be impounded. These are some measures we put in place to guarantee safety of lives and property.”

  • Robbers kill 20 motorcyclists in Ondo

    Robbers kill 20 motorcyclists in Ondo

    No fewer than twenty motorcycle riders popularly known as Okada have been killed across Ondo state in the last three weeks by armed robbers.

    The motorcyclists were killed at various locations but the majority of the killings took place in Akure, the state.

    The Commander of Ondo Amotekun Corps, Akogun Adeleye Adetunji, who disclosed this in Akure at the flag off of Ember Border Patrol activities, said the killings took place at night.

    Akogun Adetunji said the ban on commercial motorcycles from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. remained in place to avoid further killings of motorcyclists.

    Read Also: Police arrest seven suspects for snatching laptops, handbags in Enugu

    He stated that the robbers also stole motorcycles from the slain owners saying it was risky to ride motorcycles at night in the state.

    The Amotekun commander said the Ember Border Patrol activities were aimed at reducing all acts of crimes and criminal activities to the barest minimum during the yuletide season.

    He said the Ember Border Patrol would be conducted in synergy with other security agencies and that security personnel would be stationed at all access points in the state to ensure the security of lives and property.

    Adetunji said: “We want to appeal to commercial motorcyclists to go and rest if they work for 12 hours so that we can identify the criminal entities.

    “It is also no longer permitted for vehicles to ply the road without registration numbers, and all vehicles with tinted glass should obtain a police permit for them.

    “Dealers should use dealer numbers ND not stickers because all vehicles with stickers only will be impounded. These are some measures we put in place to guarantee the safety of lives and properties in Ondo state.

    “We are determined to make this act of theirs impossible and we are sending this message to them and anybody planning to foment trouble during this yuletide, that it is not business as usual again.

    “Our men will be deployed in all blackspots that have been observed in Ondo state, especially Akure. Our patrol vehicles will be on a 24-hour basis throughout this period.

    “In collaboration with other security agencies, we are determined to reduce to the barest minimum all acts of criminal activities ranging from kidnapping, shop or housebreaking.

    “You will recall that last year, we were able to rescue over 100 kidnapped or robbed people, but for this year’s patrol, we are ready to do more and we thank the people and ask for more support this year.”

  • Crisis in Ondo community over illegal imposition of monarch

    Crisis in Ondo community over illegal imposition of monarch

    Residents of Ojo town in Akoko North West Local Government of Ondo State  have raised the alarm over move by those they termed ‘settlers’ to become king in the town by contesting the stool of Olojo of Ojo-Ajowa Akoko with the indigenes.

    The residents, who protested in Akure, the state capital, said the ‘settlers’ were allowed to settle in  locations round Aremu community, the seat of power of Ojo town.

    Speaking on behalf of the protesters, Baba Eto of Uro, Ojo -Ajowa, Chief Jacob Adegoke, accused the settlers of peddling lies to justify their claims for joint ownership of Ojo royal stool.

    He alleged that the file containing authentic historical records of Ojo chieftaincy had been removed from the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs.

    He said a chieftaincy declaration made in 1957 approved Awarinajo, Awarin Oji and Awarin Olofa as the recognised three ruling houses in the community.

    Adegoke said a daughter of the late Oba Timothy Adewale was picked as the regent of the town in line with traditional practices, but that the settlers moved to present a male as regent of the town.

    Read Also: Supreme Court verdict: First Lady hails ruling as the ‘Lord’s doing’

    According to him, “why should people and the Ministry of Local Government rely on sentiments when facts and evidence are available? We are relying on facts and evidence and not sentiments. It has been in practice that a daughter of the late Oba is always a regent, but the opposition said they would not recognise her.

    “When the last Olojo of Ojo departed to the great beyond, the three ruling houses met and selected his daughter as regent in line with our age long custom and tradition.

    “The asylum seekers on our land are presenting a male regent outside the ruling houses and a certain people in the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs are supporting this illegal move against our custom and tradition”.

    Chief Adegoke appealed to the state government to follow previous declaration in picking a new Oba for the community.

  • Ondo Assembly workers begin indefinite strike

    Ondo Assembly workers begin indefinite strike

    Members of the Parliamentary Staff Association of Nigeria (PASAN) in Ondo Assembly have begun an indefinite strike action
    over non-implementation of Legislative Financial Autonomy.

    The Ondo Assembly workers said the strike action was after expiration of the 21-day ultimatum to the State Government.

    Entrance of the Ondo Assembly was placed under lock as the protesting PASAN members staged a peaceful walk to press their demands.

    Chairman of PASAN in Ondo State, Mrs Omolola Olufemi, said the strike action followed failure of government to address their demands for financial autonomy and improved welfare package for legislative staff.

    Read Also: Ondo Assembly pushes ahead with Aiyedatiwa’s impeachment 

    According to her: “You could recall that the bedrock of parliamentary autonomy hinges on financial independence. Autonomy in this context is simply defined as non-dependence and non-subordination of parliaments in relation to the executive.

    “The Parliaments should have equitable access to resources”. As such, parliaments by constitutional arrangements are supposed to have enough financial muscle to carry out their legislative mandate, including exercising power over the budget.”

  • Insecurity: Philanthropist donates police post to Ondo communities

    Insecurity: Philanthropist donates police post to Ondo communities

    An Ondo state philanthropist and founder of Dorian Homes, Dr. Tolulola Bayode, has donated a state-of-the-art police post to the Ondo state police command.

    Bayode built the police post to provide security for the people of Omodara, Itaoolorun, and Olajide, along Akure- Idanre road.

    Speaking at the commissioning of the project, Ondo State Commissioner of Police, Abiodun Asabi, said Dr Bayode has done a lot for the growth of humanity.

    Asabi, who thanked the Dorian homes boss for using her wealth to bring succour to the downtrodden and the needy in society, assured that the police post would help provide security for communities along Akure-Idanre road.

    He said: “I thank God for the life of Dr. Tolulola Bayode because she loves to give to humanity. She is a woman who has come to support the community with a police post.

    Read Also: Treat gunshots, accident victims without police report, IGP tells doctors

    “We will not relent in our efforts to provide security for the people of Ondo state and will support the police post with capable policemen.”

    Tolulope said she built the police post to support the efforts of the police to ensure security in the area.

    She appealed to the people to support policemen posted to the area to man the post.

    She said: “All of us are aware that issues of security cannot be left in the hands of the police alone, but require the contribution of all stakeholders. This is what informed my decision to assist in putting in place this Police Post for the benefit of Dorian Home and the Communities around it.

    “This is especially because it is with our joint effort and the cooperation of other stakeholders that the task of giving the children at Dorian Home a good life can be made successful.”

  • Bureaucratic reforms and potentials forenhanced investment promotion in Ondo

    Bureaucratic reforms and potentials forenhanced investment promotion in Ondo

    Ondo state is situated at the juncture of three critical natural resources—agricultural produce, oil and natural gas, and solid mineral deposits, from gold and marble to granite and lignite. In crop production, Ondo is the number one producer of cocoa. And it is the fifth largest producer of crude oil. It possesses one of the largest deposits of natural gas all over the world, and the second largest bitumen deposits too. And overall, Ondo State has the sixth largest economy in Nigeria. These are all great and inspiring facts that undergird the possibilities that the promotion of investments in the state can unleash.

    However, and as the organizers of this lecture must have realized, nothing good comes easy. And not least in Nigeria where the economic progress of any state is tied in with the sociopolitical and socioeconomic fortune of the Nigerian economic performance. And so, opening up the opportunities and finding the strategies that enhance and promote investments in Ondo State require not only that all minds but hands must be on deck. It also demands some tasking institutional and governance reforms that must backstop such promotion.

    There are two correlated reasons for this. The first is that investments lie at the fundamental base as a key source of capital that all states need to finance their economic and productive activities, achieve technology transfer, enhance human resource capacities and other skills and competences development, and jumpstart internally generated revenue. All this, including the imperative of income poverty reduction, are all implicated in a state’s determination to achieve socioeconomic growth and development for her citizens. And the significance of drawing in capital investment that enables infrastructural development is what drives governors and presidents to put in strenuous efforts in wooing investors into the critical sectors of their economies. However, and this is the second reason for the need for urgent institutional and governance reforms, investors are too shrewd to be drawn in by mere political and economic rhetoric. As rational calculators, the demand of the rational choice theory implies that they must make the most calculated and self-interested decisions that will bring in the maximum benefits for them.

    And this means that in investing their capital, they will critically investigate the political, social and economic environments of where they are prospecting, and this applies especially to a state’s business environment. We can say that investment does not come by patriotism. Rather, it comes through doing due diligence to ensure that my investment does not go down the drain due to a state’s unproductive business environment. In fact, it has been argued that such an assessment is done around four critical clusters:

    ·               Security and law enforcement;

    ·               Infrastructures and utilities like power, road and the public transportation networks, water and sanitation, and social welfare system;

    ·               Business development supports from the availability of industrial parks and zones to access to finance, and entrepreneurial facilities;

    ·               Optimal and functional regulatory services like property registration, tax administration, contract enforcement, the justice delivery system, and so on.

    Thus, an unstable political clime or volatile security situation will drive off any willing investors. And no amount of wooing will succeed. Given these concerns, we therefore need to reassess how we need to proceed not only in the context of this lecture, but also on the larger matter of enhancing the environment for investment in Ondo State. This allows us to raise and foreground some crucial questions:

    I.             In grounding the core of what is at issue here today, should we be concerned with “creating” a climate for investment or “promoting” the already existing climate of investment? Is there any need, given the timeline of this administration’s tenure, to reinvent the wheel?

    II.            If it is better to talk about promoting an already existing climate of investment (rather than creating a new one), what are the perceived gaps and loopholes in this investment climate, especially based on the perception surveys of past investors, as well as a critical assessment of the business and investment realities on ground in Ondo State? For instance, to what extent can the investors already on ground be said to be satisfied with the business environment sufficiently for them to become the state’s brand promoters?

    III.           Since most critical investors think largely in regional terms when it suits their calculations, to what extent can we say that Ondo State has harnessed her significant economies of scale vis-à-vis other states in the southwest?

    IV.           Is Ondo State involved in any existing or forthcoming collaborative economic and investment arrangements, especially with sister states in the southwest? Or do these states see themselves more as competitors rather than collaborators in opening up the southwest as a corridor of business opportunities whose cumulative benefits rebound to the advantage of all?

    Beyond the ambit of this lecture, these are questions that I presume ought to be cogent within the governance efforts of the Ondo State government to make the state a haven for investors. In the rest of the lecture, I will (a) look critically at how the larger Nigeria’s governance context affects Ondo State’s business environment; (b) the critical role that an institutionally reformed and functional public bureaucracy, like the Ondo State Investment Promotion Agency (OSIPA), can play in facilitating the objective of the state government; and finally (c) engage with other critical reform issues that the Ondo State government needs to factor into its objective of reforming its bureaucracy for an effective promotion of investment drive in the state. 

    The Ease of Doing Business in Nigeria

    Whatever we have to say about promoting investment in Ondo State cannot be divorced from the larger context of what the Nigerian business environment denotes. This is because within Nigeria’s federal arrangement, the federating states are equally drawn into federal framework that could either make or mar any individual investment efforts by the states. And all the states, for example, are drawn into Nigeria’s monocultural economy and its dependence on crude oil, with all the challenges that generate. Unfortunately, however, the demands for fossil fuel have drastically diminished all across the world and the dependence of other states on Nigeria’s crude oil has taken a serious dwindle in the world market. This immediately tells us that there is practically no future in carbon-based non-renewable energy as the mainstay for the national economy of any country with the ambition of amounting to being a significant player in the fourth and fifth industrial revolutions.

    Read Also: Aketi, Lucky, and the future of Ondo state

    The consequences of Nigeria’s dependence on crude oil are many. The least of these consequences, as consecutive Nigerian governments have realized, is the constant adverse shocks that come from global price fluctuations in the oil market. The most worrisome of the consequences is the vulnerability of the Nigerian economy to global economic recession and the foreign exchange depletion, high inflation and the other critical macroeconomic challenges that Nigeria has had to keep contending with, and which have kept her comatose for sixty-three years. This is made more significant because of the lack of an optimal productive capacities in manufacturing and any substantive industrialization process. The PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) recently reported a downward trend in Nigeria’s foreign direct investment profile as well as inflows in her foreign portfolios. This speaks dismally to a growing vulnerability whose impact on the GDP cannot be underestimated.      

    And in response to this gloomy statistics, successive Nigerian governments have been responding as energetically as they can to the urgent challenge of diversifying the monocultural economic framework to meet the global turn away from fossil fuel. Both the federal and state governments are now actively reconstituting their institutional and economic dynamics in ways that are meant to deliver on creating favorable business environments that will induce ease of doing business in Nigeria. For example, the establishment of the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC) in 2016 came with the objective of removing “bureaucratic constraints to doing business in Nigeria, and make the country a progressively easier place to start and grow a business.”  And as a consequence, Nigeria’s ranking in the Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) Index improved from 146 in 2018 to 131 in 2020. This improvement has been due to the concerted effort to reform the processes involved in the business environment, especially the automation of the company incorporation processes which now enables self-service, as well as the institutional collaboration between the FIRS and the CAC that ensures (i) the introduction of the automatic electronic stamping of incorporation documents and issuance of Tax Identification Number (TIN); (ii) the issuance of a single application form for incorporation; and (iii) the decentralisation of the CAC application completion process.

    Despite the improvement that various administrations have achieved in reducing the challenges involved in attracting foreign investment into the Nigerian economy, the challenges and bottlenecks are still significant, especially when viewed across the states. These include the following:

    –              Lack of clarity on registration procedures for new businesses

    –              High cost of land acquisition and difficulty in obtaining land title

    –              Sanctity of agreements and enforceability of contracts

    –              Inadequacy of intra-state transport infrastructure (road and rail)

    –              Low level of automation of business processes within the civil service

    –              Lack of clarity of investment protectionlaws

    –              Raw materials shortages

    –              Weak public private partnership framework

    In the PEBEC 2023 assessment of the ease of doing business in Nigeria, Gombe maintained her first position in 2021 (7.69) and 2023 (7.15). Ondo State was on the 8th position in 2021 (6.16) and a distant 19th position in 2023 (5.47). this downward trend is certainly enough reason for action for the state government.

    Ondo Development and Investment Promotion Agency and the Challenge of Institutional Reform

    No significant discernment is required to know that achieving an optimal business environment that attracts investment is in direct proportion to the existence of a reformed, effective and efficient public administration system, functional infrastructures and reliable regulatory services. An efficient public service therefore becomes a key and fundamental institutional factor in reinvigorating the Ondo State efforts to boost and promote her business environment. This is because, as is the case all over the world, the effectiveness of the government is assessed through its bureaucracy in terms of (a) the quality of bureaucratic efficiency, (b) quality of service delivery, and (c) the professionalism of the public servants and frontline managers.

    The case can then be made for two related bureaucratic backends, involving MDAs, that service the efforts to sanitize, decentralize and make efficient the business environment. These are the direct and the indirect business environments. The indirect and larger environment involves the macroeconomic climate—industrial, security and infrastructural—which delivers policies that indirectly affect the investment environment. This policy environment concerns MDAs and their regulatory functions in terms of taxes, tariffs, licenses and permits, product standardization and quality assurance, customer satisfaction, environmental protection, financial services, etc. We must also not forget the critical issue of industrial relations and labour productivity that touch on recruitment, wage and incentives, labour-employer relations, etc.   

    In terms of the direct bureaucratic framework, no other institution in Ondo State represents the core of the structures that the government needs to force into the forefront of institutional reform than the Ondo Development and Investment Promotion Agency (ONDIPA) to correct whatever structural anomalies limits the capacity of Ondo State, with all her human and natural resources, to achieve the number one position in the ease of doing business in Nigeria. Established as the institutional arrowhead for the promotion of investment in the state as well as multilateral cooperation, ONDIPA was given the mission to “actively facilitate, promote, manage and support domestic investment, foreign direct investment, foreign portfolio investment and grant investments to help nurture new and foster existing industries for social and economic development of Ondo State.” And this is to be achieved in seven key areas: investor and sector targeting/marketing, policy formulation and advocacy, promotion of tourism, business facilitation, support and aftercare, partnerships and sectoral cooperation, multilateral and donor relations, and management of economic zones. In simple terms, ONDIPA is expected to simplify the administrative procedures involved in investment in the state, improve the regulatory transparency and channel private sector collaborations. However, given the dismal performance in the ease of doing business index, the general question to ask is, to what extent ONDIPA has fared in the achievement of its vision and mission? I will now proceed to break this general question into three clusters of interrogation that pose critical queries to the Ondo State government and ONDIPA.

    The first set of queries goes to the Ondo State government. First, and given the urgency with which the government is pursuing its objective of promoting investment, the question to ask is: what is the level of budgetary funding that ONDIPA enjoys? It would seem logical that if the government wants to improve its investment profile, it would give priority attention to the agency in charge of making it happen. But, does it? In the 2023 sectoral budgetary allocation, ONDIPA receives approximately N1.1b., which is very low compared to allocations to other sectors. Second, we can ask about the scope and depth of the administrative and institutional reforms that the Ondo state government has put in place (in terms of the ease of doing business) and their impact on both the ONDIPA and other correlated MDAs. These reforms will be in terms of (a) streamlining administrative procedures; (b) reduction in the cost of establishing new investments; (c) seamless access to information and guidelines in establishing new businesses; (d) the enabling capacity of the legal and regulatory instruments, financing options, land access/grant of certificates of occupancy (C-of-O); (e) the competences of the personnel in charge of making the business environment friendly and efficient; (f) the availability of post-investment facilitation and advisory supports; and most fundamental (g) the involvement of ONDIPA and other related MDAs in policy conversations, especially at strategic and tactical levels of decision-making on investment possibilities.

    The second clusters of interrogation targets ONDIPA itself and its institutional strategies and operational tactics. 

    o             What is ONDIPA’s professionalism quotient in terms of its competences, result-oriented and innovative capacities to attract investment? For instance, if benchmarked against other high-performing investment promotion agencies across Nigeria and beyond, how innovative would it be in terms of (i) the information facilitation, brand advocacy and projection of Ondo State as the state of choice in investment, and (ii) concrete investment generation? Ondo State’s position in the 2023 PEBEC index is an indication of an answer to this question.

    o             What corporate strategy undergirds its investment mission statement and marketing programs?

    The last set of question is direct. One: what institutional linkages and leveraging has ONDIPA achieved in terms of attracting, expanding and connecting shareholders, especially the private sector, foreign investors and local players in the investment space in Ondo State through profiling and projecting Ondo’s comparative advantages and the government policy successes and breakthroughs? Two: does the private sector possess a visible representation in ONDIPA’s operation?

    Conclusion: Strengthening Ondo State Public Service Performance

    In concluding this lecture, I will briefly outline ten core reform areas that will assist the government in its search for an optimal and functional public service that will backstop the investment drive in the state.

    As I see it, the first order of reform business for the Ondo State government is the urgency of a system-wide capacity building and performance-enhancing re-professionalization and improvement of workplace ethic for all public managers. This will involve productivity audits that eliminate internal processes that hinder efficiency, as well as series of trainings and capacity development programmes which will include financial and economic analysis of investment scenarios; methodologies and tools for project formulation appraisals; analysis of investment environment; analytical tools on investment options e.g. joint venture, rehabilitation projects, cost centres, project finance, financial modelling and evaluation, risk management and risk sharing, and so on.

    As a second order of business, government needs to focus on enhancing the public service’s capacity for policy intelligence on investment as well as stakeholders’ engagement skills. This will enable government officials to deploy multiple perspectives into their investment policy analyses through different techniques and procedures that test different investment scenarios. These officials and public managers will also be able to adopt creative and strategic communication skills in building a friendly business environment for stakeholders, while also designing and adjusting contracts and investment agreements as the environmental indicators will demand. 

    The next set of reform activities are specifically targeted at the transformation of the general business environment and specifically the ease of doing business dynamics. First, government reforms whose objective will be to reengineer the business and investment environment processes, especially through the review and reform of the standard operating procedures and guidelines is imperative. This will not only achieve the objective of dispensing with non-value-adding licencing regulations in order to speed up the cycle time in investment licencing. It will also eliminate hindrances involved in the bureaucratic and legal processes for granting land permits for investment purposes.

    Finally, the Ondo State government must necessarily review the baseline frameworks and modalities regarding her ease of doing business. First, it is imperative to strengthen statistics involving investment and other related matters. This will involve putting in place more systematic and evidence-based models and machineries for collecting data, establishing databases and information systems that enhance better decisions with regard to investments. This automatically place information and statistics at the core of the EoDB reform.

    Second, it is crucial to conduct regular sector analyses that will automatically benefit from the improved data collection and statistical frameworks. This will enable the Ministry for Economic Planning and Budget, as well as ONDIPA, to conduct periodic sector analyses, through a reprofiled monitoring and evaluation (M&E) system, to generate helpful information required by investors, targeted business communities, development partners, research institutions, and the general public. For example, the government can facilitate an EoDB portal, upgraded into a public-private web platform that

    (a)          collates information real-time on starting or operating a business in the state,

    (b)          provides information on business registration process and fees, the process to renew a business permit, tax exemption, and other tax-related information, and

    (c)           provide downloadable form for citizens to submit questions, complaints, and feedback regarding business processes.

    And then, there is the need to review cost centres to significantly reduce investors’ transaction costs. This review will focus on issues such as the cost of registration and other administrative bottlenecks involved in registering businesses, the rationalization of multiple and constraining tax regimes, and the elimination of all forms of illegal payment schedules. The last leg of the reform is concerned with strengthening the government’s post-investment support systems through the provision of technical supports and advisory services that will be periodically reviewed in ways that ensure that existing investors are not only duly satisfied and their re-investment and project expansion assured, they eventually become the state’s brand ambassadors to other potential investors.

    (Being Lecture Delivered by Prof. Tunji Olaopa, retired Federal Permanent Secretary, professor of public administration and Executive Vice-Chairman, Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy – ISGPP – as Guest Speaker at the 2023 Ondo State Public Service Week on the Theme “Bureaucratic Impact on Investment Promotion in Ondo State” held on Thursday, 19th October, 2023 at the International Culture and Event Centre (The DOME), Akure)

    by Prof. Tunji Olaopa Retired Federal Permanent Secretary, Professor of Public Administration & Executive  Vice-Chairman, Ibadan School of Government  and Public Policy – ISGPP, Bodija, Ibadan  tolaopa2003@gmail.com

  • Crisis hits Ondo Assembly over Deputy Gov’s impeachment

    Crisis hits Ondo Assembly over Deputy Gov’s impeachment

    Crisis has hit the Ondo State House of Assembly over move by the lawmakers to continue impeachment process against the Deputy Governor, Lucky Aiyedatiwa, despite the political solution proffered by the national leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Speaker of the Assembly, Oladiji Olamide, had written to the Chief Judge, Justice Olusegun Odusola, to constitute a seven-man panel to investigate allegations of gross misconduct leveled against Aiyedatiwa.

    The Speaker had said the restraining order by a Federal High Court in Abuja had elapsed.

    But 12 lawmakers led by spokesman of the Assembly, Oshati Olatunji, in a letter addressed to Justice Odusola, urged him to disregard the recent letter by Speaker Oladiji.

    The 12 lawmakers, in the letter, said the Speaker’s letter did not emanate from any of the sittings of members of Ondo State House of Assembly.

    They said the order of interim injunction of the Abuja Division of the Federal High Court still subsists, saying it was neither vacated nor set aside.

    The lawmakers said it would be contemptuous for them to act in contravention of the subsisting order of Court.

    The letter stated: “The decision to transmit the purported letter of Ondo State House of Assembly dated 23rd October, 2023, signed by Rt. Hon Oladiji Olamide Adesanmi, was taken without a formal sitting of the House and our knowledge as members of the 10th Assembly.

    “It is our considered view that we should be honourable indeed by standing with our acceptance at the Abuja meeting to suspend the impeachment process and allow for amicable and political solution to the issue for the benefits of governance and peace of Ondo State.

    “In the light of the foregoing, we the undersigned members of Ondo State House of Assembly wish to dissociate ourselves from the letter titled: Request to Constitute a Seven-man Panel to Investigate the Allegation of Gross Misconduct Against the Deputy Governor of Ondo State.”

    Read Also: Witness claims Fayose lavished FG’s N1.2bn on property, others

    Those that signed the letter were Hon. Japheth Oluwatoyin, Hon. Jide Oguntodu, Hon. Tiamiyu Fatai Atere, Hon. Gbegudu Ololade, Hon Allen Oluwatoyin, Hon. Abitogun Stephen, Hon. Tope Komolafe, Hon. (Barr) Afe Felix, Hon. Oladapo Biola and Hon. Fayemi Olawumi.

    Hon. Oshati Olatunji, who confirmed the contents of the letter, said they were not properly consulted.

    He said: “The letter is true. It actually emanated from us. If you look at the content of the letter, it addressed a particular point—the last letter sent to the Chief Judge of Ondo State by the Speaker.

    “The Speaker did not consult well. It has to be a collective responsibility because we have lawyers among us who normally advise us on the implications of some of the things we do when it comes to legal issues.

    “That is why they hammered on the last letter being contentious as long as the vacation on the injunction has not been removed.

    “It is just an inter-house conflict, but unfortunately, people coloured it and gave it so many meanings. But the content of that letter said it all.

    “We are after due process as we promised the people of Ondo State. And since the national body of our party (APC) has intervened, we believe in exploring the reconciliatory move because the two gladiators are our fathers; they are the leaders.”

  • Impeachment: Crisis hits Ondo House of Assembly

    Impeachment: Crisis hits Ondo House of Assembly

    The crisis has hit the Ondo State House of Assembly over the move by the lawmakers to continue the impeachment process against the deputy governor, Lucky Aiyedatiwa, despite the political solution preferred by the national leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The speaker of the Assembly, Oladiji Olamide, had written to the Chief Judge, Justice Olusegun Odusola, to constitute a seven-man panel to investigate allegations of gross misconduct leveled against Aiyedatiwa.

    Olamide said the restraining order by a Federal High Court in Abuja had elapsed.

    However, twelve lawmakers led by the spokesman of the Assembly, Oshati Olatunji, in a letter addressed to Justice Odusola, urged him to disregard the recent letter by speaker Oladiji.

    The twelve lawmakers, in the letter, said the speaker’s letter did not emanate from any of the sittings of members of the Ondo state House of Assembly.

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    They said the order of interim injunction of the Abuja Division of the Federal High Court still subsists, saying it was neither vacated nor set aside.

    The lawmakers said it would be contemptuous for them to act in contravention of the subsisting order of the Court

    The letter read: “The decision to transmit the purported letter of Ondo State House of Assembly dated 23rd October 2023, signed by Rt. Hon Oladiji Olamide Adesanmi was taken without a formal sitting of the House and our knowledge as members of the 10th Assembly.

    “It is our considered view that we should be honourable indeed by standing with our acceptance at the Abuja meeting to suspend the impeachment process and allow for an amicable and political solution to the issue for the benefits of governance and peace of Ondo State.

    “In the light of the foregoing, we the undersigned members of Ondo State House of Assembly, wish to dissociate ourselves from the letter titled: Request to Constitute a Seven-man panel, to investigate the Allegation of Gross Misconduct Against the Deputy Governor of Ondo State.”

    Those that signed the letter were Hon. Japheth Oluwatoyin, Hon. Jide Oguntodu, Hon. Tiamiyu Fatai Atere, Hon. Gbegudu Ololade, Hon Allen Oluwatoyin, Hon. Abitogun Stephen, Hon. Tope Komolafe, Hon. (Barr) Afe Felix, Hon. Oladapo Biola, Hon. Fayemi Olawumi, Hon. Oshati Olatu

    Oshati, who confirmed the contents of the letter, said they were not properly consulted.

    He said: “The letter is true. It actually emanated from us. If you look at the content of the letter, it addressed a particular point—the last letter sent to the Chief Judge of Ondo State by the Speaker.

    “The speaker did not consult well. It has to be a collective responsibility because we have lawyers among us who normally advise us on the implications of some of the things we do when it comes to legal issues. That’s why they hammered on the last letter being contentious as long as the vacation on the injunction has not been removed.”

    “It is just an inter-house conflict, but unfortunately, people coloured it and gave it so many meanings. But the content of that letter said it all.

    “We are after due process, as we promised the people of Ondo State. And since the national body of our party (APC) has intervened, we believe in exploring the reconciliatory move because the two gladiators are our fathers; they are the leaders”.

  • Hawks and Ondo wars

    Hawks and Ondo wars

    The Ondo gubernatorial impeachment wars have hit a dangerous tempo, with the hawks on both sides going for broke.  The APC should stay steady: it should defang these hawks and negotiate a truce.  

    That’s the party’s best bet, if it must not blunder into a self-set ambush, at governorship election time, less than a year away.  A house divided against itself seldom stands.

    The latest salvo came from the Ondo legislature, fearing the fiery impeachment threat to Deputy Governor Lucky Ayedatiwa might be turning cold ash — no thanks (or is it thanks?) to an intervention by the APC National Chairman, Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje.

    In a sudden twist, the Ondo House wrote to the Chief Judge of Ondo State, Justice Olusola Odusola, to go ahead and put in place the impeachment probe panel, claiming the restriction order on it, by a Federal High Court in Abuja, had lapsed.  

    In playing to that new gallery, the House not only touted its huge number of pro-impeachment deputies, it also bragged it was superior to the ruling party, without which platform they couldn’t have been elected, on “constitutional” matters.  Ego!

    But Ayedatiwa’s lawyers, kamikaze-like, responded, warning the pro-impeachment  legislative bastion not to get ahead of itself by misdirecting the CJ, over “conjectures, misconceptions, inconsistencies, undue desperation and misconstruction of the law” — what a torrent!  What a mouthful!  Counter-ego!

    The lawyers, led by Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, SAN, told the CJ to maintain the status quo.

    Another batch of self-named pro-Ayedatiwa Ondo native-lawyers then raised the stakes: Governor Rotimi Akeredolu should not only address a press conference to “declare his health status”, it also goaded the Ondo State Executive Council to trigger Section 189(1) of the 1999 Constitution, with the dangerous insinuation that Aketi was “incapacitated and unable to perform the functions of his office”!

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    But mercifully, if incidentally, as all that drama was unfolding in Akure, Aketi was meeting the South West governors, in his Ibadan home, in his capacity as chair of the South West Governors Forum.

    The optics of that was sweet and sour.  Sweet, because Akeredolu looked much improved and appeared gaining weight.  Perhaps that was his traducers’ “press conference”!

    But sour because, by and by, the governor’s health was becoming fair(?) fare in the fierce impeachment war!  That’s isn’t helping Aketi’s recuperation much.

    This impeachment, either way, is a bad idea that turns everyone into a loser.  Let both parties therefore lick their wounds and tactically withdraw.  

    The governor going after the deputy or vice-versa, is less strategic than earning a fresh four-year mandate less than a year away.  That should be APC’s message to the hawks, who easily can destroy but hardly can build.