Tag: ONDO

  • Solar power beneficiaries in Ondo to pay N500 monthly

    Beneficiaries of the stand-alone solar power in Upare and Igbobini communities in the Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State are to pay N200 to N500 monthly billing per household.

    The decision was reached at stakeholders’ meetings held in each of the communities with officials of the Office of Public Utilities (OPU) and the power service provider, RR Reynolds.

    Acting Secretary of OPU Mrs Abike Bayo-Ilawole told reporters after the meetings that it was agreed that, starting from August, each beneficiary household would pay between N200 and N500 per month, depending on the capacity of the installation in the home. She said the communities had been using the solar power free of charge, for months as a palliative measure from the state government.

    Bayo-Ilawole recalled that for years, the communities did not get power supply from the national grid before the solar power intervention.

    She disclosed that a five-man Cluster Off-take Unit (COU) committee was constituted in both communities to liaise with the residents over complaints on installations and payment of bills.

    The acting Secretary added that they would meet with the service provider to fix all technical problems complained of by the users.

    Meanwhile, some of the beneficiaries of the solar power at Ebute Upare have complained that rodents have eaten up some cables, preventing them from getting light.

    A handful of them also narrated how the power got exhausted, particularly when it rained for longer period of the day.

    The traditional ruler of Ebute Upare, Oba Segun Akinyomi, who was represented by High Chief Ikuejamoye John, appreciated the state governor, Rotimi Akeredolu for the power intervention in his community.

    Oba Akinyomi, who confirmed that the community had not enjoyed electricity supply for years, urged Reynolds to improve on the solar facilities for all residenst to assess.

    Speaking in the same vein, Oba Oyedele Raphael, the Olu of Igbobini, alleged that the electricity distribution company covering their area had demanded over N200 million from the community and others to reconnect them to national grid.

    Oba Oyedele said he had to shut down his frozen water business when there was no electricity supply to run it.

    He explained that a lot of business ventures had to close down in the communities because it was not viable to run them on power generating sets.

    The monarch praised the state governor for the palliative measures which he said had prevented them from living in darkness.

    He appealed to the service provider to upgrade the capacity of the standalone solar power to allow the people use different electrical appliances for both business and social activities.

    Oba Oyedele, who said that about 10 per cent of the 1550 houses in the community were beneficiaries the solar power, called for supply of more installations.

    He assured that the communities would ensure that the facilities were protected from vandals.

  • ‘Ondo Assembly worst in infrastructural facilities’

    It has been revealed that the Ondo State House of Assembly Complex is the worst in terms of infrastructure in the country.

    The lawmakers lamented that the administration of Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu and the previous administrations had failed to release money for the renovation of the complex.

    Through the Chairman House Committee on Information, Gbenga Omole, the legislators said a snake was found inside the hallowed chamber last Wednesday while the termites-invested ceiling of the chamber caved in, preventing the plenary session from being held.

    This development forced the Assembly to adjourn sitting indefinitely.

    The lawmakers had earlier claimed to have no financial capacity to carry out project on the Assembly complex.

    Read AlsoNo snake dropped on me during plenary, says Ondo Speaker

    They advocated for total autonomy of the legislative arm of government for proper functioning.

    The parliamentarians also blamed Akeredolu’s media team for allegedly doctoring the videotape of the event that happened when the governor inspected the Assembly complex after the snake appearance.

    In a communiqué issued at the parliamentary meeting held at the Speaker’s official  Lodge, Alagbaka, Akure, the Ondo legislators reiterated that the Assembly complex was in a state of dilapidation and needed urged renovation.

    The  meeting was presided over by the Speaker of the Assembly, Bamidele Oloyeloogun and the communique was read by the lawmaker , representing Ese Odo State Constituency, Success Torukerijo.

    However, Commissioner for Information Mr. Donald Ojogo said he could not react on the issue.

  • Python in the parliament

    A serpent will ordinarily evoke anxiety. Fear is added if that nocturnal creature were found slithering up from the depth of a communal well. To the superstitious in these parts, such spectacle can only be indicative that the surrounding community had either come under a plague or arrived at its threshold.

    So, when reports came last week that the “hallowed chamber” of Ondo State House of Assembly had suddenly come under the occupation of a python just before the commencement of a plenary, public responce was understandably hysteria.

    A photograph of the invader purportedly taken live and splashed in the chilling account on the social media, is the stuff only found in a magic-realist fable, with a section of the giant snake shown suspended from the broken ceiling.

    Not even CNN, the global media giant, could resist the temptation to report the phantasmagorical development on its online platform.

    After reading such report, anyone could, therefore, be pardoned if they succumbed to sheer imagination by visualizing a sprawling gallery strewn with discarded gavel, forgotten shoes and scattered sheets after the about two dozens frightened lawmakers had managed to scramble through the emergency exits to safety on that dark day.

    Of course, it would be pointless to ask if, faced with possible death from snake-bite, anyone had even remembered to whisk the much prized mace along this time.

    More, let it be noted that, with the assembly forced to adjoin indefinitely in such distress and utter disorientation just days after a top state functionary admitted that some Fulani herdsmen were officially engaged at some point as bush navigators, we were inadvertently denied perhaps a golden chance to ascertain if overwhelming public opinion across Ondo’s eighteen councils would not be enough to persuade the college of twenty-six lawmakers to pass a motion on that fateful day compelling Governor Rotimi Akeredolu (a.k.a. Aketi) to, as a matter of urgent public emergency, explain whether cells of Miyetti vigilante sighted on some highways of the Sunshine state, brandishing dane guns and blunt daggers, were now to be taken as the pilot scheme of the state police of which advocacy he would appear to have become so implacably fastidious lately.

    But 48 hours later, we would hear a starkly different story from Aketi, whose other observable passion is Indian hemp farming, in what sounded like a calculated attempt to disown his own share of the blame.

    During a “fact-finding” visit to the assembly complex, it was a self-righteous Akeredolu we saw seeking to weave a conspiracy theory by arguing that 1) the snake story was entirely fabricated; 2) the cited dilapidation should be blamed on the leadership of the legislature for poor housekeeping, and 3) his tenancy in power for less than three years should not be held accountable for the cumulative pillage the termites had inflicted on the chamber’s roof for donkey years.

    Without any attempt at concealment, Aketi’s tone reeked of a strange magisterial finality of the prosecutor-juror; far from the open-mindedness expected of a fact-finder, let alone the objective detachment of a senior lawyer under the circumstance.

    But, at best, whatever view the governor expressed could only be entertained as an opinion; it cannot be entered as the truth.

    By taking liberty to also insinuate blackmail, Aketi only left one with the impression that someone wanted to stampede him into awarding a sweetheart contract.

    Curiously, before the phalanx of Government House television cameras that day, Speaker Bamidele Oloyelogun, who had adopted the language of anger, desperation and destitution on the day of the incident, began to em, em, em modify his words to a worship of Aketi within earshot.

    Obviously intimidated by the governor’s presence, Mr. Speaker quickly conscripted the media as the fall guy. As if a short gun was put to his temple, he was now accusing the media of “blowing things up”. To be sure, the Chairman of the house committee on information was quite unambiguous in his recall of what transpired: “When we were about to enter into plenary, a big snake just ran out of the chamber which disrupted our sitting and we had to hurriedly leave the chamber.”

    Taken together, maybe the issue is whether the species sighted was actually as gargantuan as that depicted in the social media; but certainly not that the story was entirely made up.

    Indeed, in the age of social media with little or no fidelity to truth, there is no doubt that lies are made to appear more seductive these days while the few facts often get mangled beyond recognition. While it should be admitted that a controversy of this nature invariably underscores the absence of rigour of true journalism thus far, at least one indubitable fact can be distilled from the muddle — the space presently designated as “hallowed chamber” in Akure is clearly now a monument to dilapidation and shame. Thank God, no attempt was made to paper over the holes in the ceiling, or deny the ravages of the termites over the years.

    In seeking to push the patently escapist argument of “media mischief” on this matter, both Aketi and the Speaker could, therefore, not be said to be familiar with the cautionary wit of immortal Khalil Gibran that an exaggeration is only a truth that had lost its temper. For, regardless of the fierce official arguments to the contrary, the truth surely lies between Aketi’s self-righteousness and the Speaker’s half somersault on the one hand, and the media reports on the other.

    It is quite disturbing that none among today’s political “prodigal children” in Ondo appears to feel ashamed that an edifice their ancestors labored hard to build over forty years ago and officially designated on February 3, 1979 as the “hallowed chamber” of the old Ondo State (from which Ekiti was excised in 1996) for the sole purpose of fashioning laws to foster the happiness and prosperity of the people has been allowed to wither.

    Again, while in hot pursuit of a scape-goat, it did not seem to occur to the governor and the speaker that that very squalid chamber accounts for a critical section of the public space for which not less than a whopping N2 trillion has been appropriated in the last twenty years of uninterrrupted democracy, to maintain either under capital or recurrent subheading. In 2019, for instance, Ondo’s budget is N190b, while that of 2018 was N180b.

    Like his three predecessors, Aketi would not allow any chance slip without trumpeting his own idea of “total transformation” of the state from the “decay inherited”. But if an institution as critical as the assembly chamber — the very sanctuary of lawmakers themselves — could suffer such neglect, one can then imagine the plight of the lesser sectors.

    Another point: this incident surely reinforces the old argument for fiscal autonomy for both the legislature and the judiciary. Apart from Lagos, legislative and judiciary arms in most of the states are still at the mercy of the executive arm for funding. It explains the buck-passing we saw between Aketi and the speaker. The former was quick to defend that the chamber could have been better maintained from the funds released to the legislative arm. While the speaker, in turn, contended that adequate allowance was made consistently for a complete overhaul of the property in previous budgets, but the fund was never released.

    Truth be told, the speaker is correct. It is only in Lagos that the speaker or chief judge would not have to constantly go cap in hand to the governor’s to literally beg for the release of budgetary provisions or funds to meet the challenges of their respective offices. That leaves room for a governor harboring some grudge against the other institutions of democracy to literally sit tight on the funds, teeth-clenched to boot.

    Come to think of it, Ondo ordinarily prides itself on the mantra of “Sunshine State”. On the website of its Budget Ministry, the following lofty words are proclaimed as the corporate vision: “To make Ondo State the best administered state in Nigeria and the cynosure of all eyes of which all its citizens shall be proud; where equity, justice and fairness shall be the driving forces of government action.”

    But for the truly proud citizens of the province noted for perhaps the tallest cocoa pyramid in the South-west, utter shame is what is ultimately spelt by even the mere suggestion of a snake ever peeping from the assembly’s dingy rafter, much less the certainty of a drooping ceiling, and the probability that the presiding speaker missed death providentially by not being on seat when finally a section of the roof collapsed right on his desk under the weight of treacherous termites.

    That should be the takeaway from the drama at the Ondo assembly last week.

  • Akeredolu to Senate: Shun faceless group against Alasoadura’s nomination

    Ondo State Governor, Oluwarotimi Odunayo Akeredolu has reinforced his support for the nomination of Senator Tayo Alasoadura as a member of the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

    The charge became imperative following the purported position taken by a faceless group, APC Solidarity Stakeholders, against the nomination of the Akure born senator of the Eighth National Assembly.

    A statement by his Chief Press Secretary(CPS) Segun Ajiboye emphasised that the so-called group is not just faceless, but a divisive aberration unknown to all legitimate organs of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    It said” To say the least, the group merely exits in the hallucinating minds of a few individuals who have surrendered themselves to ignoble self-abnegation.

    Read Also: Ondo Assembly lauds Buhari over Alasoadura’s ministerial appointment

    “Mr. Governor considers the call for the withdrawal of Alasoadura’s nomination as a contrived distraction which stands logic in the head. For the records, Alasoadura, who served meritoriously as a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is one of the few enviable brains behind the Petroleum Industry and Governance Bill (PIGB) which currently awaits Presidential Assent.

    “As a Chartered Accountant of over 30 years experience who doubled as chairman of the Finance Commissioners’ Forum for six years while he served as Finance Commissioner in Ondo State, Mr. Governor believes strongly that not only APC, but the entire citizenry in the State will derive maximum benefit from his stay at the Federal Executive Council.

    “There could not have been a better ministerial nominee from the APC in Ondo State than Alasoadura at the moment”, he said.

  • Woman, four grandchildren die in Ondo inferno

    The riverine Biagbini community in Ese Odo Local Government Area of Ondo State was in pensive mood on Saturday morning following the reported death of a 70-year-old woman, Mrs. Moyo Jide and her four grandchildren in a fire incident.

    Sources gave the names of the deceased grandchildren as Jennifer, 3, Gbana, 7, Biddaddy, 5 and Wisdom, 9. Two of the grandchildren were said to be living with the grandmother since the death of their father (Mrs. Moyo’s son) few years ago.

    At press time, the cause of the inferno, was yet unknown but an eyewitness said the incident might have been caused by the cooking fire in the kitchen of the deceased. It was also learnt that many property in the house were razed down by the fire.

    Read Also: Truck crushes three to death in Ogun

    According to a resident of the community, who spoke in confidence, the fire started around 12.am on Saturday when the deceased were asleep.

    He said the matter was immediately reported at the Arogbo Police Division while the corpses of the deceased had been deposited at a hospital. The Police Public Relations Officer of the state, Femi Joseph, a Superintendent of Police (SP), confirmed the incident and said investigation had begun.

  • Insecurity: Army deploys drone in Ondo, Ekiti forests

    The 32 Artillery Brigade of the Nigerian Army (NA) Owena Barracks, Akure, has deployed the use of technology to fight the scourges of kidnapping and banditry within the Ondo and Ekiti States axis.

    The Brigade Commander, Brig-Gen Zakari Logun Abubakar, disclosed this on saturday during the launching of a high tech drone device in the Osi community in Akure North Local Government Area of Ondo State to combats the criminal activities in the vast forest of the two states which has become a den of kidnappers.

    Abubakar explained that the drone, a Phantom 5DGI, procured by the Army would assist the military formation of the Anti-kidnapping Squad in identifying the movement and activities of suspected bandits, kidnappers and other criminals.

    Read Also: ‘Insecurity can cause revolution if unchecked’

    According to him, the device which would also help the survey targeted areas in the two states is the latest technology in aerial surveillance and can cover up to seven kilometer radius with capabilities of recording and transmitting report back to the base.

    He said “There are thick forests in these states and that is the advantage some of the criminals are using because some of the places you cannot penetrate them easily. So in line with the Chief of army Staff directive to have a responsive Nigeria Army in the discharge of its constitutional role, we decided to use technology in addition to the Anti-kidnapping Squad. We have two of this drone, one for Ondo and the other one for Ekiti State which would easily help us to fight the issue of this kidnapping headlong.”

  • Ondo deputy governor denies lobbying for NDDC’s MD job

    Ondo State Deputy Governor Agboola Ajayi has debunked the rumours that he was scheming for the top position at the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).
    According to a statement by his spokesman, Leke Akeredolu, the sponsors of the report are interested in blackmailing the deputy governor for the purpose of heating up the polity ahead of 2020 governorship election in Ondo State.
    “Agboola Ajayi cannot be sneezing and also be whispering at the same time. He is contented with his current position as the elected deputy governor of the state.
    “We also see the report as an attempt to pitch the deputy governor against his boss, Governor Olurotimi Akeredolu, SAN, and to finally cause disaffection between them.

    Read Also: Protesting Ondo youths paralyse activities at Governor’s Office

    “Let me clearly state that the deputy governor has neither lobby, nor has the intention to become the NDDC Managing Director.
    “It is bewildering and laughable that those behind the news story would allege that Agboola Ajayi has been making secret consultations with his alleged associates without the knowledge of his boss, Arakunrin Akeredolu.
    “We are challenging these busybody politicians to come out with evidences or desist from causing acrimony between the governor and his deputy.
    “We will like to inform the general public that the same set of politicians peddling the rumours about the purported resignation of the deputy governor to contest against his boss in 2020, are the same set of people behind NDDC published news story.”

  • Ondo: Igbo to the rescue!

    In Thailand, Ondo Governor, Arakunrin Rotimi Akeredolu, has given cannabis aka marijuana, locally known as “Igbo”, a big high five — and if the federal authorities buy his reasoning, “Igbo” could well be Ondo’s new job spinner.

    Hear the governor enthused, in his Igbo job advocacy: “We all know that Ondo State is the hot bed of cannabis cultivation in Nigeria.  We know how to grow it and it thrives well in the Sunshine State,” the governor was quoted to have said at an economic diversification function in Thailand, and the possible role of medical cannabis in it all.  ”With an estimated value of $145 billion in 2015, we would be shortchanging ourselves ourselves if we failed to tap into the Legal Marijuana market.”

    O, boy!  But where the hell is the Nigerian Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) chief, whose agency seems to have declared a war-without-end against cannabis; and its abuse among the youth?

    An interesting sight, wouldn’t it be, to see the Arakunrin, a SAN make his marijuana case in front of the fierce NDLEA?

    Well, he was right there, Muhammad Abdallah, NDLEA director-general — and the news didn’t report him at raving mad at the Arakunrin’s Igbo apostasy!  It really must be end times!

    But maybe that was because the new Igbo advocacy had to do with health care?

    “Our focus now,” Akeredolu revealed, stating NDLEA was already in the know, “is medical marijuana cultivation in controlled plantations under the full supervision of the NDLEA. I strongly implore the Federal Government to take this seriously as it is a thriving industry that will create thousands of jobs for our youth and spur economic diversification.”

    Ay!  But how many additional smokers, on the new Igbo factory line spawn?  That would be the query for the religious prudes, who already have made up their minds that nothing good can come out of the house of Igbo!

    Ah, Hardball forgets!  The Arakunrin’s latest advocacy echoes the earlier election-time campaign of Yele Sowore, he of the “Take it back” fame.  During electioneering for the presidential election, Sowore had pushed Igbo — it’s cultivation and export — as his forex spinner, making not a few to look at him with utmost suspicion, if not outright dismissal.  Well, those folks won’t look so sanguine now, after the Arakunrin’s latest gubernatorial advocacy, with the NDLEA boss in tow!

    Igbo to the rescue?  Why not?  All roads lead to the new economic el-dorado, in the Arakurin country!

     

     

  • Oil field inferno: Ondo urges Chevron to protect lives

    Ondo State Government has urged Chevron Nigeria Limited to prioritise the safety of lives and properties of citizens, following a fire outbreak at Oju Imole Oil Field in Ilaje Local Government

    The inferno started last Thursday after an explosion.

    Deputy Governor Agboola Ajayi, while receiving a delegation from Chevron in his office in Akure, the state capital, called on the company to deplore all necessary resources to ensure the fire was put out on time and forestall recurrence of such incidence.

    Ajayi said the company must act fast to ensure that the community is safe again for the residents since they do not have any other home.

    He said the oil deposit in the community should be a source of blessing to residents rather than a source of worry.

    The deputy governor stressed the importance of the oil producing areas to the state’s economy.

    The leader of the Chevron delegation, Mr. Brikinns Esimaje, said the company was doing everything possible to put out the fire as well as addressing both the immediate and remote causes of the inferno.

    Esimaje said the visit would allow them to work with government in the interest of the host community’s safety.

    He said: “The reason for coming here is to really have a face-to-face discussion with government and to update the government on the incidence,” he said.

    Commissioner for Environment Mr. Funso Esan said the report of the inferno at Oju Imole Oil Field was received during Easter holidays and government had been working hard to ensure the safety of residents.

    Esan said the meeting with Chevron would allow the government to iron out issues of safety of residents in the oil exploration area.

     

  • Ekiti, Ondo, Kwara, Benue ready for N30,000 minimum wage

    GOVERNORS Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti), Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (Ondo), Abdulfatah Ahmed Kwara) and Samuel Ortom (Benue) have assured workers of their readiness to pay the N30,000 new minimum wage.

    They spoke yesterday at different fora on the minimum wage, which was signed into law by President Muhammadu Buhari

    Fayemi said the welfare of the workers had always been his concern, stressing that his government would pay  the minimum wage for effective and efficient service delivery.

    The governor, who was represented by his Chief of Staff, Mr. Biodun Omoleye, spoke in Ado-Ekiti at the Nigeria Labour Congress  (NLC) delegates’ conference, where Olatunde Kolapo was elected as the new chairman of the state NLC.

    He said the newly elected leadership of the trade unions would be invited soon for a meeting on the modalities to ensure the payment.

    He announced that facilities at government offices would be upgraded and conducive environment would be provided to ensure the optimal performance of workers.

    At the event, NLC National President Ayuba Wabba, who was represented by an ex-officio, Maureen Onyia-Ekwuazi, stated that the workers would not accept any minimum wage that is less than N30,000 from the governors.

    Read also: Minimum wage ‘ll give workers sense of belonging, says TUC

    Wabba said the new minimum wage has become binding, having been signed into law by the President, stressing that the excuses by some governors that they would not be able to pay was not tenable.

    But, Akeredolu pleaded with the Federal Government to review the present revenue sharing formula to enable states to cope with the new increment.

    He spoke through the Head of Service (HoS) Toyin Akinkuotu during the election of Mr. Sunday Adeleye as the state NLC Chairman.

    The governor said: “We are not against the new minimum wage and if we are not against it, we are in support. Our prayer is that the Federal Government should look into the revenue allocation sharing formula, by giving more money to states and local governments to enable them to implement the new minimum wage”.

    Congratulating the new NLC executives, the governor, who hailed the peaceful conduct of the election,  advised workers to cooperate with the new executives.

    To Ortom, workers deserved more than N30,000 minimum wage if funds were available to pay.

    The governor said consultations would soon begin towards successful implementation of the new wage.

    The governor, however, called on the Federal Government to review the Revenue Allocation Formula in favour of states to facilitate the smooth implementation of the new wage.

    He spoke at the JS Tarka Foundation, Makurdi while opening the Benue State NLC Council delegates’ conference.

    Ortom urged those that would be elected at the conference to brace and provide selfless service to the organised labour, stressing that they should be servant leaders.

    Ahmed said his administration was also committed to paying the new minimum wage.

    Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Media and Communications Dr. Muyideen Akorede said “in this regard, the government set up a committee headed by the Head of Service, Mrs. Modupe Susan, to work out the modalities and sources of revenue for the payment months before the President signed the new minimum wage into law”.

    “The committee is expected to submit its report to Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed next two weeks,” the media aide said.

    Ahmed said the state government did not owe core civil servants any salary arrears.

    But, he stated that the state government is owing junior secondary school teachers and local government workers some months’ salaries.

    The state is claiming that the junior teachers and council workers are in the payroll of Kwara State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB).

    Teachers under the aegis of Kwara State Concerned Teachers have blamed their predicament on Nigerian Union of Teachers’ (NUT) leaders.

    The group said the NUT leaders had mortgaged the welfare and interest of its members.