Tag: Osun State

  • Facial marks in a dental museum

    Facial marks in a dental museum

    In Ile-Ife, Osun State, a new museum on dental health and history has been established purposely to document and preserve the relics of various age and time used for oral dentistry.  Edozie Udeze who witnessed the commissioning ceremony in Ife writes on the essence of this and why more of such projects and ideas should be encouraged.

    The idea of having a private museum is not common in Nigeria.  It is even more amazing to think of it when the museum owned and run by the Federal and State Governments in Nigeria are being neglected.  In Ife, the cradle of Yoruba heritage, more of such ventures are daily being undertaken by different individuals.  The idea of this sort of situation is to help register the essence of museums in the minds of the public and to ensure that some important aspects of the legacies of the people are not put in jeopardy or left to rot away.

    In Ile-Ife, Osun State, Eyitope Ogunbodede, a Professor of Dentistry at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), has decided to establish a Dental Museum.  Declared open last weekend in Ife, the whole concept was to use historical approach to preserve the relics of dental materials that have been of immense use to the people.

    In other words, the Dema Foundation Dental Museum which took Ogunbodede many years to put together has in its storage, the history of Dentistry in Nigeria.  It has all the requirements used in treating dental and other related oral health problems.  The assemblage of these archival materials, in the reckoning of Ogunbodede, was “to mobilize society and then strengthen its capacity to play an active and significant role in expanding the frontiers of dental and general health.  It is to inform and help the society.”

    A non-governmental and non-profit making venture, the museum boosts of various profound historical materials which have been collected and preserved from around 1926 when Nigeria had its first dental doctor in the person of Dr. Sydney Obafemi Philips.  As the first dental museum in Africa, the rich contents of the collections include the history of modern dentistry in Nigeria from 1903 to the present.  Inside some of the rooms, there are relics of the first dental chairs used in Nigeria but were manufactured in the United States of America in 1907.  The very first chair was used by one certain Dr. Ewart Gladstone Maclean who was a Baptist Missionary.  He was noted to be the first to practice the treatment of tooth problems in the country.

    The objects and relics are so well identified, dated and arranged that once you step into the foyers of the museum, you are struck by the aura of the rooms and the heavy instruments of old used to extract people’s dentition and treat other problems that pertained to the mouth.  “We did this to ensure that nothing is left out,” Ogunbodede explained.  This was why in addition to the halls housing these implements, he wrote a book entitled History of Dentistry in Nigeria.  “This book is meant to complement the educational essence and mission of this museum.  The proceeds will also be used to help fund the museum,” Ogunbodede said.

    “Let me assure you,” the professor asserted before the large gathering of people from all walks of life, “that adequate thoughts have been made on how to preserve and run this centre so that it does not fizzle out.”

    In addition, and indeed in order to really combine tradition and modernity to give the place a complete historic outlook, the museum houses life-sized heads bearing the different tribal marks in Nigeria.  With over 30 of such important relics, the importance of the marks was to show some of the complications inherent in it and how this distorts the human face.  In the process of giving these marks, parts of the dentition of a person may be disorganized.  Often, this leads to bumps, dental diseases and oral and other hygienic disorders.

    In order to make this aspect of the show explicit, the National Troupe of Nigeria, led by its director, Akinsola Adejuwon, was on hand to demonstrate the exigencies of oral problems and the connection with tribal marks.  The play, written by Arnold Udoka and presented to the gathering, was titled Dokita Eji and it centred entirely on some of the myths people usually attach to most oral and dental problems and diseases.  And in simplifying the show on stage, it became clearer that dance-drama can always be a huge and potent means to bring issues of life closer to the people.

    Once you have a tooth-ache or decay, all you have to do is to look for a dental doctor to cater to your problems.  The play was used to disabuse people’s minds towards some certain dental issues and challenges which they often link with witchcraft.  There are different types of facial marks identified in the museum and how they have defaced people’s faces over time.

    The principal types among the Yoruba are Pele, Abaja, Gombo, Baramu, Keke, Ture, Mande and Jamgbadi.  Although it is not only the Yoruba tribe that gives facial marks, the import of the show was to let people know that it is not all facial marks that heal well or quickly.  Therefore, some of the complications come in forms of infections, tetanus, keloids and hypertrophic scars that often lead to death.  But the essence of the museum is to document issues and to enlighten the public on the dangers in it and how it distorts dentition and more.

    Located on Ilesa road, Ile-Ife, Dema Foundation Dental Museum is an imposing one-storey building which has all the trappings of a modern museum.  It was for this reason that the Director-General of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments, Mallam Yusuf Usman described it as a centre put in place to tell the story of events and activities of things in a society.  “And for this, it is proper to encourage more people to follow the example of Professor Ogunbodede in order that we have more of such establishments to document our history.”

    In his own opening remarks, Emeritus Professor of Law, David Ijalaye commended the idea and quickly added that “this is part of the mission of promoting oral, dental and general health with particular focus on the history, education, research and information aspects of this huge project.”  This remark indeed set the ball rolling, for in his own contribution, Professor Jonathan Lawoyin of The Oral Pathology of the University of Ibadan described the book as a work of long years of painstaking research in which the author criss crossed the globe to secure detailed and valuable information.  This is what this erudite scholar has given to the society in addition to this beautiful edifice and the rich contents of the museum.”

    The occasion was witnessed by many scholars from different parts of the nation who indeed saw the need to have more museums in the medical realm.  For Adejuwon, the combination of dance drama and dental issues was to bring the whole concept closer to the people.  And since Ife is a university town, its location has many academic and social values to the people.  In fact, the idea is to encourage more Nigerians who have the means to go into such wonderful venture.

  • Unpaid Salary: Osun Speaker defends Aregbesola’s integrity

    Unpaid Salary: Osun Speaker defends Aregbesola’s integrity

    The Speaker of Osun State House of Assembly, Hon. Najeem Salam, has defended the integrity of the State Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, saying the governor remains a man of strong character, honesty and integrity.

    The Speaker absolved the governor from blame on the financial status of the state, stressing that it was the openness of the governor that exposed the financial predicaments of other states in the country.

    He assured that the 34 billion naira bailout loan obtained by the state from the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, would go a long way to address the challenges facing the state and called on the workers to cooperate with the government to move the state forward.

    The Speaker made the remarks in Abuja Tuesday at the opening ceremony of a workshop organised by the Anti-Corruption Academy for members of states Houses of Assembly from the South-West Zone of the country.

    The Speaker who spoke through his Deputy, Hon. Akintunde Adegboye said transparency and honesty go together and this has remained the watchwords of the present political leadership of Osun state.

    He dismissed insinuations that the problem over unpaid salary in the state had to do with corruption, insisting that there was no iota of truth in the allegation.

    The law-maker said the capacity building workshop for legislators was timely as it would update their skill and fine tuned their knowledge on transparency, probity and accountability in governance.

    The Provost of the Anti-Corruption Academy, Professor Sola Akinrinade said the fight against corruption in the country cannot be undertaken by President Muhammadu Buhari alone and called on all law-makers, civil servants, members of the private sector and ordinary Nigerians to join in the crusade against corruption.

    “The agenda for the next three days is sensitization and capacity building to ensure that legislators are aware of the requirements of the law in relation to probity, accountability, integrity and transparency and the need for them to thses values in the performances of their official duties,” he said.

    Professor Akinrinade added that ” the other part of it is the forewarning of what lies ahead for those who choose to pursue the path of perfidy, that there is the long arm of the law waiting to bring to justice all those who are caught perverting the process and helping themselves to unfair proportion of the national cake, especially the portions that do not belong to them.”

  • Osun  workers  end strike, resume work today

    Osun workers end strike, resume work today

    •Government begins payment of salaries
    •’Protests politically motivated’

    OSUN State workers yesterday ended their six-week strike after signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the government.

    Labour leaders at the end of the meeting at the Governor’s Office in Osogbo  called on civil servants to resume work today.

    The government yesterday began paying backlog of salaries. State workers are to receive January and February while local government workers will be paid March and April.

    Other payments include those of primary school teachers’ balance of November pensions, outstanding pensions for January and February for retired primary school teachers and March pensions for retired local government workers.

    The MoU was signed by the government, Joint Public Service Negotiating Councils (JPSNC), Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC).

    NLC Chairman Jacob Adekomi, who spoke on behalf of other labour leaders, said Organised Labour ended the strike when it considered the state’s parlous financial situation.

    The NLC chairman added that the government and labour agreed to sign an MoU, following efforts put in place to end delays in salaries.

    He said the strike was suspended to  appreciate   government’s commitment to workers’ welfare.

    Adekomi said committees would be set up to screen workers  and pensioners.

    “Committees will be set up to screen, determine the wage bill, the number of workers, the number of pensioners and their wage bill.”

    The NLC chairman called on workers to be more diligent and committed, saying government could only progress when its workers are productive.

    Adekomi assured workers that the government and labour leaders would fashion out the modalities of payment for the remaining four months.

     

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    Organised Labour dissociated itself  from the protests over unpaid salaries.

    The unions condemned the protests and described them  as “politically-motivated”.

    JPSNC Chairman Bayo Adejumo said the protests were sponsored by some fifth columnists, who used the opportunity to tarnish the government’s image.

    He added that none of the known labour unions participated or sponsored any of the protests.

    “We were not part of any protests neither did we sponsor one. As an organised workforce, we are aware of the constraints of government.

    “As at the time we embarked on the industrial action, it was assumed that we had no other choice than to embark on the strike, despite our understanding of the state of funds in the state.

    “All the purported protests were aimed at tarnishing the government’s image.

    “They were sponsored and the workforce did not participate or organise any. All we did was to order our members to embark on an industrial strike and at no time did any of the unions called its members out for a protest rally.”

  • Students score union low on welfare, academic out put

    Students of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State have rated their Students’ Union Government (SUG) low on welfare. They accused their leaders of causing them untold hardship and suffering because of the union’s unrealistic approach to issues.

    The students said the union has not delivered on its promise to improve on their academic performance and welfare. They accused the union of introducing a levy, which stopped  commercial vehicles from taking them to their halls as it was in  the past.

    The union President, Isaac Ibikunle, said the commercial buses stopped going to the halls because they did not accept the fares proposed by the union. But, the students said the union’s greed forced the drivers to take the action.

    Some drivers, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, said the union asked them to pay N2,000 for a sticker after paying N5,000 to the management. They said the union wanted to reduce their fare from N20 to N10, describing the move as unreasonable because of the prevailing economic reality.

    The students’ other complaint was the alleged downward review of results  pasted by departments. They claimed there was mass failure in a course when students’ scores were reviewed downwards after the union wrote to the department over sale of course materials.

    Students said they passed the exam after reading the materials,  but their  union‘s letter. This letter prompted the deduction of 10 marks from their scores, they alleged.

    The union said it was unethical to compel students to buy course material, but the  department did not take it lightly.

    A student, who did not want to be name, said: “When the results were released, I scored 71. But after reviewing, they gave me 31. How can I fail that course if it was 10 marks they deducted from the whole result?

    This  is a compulsory course taken by over 5,000 students.”

     

     

  • Beyond Aregbe’s victory

    Beyond Aregbe’s victory

    For the progressives, it’s time for introspection

    Two weeks before, I had made a case for the reelection of Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State in the (then) forthcoming governorship election in the state billed for August 9. I mentioned some of Aregbesola’s many achievements in less than four years, and in spite of financial limitations. As I said then,  such campaign would have been unnecessary as Aregbesola’s achievements should have spoken for him. But we have entered a dangerous era in our political development where achievements alone no longer speak. That much was learnt from the June 21 governorship election in Ekiti State in which the incumbent Governor Kayode Fayemi of the All Progressives Congress (APC) lost to his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) challenger, Ayo Fayose.

    Mercifully, the Osun election result was different. Although Osun people took ‘political notice’ of the nuisance value in Aregbesola’s challenger, they rewarded performance by retaining Aregbe (APC) as governor with 394, 684 votes against Iyiola Omisore’s (PDP) 292,747. It would have been tragic to have allowed unserious people and impostors to take over another state in a pace-setter region like the south-west. It was not that they did not try; they did, but the people’s eternal vigilance and God made it impossible for them to carry out their satanic desire. This is why I find it so ridiculous to laud President Goodluck Jonathan for deploying troops to Osun as he did in Ekiti. Only that in the former, we saw not only genuine soldiers but also suspected fakes; both hooded and hoodless.

    Moreover, the motive for sending the soldiers was not altruistic. An account had it that at a point, the soldiers were reminded of the ‘patriotic duty’ not to disappoint their C-in-C in Osun. But everyone who should know ought to have realised that Nigeria is one of the very few places where President Goodluck Jonathan could be a political asset. A situation where the president would have thrown his hat into the ring should have been avoided instead of allowing him to do that only to start looking for security agents to ensure his party was rigged in. More importantly, soldiers would have had no business in elections if the ruling party had done what was required in the police force all these years. Why should soldiers take up police duties while duty calls at Sambisa Forest?

    It baffles me that despite what happened in the Western Region in the ‘60s and ‘80s, some people still had the effrontery to want to rig election in the region so barefacedly like the PDP tried even in Osun on August 9. But, as we all know, if history is always to repeat itself, there must be people to make that happen. Renegades there always will be. They were there even in Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s time. With every 12 disciples, there must be a Judas. I mean sons of perdition will always be sons of perdition, no matter what.

    But, it is good we continue to remind such people that they rig election, especially in the south-west, at their own risk. This is not a clarion call to arms. And even if it is, it is nothing to be apologetic about. After all, John Kennedy in 1962, it was who said, “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.” This is forever true, whether in Kennedy’s America or anywhere for that matter. America will not experience violent revolution today simply because politicians there would not attempt to subvert the will of the people blatantly as our politicians do at the polls. Elections are supposed to be sacred and those who desecrate that sacredness are like people who cause rain to fall. Unfortunately, they did not reckon that when the rain starts, the possibility of its being accompanied by thunderstorm is high. Yet, they do not want thunderstorm.

    One of the reasons why Africa is in a shambles today is because people who do not deserve to lead have forced their way into positions of authority in many African countries. And they always want to stay put even when it is clear that they have outlived their usefulness. When undeserving people sit tight in power, it has implications not only for today but also for tomorrow. It is people’s future; people lives and people’s progress that such usurpers arrest for every minute that they stay in power.

    Anyway, having driven away those who wanted to reap where they did not sow in Osun, it is time to tell the progressives some home truths. Posterity would not be kind to them if they give people who have nothing to offer the opportunity to fish for ridiculous excuses why politicians who perform cannot be reelected, thus throwing the people into perpetual lamentation. All over the democratic world, performance is key. We should resist the attempt by non-performers and vagabonds who are lurking around, waiting to exploit minor weaknesses of some of the region’s performing politicians. We have passed that stage in our political evolution where achievements would take the back seat; we should not allow the PDP to reduce the region to its base standards.

    I say this because if truly Omisore scored the 292,747 votes that INEC said he scored in the August 9 election, then, the value system that we used to hold dear in the south west is being gradually eroded. And this is dangerous. In the past, no one in Yorubaland would touch Omisore, not even with a long pole, given his antecedents. His acquittal over the murder of Chief Bola Ige might have had the force of law, but it would have lacked the force of votes in the south west because the people’s court too used to count. Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey, in one of his evergreens it was who sang that ‘ka to fi’yan j’oye larin Egba, o ni lati je’ni rere’ (before anyone is given chieftaincy title by the Egba people, such a person must be worthy of it). Ekiti people say their land is ile iyi; (land of honour); but this is not true of the Ekitis alone, it used to be like that all over Yorubaland.

    Yes, the PDP might have fielded Omisore, not necessarily because of what he has to offer, but, as a source put it, because it wanted people who have an infinite capacity to cause trouble; still, the Yoruba people would have rejected him resoundingly at the polls. I hear the ruling party also sponsored another candidate in the region because, again, as the source said, ‘he get craze for head’! These are, trying times for the south west; indeed trying times for Nigeria!

    But, the point is, if the Yoruba people were ready to insist that their votes count in the 1960s, breaking their rediffusion sets which they saw then as the roguish government’s tool of propaganda in the process; and if they were ready to do same even in 1983, then there must be a reason why they think such struggle is no longer worth it today when robbed of their votes, even in broad daylight. Agreed, as Hans J. Morgenthau argued ‘… all politics is a struggle for power’ but not all struggles for power are struggles for people’s development. If politicians in Nigeria devote only 30 percent of the energy they give seeking power into governance, things would never have been this bad. Indeed, as we saw in the First and Second Republics, and as we must have seen so far after more than 15 years of PDP rule, the struggle for power has largely been a struggle for personal aggrandisement. “If someone spent eight years in power, I should be able to beat that record”. “If someone who entered the Government House in bathroom slippers is able to come out in golden shoes barely a week after, I should be able to do same in two days”. This may seem more of exaggeration, but that is the spirit among many of our public office holders now.

    Without doubt, the PDP would not mind allowing people who want to ride Okada from Lagos to Ibadan on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway kill themselves if that would fetch it votes. It is ready to return Nigeria to the Stone Age, provided that would bring in votes. Such is its desperation. And it is understandable; that is the only way it can get gullible people to still reckon with it in spite of its monumental failure since 1999, especially at the centre. I am not arguing that the south west should fall to such base standards, because the region has always been a pace-setter, but the political leaders in the region have to learn to sell their programmes to the electorate instead of putting up a ‘know-all’ posture or being arrogant or messianic in doing things. And, when like all mortals, they find they are wrong, they should not hesitate to reverse themselves. That is one sure way to keep the predators at bay.

    All said, the progressives family has to call a meeting where they have to tell themselves the bitter truth. As I argued earlier, if the Yoruba people were ready to go the whole hog like they did in 1966 and 1983 when roguish politicians subverted their electoral choice, then something is missing if they cannot take a similar risk today in the face of a rampaging ruling party that has nothing to offer and yet wants to ‘capture’ more states in the country, particularly in the south-west. Like the biblical missing axe, it is that missing link that the progressives must find to make the difference in 2015.

  • Stay away from Osun, Acting IGP warns troubleshooters

    The Acting Inspector General of Police, Suleiman Abba has warned Nigerians who have no business in Osun State to stay away from Saturday’s gubernatorial election in the state.

    He gave the warning while speaking to State House correspondents on Monday after a meeting with Vice President, Namadi Sambo at the Preseidential Villa, Abuja

    According to him, only people who have official functions to perform in the state would be allowed to move freely within Osun during the election.

    To ensure peace and compliance with law and order in the state, he said that he had to change the operational guidelines left behind for the election by his predecessor, Mohammed Abubakar who retired last week.

    He said that the new operational guideline will ensure that his men gets to Osun State on time to commence preparations for the election.

    Abba warned that the law would take its course against those allegedly training thugs to cause trouble in the state during the election.

    He said: “When I took over on Friday, I met an operational order in place, I went through it quickly and made a number of adjustments which include the fact that we need to be there early enough, so I adjusted the time that officers were directed to report.”

    “I made sure that by Saturday, they were there. And the aim is that if any one, is training any body to cause violence, we are telling him that we would make sure the law takes its course,”

    “In fact, my advice is this, if you don’t have any business to do with Osun elections, just don’t go there because the law will catch up with you. This is may advice.” He stated

    On his strategies to combat insurgency and other crimes in the country, he said that his strategies would come into place this week.

    “I must tell you, I would like to categorise all of them whether insurgency or kidnapping, or armed robbery, all of them are violent crimes and the first and foremost thing we are going to do is to make every effort that it does not continue to spread. And these strategies will come into place before the end of the week, I assure you,” he said.

  • ‘Our opponents sustain their campaigns with falsehood’

    ‘Our opponents sustain their campaigns with falsehood’

    Osun State is in the focus of the nation as the people go to the poll next Saturday, August 9, 2014.  The tension in the state is palpable. Last Wednesday, July 29th, gun-wielding men of the Directorate of State Services (DSS) and other security agencies paraded through major streets of the state capital, Osogbo, shooting sporadically into the air. If it was meant to be a show of force, it was largely met with consternation by the residents.  It was against this backdrop that Governor Rauf Aregbesola, the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate in the election sat down with a select group of journalists – among who was Festus Eriye – to discuss issues in this coming weekend’s election. Excerpts:

    The governorship election in Osun State is here. Do you fear a repeat of what happened in Ekiti?
    The real issue is not about you as a candidate but the quality of the electoral process. Once the quality is good and high, whatever the people say because they are the ultimate decider of who represents or govern them. A democratic choice is expected to be correct, good and right but it is not always that the choice is good, correct and right.
    But to answer the question properly, I have prepared so well for the office in a way that going by the normal run, I should not be working as hard as I am working now for re-election. Why we are different from them is that we have always been with the people from day one of our administration.
    How many governors walk the streets with their citizens? I have been doing that since the first month in office. How many governors created interactive forum in Nigeria before me? There is none. I was the first governor that devoted close to ten hours of continuous engagement on a quarterly basis with the citizens. The people ask any question in no- holds-barred atmosphere.
    ‘Ogbeni Till Daybreak’ is a worldwide engagement because we take feedback from social media. The Gbangba dekun is a monthly community interactive forum where the governor sits with all stakeholders in the community to ask or make inquiries on any issue. This is the picture of direct engagements that we are doing with the people that no government in Nigeria has ever attempted to do. We also have a carnival-like procession in ‘Walk to Live’ where we just walk round the communities and it is too engaging and popular because everybody wants to be with the governor. Hardly is there any community in this state that I have not touched personally.
    In terms of physical and social services, this is the first government that will say that there is no household, be it PDP, APC and others, that our programme has not reached. I feed 300,000 pupils every school day at the cost of N3.6 billion a year, I have been doing it since 2012 and I have spent N7.2 billion on that. You can go to the school by yourself and access what the children are eating to be sure whether it worth what we are saying or not. I can tell you that nobody touches the money except those in charge.
    Long before we commenced the feeding arrangement, we empowered poultry farmers to produce poultry products so that the chicken and eggs the children consumes are all sourced from them. We gave close to N600 million to the poultry farmers and also the fish farmers. The only people we buy from now are the cattle rearers.
    We have the second batch of O’Yes cadets, the first batch of 20,000 had gone, the 2nd batch of 20,000 is on and they are from homes. They work two or three days a week and they have the entire days of week left for them to see what they can do with their hands and earn a living because they are taught entrepreneurial training but they earn N10,000 monthly as cadets. On this scheme alone, this administration has spent N9 billion. I tell people what this type of scheme means for national government.
    You have in that scheme a directly injected N9 billion to the economy that has no means of going out because a man earning N10,000, unless you promised to double his investment, he has no business travelling to Ibadan with that N10,000. If it’s not going to yield anything more, he won’t go to Ibadan. Every bit of the money is better spent here. Every O ‘Yes cadet has a smart card and the issue of anyone handling or tampering with their money does not arise.
    We are one of the few governments that develop a meaningful programme for elderly citizen’s care. We are not into a blanket social welfare scheme for the elderly, we have a package that did an extensive survey of citizens that are 65 years and above, we have them in our database. We now identified those among them that are without any support that is the first time any government will so do in Nigeria.
    We identified 1,800 of such people state wide. The selection was purely based on their conditions, no primordial sentiment. We didn’t do the selection anyway, Professor Ogunbameru of OAU administered everything, gave us the list and the addresses. We have been giving them N10, 000 monthly since 2012. Still along that line, before now the only usage of ambulances here is to carry dead bodies, whereas it is not meant only to carry dead bodies but the conception of it is simply as a morgue vehicle.
    We have ambulance points everywhere in the state now working 24 hours. We just launched debit card with cash between N100, 000 to N150, 000 with which they buy their farm inputs by their doorsteps. They will buy on guaranteed credit and will pay back with either their commodity or they sell and pay back.
    I look at my engagement with the people, the products of my government which has not left any home unaffected positively, and I said if election is about acceptance, popularity and impact you have made on the people, we are waiting for what the dictate of democracy would be. In a credible, transparent, free and fair election, Rauf Aregbesola does not have any worry at all about what people will say about his administration.
    What is your reaction to the heavy security presence in the state?
    It is not just voting that is democracy. Everything pertaining to the capacity of the people to vote or not to vote and to freely decide what they want must be of interest to all of us. Whenever that right is abrogated, it is a total assault on democracy. And we cannot call that democracy.
    The fact that they disallow air of freedom greatly affects the quality of the democracy we are talking about. Rejecting the militarisation of the state is not one man’s job. We owe it a duty to let the whole world know what is happening here. This is against the right of the Nigerian people. We’ve all forgotten that we pay the salaries of the security agencies. We don’t pay for them to wear mask in our towns. They should only wear masks when they engage terrorist and if they have to operate in a region where seeing them will might compromise their own safety and security.
    What would they say is the reason for what they are doing now other than threat, shock and awe? So, what this means is that they want to conquer and cow our people, which is a direct assault on democracy. Yes, you ask for what I am doing. I won’t take gun against them but I will not be quiet.
    I believe that your supporting us to highlight this horrendous bent of the Nigerian federal authority to use all means at its disposal to cow how people must be condemn. We should all talk and condemn it because this is not about Aregbesola alone. You people may not have any press office to work with if this continues. Don’t think it will stop there. By the time they finish with the press, they can say you should not even go and buy yam to eat somewhere. Everything will be affected.
    Is your administration in good terms with four critical sectors, namely, teachers, civil servants, okada riders and students who can vote?
    I will answer in this form: most people don’t even know how to assess relationships. They assess it from the complaint they get from dissatisfied section of a critical lot. It cannot be. It is impossible for human to exist without conflict. The Yoruba has an idiomatic way of expressing it, they said teeth and tongue fights but they are always still together. A sociologist in human scientists would not therefore base his assessment of any sector on when there is disagreement. Let us look at what we have done and then situate our relationship within it, though some people for whatever reason does not just like you.
    I was telling someone that what should concern you is not those who are opposed to you especially as it gets to the run-up to the election. When you are still far from it, you may be bothered so that you can make it up. But when no matter what you do, that is their attitude, you just stay put. From the newspapers, there are not less than 20 parties seeking power, democratically. If you have 60 per cent, which does not mean you don’t have opposition. The 40 per cent who doesn’t want to see you and may cut your head if you are careless not only vote against you. If you have 60 per cent, you are home and dry. In a struggle with other stakeholders, six is a good number. What we are doing is to ensure that each of these critical sectors don’t have any basis at all to be opposed to us.
    Let us start with the students: we met a condition when we came in that students were given a bursary of N3, 000 and they won’t even get the bursary on time and it was full of scam. They brought it to me to sign and I said why do I have to sign N3, 000 for anybody? It’s best if we don’t give this bursary or we give it meaningfully. We raised the bursary to N10, 000 flat. For medical and law students N20, 000 while our indigenes in Law school get N100, 000. The school authorities give the money to students in their system.
    I don’t see how such students will hate us in the majority, I can’t see it. Whoever now hates us has something else against us not for the fact that we have not done the needful. The increase wasn’t solicited; we did it out of our own understanding of the reality of what the students are going through.
    There was clamour for reduction of fees; we reduced the fees from a huge amount to something that is comparably affordable. Also, we have been investing in developing the institutions much more than any administration has done in the history of this state. Yes, we are having some challenges with the lecturers but it’s not peculiar to us but you just have to bear it.
    For Okada riders, they have no problem with us. They may want us to do things for them as we have done to some other groups, but it not as if they said compared to others, these are the problems. The roads here are appreciated even by those who used legs. Has any government succeeded in constructing 200 kilometres of road in all nooks and crannies of the state?
    There is no part of this state that we have not constructed a new road and it’s not just any road but roads with concrete drainage, with stone base and kick asphaltic cover and above all when I get to campaign grounds, I say our roads have tribal marks. In all general roads, we have roads to with marks. We now have special roads, when we complete some of them, they will be tourism attraction and centres on their own. The road we are building in Gbogan, people will be coming to look at it, mark my words. That road you see, Gbongan to Akoda, will be a tourism attraction because it is not an ordinary road because it’s a road that took me time to conceive and design and we are taking our time to develop it. So, when people talk about the cost of our roads, I just laugh because it’s not good to be talking to people who don’t know what they are saying. We have different types of roads.
    That road is going to be a reference point in road construction. We are changing the landscape and making the state of Osun a hub of everything that is good. We also want to tell the world that the black man is a human being.
    Before our advent, the civil servants never knew that salary could be paid before the end of the month. For seven and half year, salaries were never paid here before the end of the month. But from when I assumed office, we changed that. Before the year ended when I assumed office, I paid 10 per cent of their basic as 13th month salary and paid December salary before the end of the year, the civil servants were dazed.
    Since that day up until December 2013, I pay salary on or before the 25th of every month. But as from January 2014, we ran into trouble which we explained to everybody six months before then. In July 2013, the Federal Government began a squeeze that they themselves know that nobody believed them. They said 400,000 barrel of crude oil is being stolen every day.
    We didn’t know problem was coming. Instead of collecting N4.6 billion, they gave this government N2.6 billion, 40 per cent slashed. We thought it will be temporary because after that month, they said the stolen crude has reduced to 200,000 barrel per day. When the oil being lost reduced, would you still expect a 40 per cent cut? From that July to now, the maximum allocation this state has ever received is N3.2 billion which was in November 2013.
    I am not making up anything, simply saying the truth. Now ask me how was I able to pay up until December 2013? My people are called osomalo- they are very deft in the management of money and I took this from them. I had been saving through the Omoluabi Conservation Fund in which 10 per cent of all allocation must just go and rest. So, I had money in reserve, which was a build-up for my refusal to form cabinet for 10 months, I had the money. Whereas my income fell to N2.6billion at the lowest and N3.4billion at the highest for a month, my statutory expenditures which are expenditures that I have no control on once we have agreed on it, for instance salary, pension and they are N3.6 billion every month, I have no power over it. I can’t say no, am not paying, Between July and December, I augmented my income with N5.4billion.
    All in the hope that this thing will go, it didn’t go. It has not gone as we speak, it is even worse. Before, when you get your allocation, you will cash it by the 15th of every month that is why they are paying salaries on the 15th of the month before we came in. That used to be the practice. But now, because you want to squeeze the opposition government, they even squeeze themselves. Nobody gets the reduced allocation earlier than the 26th of the following month.
    But before now, I wasn’t waiting for their money; I just pay on or before the 25th. If for whatever reason, because when we wanted to introduce the digital automation, it was difficult to do cross over it will get to the 1st or 2nd of the following month, not that the money is not there, we have arranged, banks just pay, we have money with them. To make up the deficit in what I received and what I must pay, I spent extra N5.4 billion.
    However, I told you earlier that I gave 10 per cent of basic salary for 13th month salary; the second year I gave 25 per cent; the third year I gave 50 per cent; the fourth year, I gave 100 per cent. So, December of 2013, I gave every worker in the employment of Osun 100 per cent of their basic salary as extra income which I paid before the end of the year, ordinarily, why should any worker say I am not friendly with them.
    Before, workers here were given their leave allowances en bloc at the end of the year, I told them this is unreasonable because we don’t go to leave at the same time, so choose when you want your leave allowance to be paid. Is it at your birthday or the anniversary of your employment into the service?
    So, whenever you submit your birthday, your leave allowance will be credited to you. I don’t know if any other government in Nigeria does that. Two, go and visit the secretariat and see what we have made of their work environment. So, if these are things that should motivate workers, I stand tall and proud because I have done my best.
    No matter what anybody tells me, majority of them will appreciate these things. However, since January because I have exhausted my reserve, it is when we get money that we now go to look for money to add to it and pay. That began in January. The difference between me and others is that I don’t hide anything; I tell whosoever cares to listen.
    I am the most loquacious governor in Nigeria. I went to the retreat of lawmakers’ and I said what is happening in Nigeria today is equivalent to the declaration of economic war on the states. If it is just mere shortage and it comes early, of course we will pay, it doesn’t come early. As we speak, we have not collected June allocation. What we are saying is that is either people don’t even care or they think you can just conjoined money or they know what you are going through.
    I said at a rally recently that from what I have heard from their grapevine because they had a meeting where they said that, squeeze them, if they can’t pay salary, you will create problem for them. Mark my words; they might not give us June allocation until the end of August. But we will pay our workers, already we have pay June.
    I am happy to tell you that majority of our civil servants see and appreciate what we are doing. You can to the secretariat and see what we are doing. We increased the car loan by 400 per cent; we increased housing loans by 100 per cent. For 36 out of 43 months we have been paying regularly, let’s even assume that there is a problem of delayed payments now, I cannot believe all the workers will be against us because I have done my best. If the demonstration of interest of workers in their remuneration and allowances counts and with what we have done, I don’t think they will be against us.
    I read the advert they published and I laughed because it indicted them. They wrote that my income was N2.8 billion and this is what I have to pay, N3.4billion and pegged it with state and local governments. There is no way I can touched local government account because is separate and distinct. We made sure nobody touches local government account and get away with it. Local government has its own separate account and I don’t know where their account is. I can only give policy statements on that.
    Our teachers in the state are now very well motivated such that you cannot distinguished between our them and bank workers. When you see a teacher in Osun before you know. They are so depressed, unmotivated and absence of facilities. Our teachers now appear corporate and well-motivated. It is not that there won’t be some of them who for whatever reason don’t like us but they are in the minority.
    Don’t buy the talk that you hear that teachers don’t like him, I don’t believe that. We do independent, scientific opinion poll does not support all these talks. You need to how people respond to us everywhere, people just swarm around me. I have never being in a place where my presence does not generate euphoria. You don’t get such reception if people have problem with you. I don’t really believe I have any problem with any critical sector. There is nothing that they have done to deride us.
    There is no household in this state that does not feel our impact. We are talking about how to make education the central focus of our administration because I am no longer thinking of now but we want to create a new sets of Nigerians on which a new society would be born and we can’t do it on what is there now. Mine is the first government in Nigeria to give free uniform to all students.
    The first government that will say that you don’t need to buy textbooks for your children in the high school, Opon Imo and its targeted at 150,000 students. One of the attractions is that it reduces the cost of book. With that number and with what it cost us to procure the e-book, N200m for 53 books. If you divide N200 million by 53, you will get the cost of per book on that basis.
    If you now divide the outcome with 150,000, do you know that the cost of the book will be N2? Opon Imo should be celebrated by all because it reduces the capital outlay on books. Tell me any government anywhere in the world that can provide eight textbooks free of charge to students. How many parents can buy all books required by their children, but we have changed this by putting into the hands of all our students in high school a library of 53 textbooks.
    Our students here keep it with them, go home with them, and sleep with them for as long as they are in school. That was why I said that we have saved our state N8 billion to procure these books for the students. Immediately they heard that I said we have save the state of N8 billion naira, they said Aregbesola has stolen N8 billion. That was the genesis of the money they said my son took from Opon Imo. Let’s asked them where the N8 billion is.
    How much of an impact do you expect what is now referred to as ‘stomach infrastructure’ to have on the poll this weekend?
    To those who people who are elite and are therefore separated from the people, this term may make a new meaning to them. I am a product of the popular forces, the people and I am part and parcel of them. I emanated from them and a product of their struggles. What is now known as stomach infrastructure is what we know as interaction, engagement, living with the people and meeting their aspirations and needs.
    That is what we have been doing from the very beginning of this administration; I feed their children every day meal. The Akara seller knows that I feed her child every day. I identify with them on a daily basis in their struggle to live and they understand that everything we do is to make live easy for them. My administration does not suffer alienation from the people, it is one and same with the people and that is the basis of our confidence in their ever ready support at all times.
    Is there any aspect of the state that you think you have not touched?
    There is no trade, commercial or social group in the state of Osun that we have not impacted. There is no aspect. Apart from Lagos, we are the only state government that has an emergency call centre but has been made dysfunctional because the federal government just refused to give us short code to make it work.
    I am telling how totally insensitive some of us are to the critical issues of our people. Whether you are APC or PDP, is your commitment not to improve the lot of your people? And when you get to these offices you must show shun partisanship because you have sworn to an oath of allegiance to the Constitution and service to the people. I challenge anybody to say that my programmes are discriminatory? Why should it be anyway, are they not our citizens? We have a nation to build and a people to serve administration has done in the history of this state. Yes, we are having some challenges with the lecturers but it’s not peculiar to us but you just have to bear it.

    For Okada riders, they have no problem with us. They may want us to do things for them as we have done to some other groups, but it not as if they said compared to others, these are the problems. The roads here are appreciated even by those who used legs. Has any government succeeded in constructing 200 kilometres of road in all nooks and crannies of the state?

    There is no part of this state that we have not constructed a new road and it’s not just any road but roads with concrete drainage, with stone base and kick asphaltic cover and above all when I get to campaign grounds, I say our roads have tribal marks. In all general roads, we have roads to with marks. We now have special roads, when we complete some of them, they will be tourism attraction and centres on their own. The road we are building in Gbogan, people will be coming to look at it, mark my words. That road you see, Gbongan to Akoda, will be a tourism attraction because it is not an ordinary road because it’s a road that took me time to conceive and design and we are taking our time to develop it. So, when people talk about the cost of our roads, I just laugh because it’s not good to be talking to people who don’t know what they are saying. We have different types of roads.

    That road is going to be a reference point in road construction. We are changing the landscape and making the state of Osun a hub of everything that is good. We also want to tell the world that the black man is a human being.

    Before our advent, the civil servants never knew that salary could be paid before the end of the month. For seven and half year, salaries were never paid here before the end of the month. But from when I assumed office, we changed that. Before the year ended when I assumed office, I paid 10 per cent of their basic as 13th month salary and paid December salary before the end of the year, the civil servants were dazed.

    Since that day up until December 2013, I pay salary on or before the 25th of every month. But as from January 2014, we ran into trouble which we explained to everybody six months before then. In July 2013, the Federal Government began a squeeze that they themselves know that nobody believed them. They said 400,000 barrel of crude oil is being stolen every day.

    We didn’t know problem was coming. Instead of collecting N4.6 billion, they gave this government N2.6 billion, 40 per cent slashed. We thought it will be temporary because after that month, they said the stolen crude has reduced to 200,000 barrel per day. When the oil being lost reduced, would you still expect a 40 per cent cut? From that July to now, the maximum allocation this state has ever received is N3.2 billion which was in November 2013.

    I am not making up anything, simply saying the truth. Now ask me how was I able to pay up until December 2013? My people are called osomalo- they are very deft in the management of money and I took this from them. I had been saving through the Omoluabi Conservation Fund in which 10 per cent of all allocation must just go and rest. So, I had money in reserve, which was a build-up for my refusal to form cabinet for 10 months, I had the money. Whereas my income fell to N2.6billion at the lowest and N3.4billion at the highest for a month, my statutory expenditures which are expenditures that I have no control on once we have agreed on it, for instance salary, pension and they are N3.6 billion every month, I have no power over it. I can’t say no, am not paying, Between July and December, I augmented my income with N5.4billion.

    All in the hope that this thing will go, it didn’t go. It has not gone as we speak, it is even worse. Before, when you get your allocation, you will cash it by the 15th of every month that is why they are paying salaries on the 15th of the month before we came in. That used to be the practice. But now, because you want to squeeze the opposition government, they even squeeze themselves. Nobody gets the reduced allocation earlier than the 26th of the following month.

    But before now, I wasn’t waiting for their money; I just pay on or before the 25th. If for whatever reason, because when we wanted to introduce the digital automation, it was difficult to do cross over it will get to the 1st or 2nd of the following month, not that the money is not there, we have arranged, banks just pay, we have money with them. To make up the deficit in what I received and what I must pay, I spent extra N5.4 billion.

    However, I told you earlier that I gave 10 per cent of basic salary for 13th month salary; the second year I gave 25 per cent; the third year I gave 50 per cent; the fourth year, I gave 100 per cent. So, December of 2013, I gave every worker in the employment of Osun 100 per cent of their basic salary as extra income which I paid before the end of the year, ordinarily, why should any worker say I am not friendly with them.

    Before, workers here were given their leave allowances en bloc at the end of the year, I told them this is unreasonable because we don’t go to leave at the same time, so choose when you want your leave allowance to be paid. Is it at your birthday or the anniversary of your employment into the service?

    So, whenever you submit your birthday, your leave allowance will be credited to you. I don’t know if any other government in Nigeria does that. Two, go and visit the secretariat and see what we have made of their work environment.  So, if these are things that should motivate workers, I stand tall and proud because I have done my best.

    No matter what anybody tells me, majority of them will appreciate these things. However, since January because I have exhausted my reserve, it is when we get money that we now go to look for money to add to it and pay. That began in January. The difference between me and others is that I don’t hide anything; I tell whosoever cares to listen.

    I am the most loquacious governor in Nigeria. I went to the retreat of lawmakers’ and I said what is happening in Nigeria today is equivalent to the declaration of economic war on the states. If it is just mere shortage and it comes early, of course we will pay, it doesn’t come early. As we speak, we have not collected June allocation. What we are saying is that is either people don’t even care or they think you can just conjoined money or they know what you are going through.

    I said at a rally recently that from what I have heard from their grapevine because they had a meeting where they said that, squeeze them, if they can’t pay salary, you will create problem for them. Mark my words; they might not give us June allocation until the end of August. But we will pay our workers, already we have pay June.

    I am happy to tell you that majority of our civil servants see and appreciate what we are doing. You can to the secretariat and see what we are doing. We increased the car loan by 400 per cent; we increased housing loans by 100 per cent. For 36 out of 43 months we have been paying regularly, let’s even assume that there is a problem of delayed payments now, I cannot believe all the workers will be against us because I have done my best. If the demonstration of interest of workers in their remuneration and allowances counts and with what we have done, I don’t think they will be against us.

    I read the advert they published and I laughed because it indicted them. They wrote that my income was N2.8 billion and this is what I have to pay, N3.4billion and pegged it with state and local governments. There is no way I can touched local government account because is separate and distinct. We made sure nobody touches local government account and get away with it. Local government has its own separate account and I don’t know where their account is. I can only give policy statements on that.

    Our teachers in the state are now very well motivated such that you cannot distinguished between our them and bank workers. When you see a teacher in Osun before you know. They are so depressed, unmotivated and absence of facilities. Our teachers now appear corporate and well-motivated. It is not that there won’t be some of them who for whatever reason don’t like us but they are in the minority.

    Don’t buy the talk that you hear that teachers don’t like him, I don’t believe that. We do independent, scientific opinion poll does not support all these talks. You need to how people respond to us everywhere, people just swarm around me. I have never being in a place where my presence does not generate euphoria. You don’t get such reception if people have problem with you. I don’t really believe I have any problem with any critical sector. There is nothing that they have done to deride us.

    There is no household in this state that does not feel our impact. We are talking about how to make education the central focus of our administration because I am no longer thinking of now but we want to create a new sets of Nigerians on which a new society would be born and we can’t do it on what is there now. Mine is the first government in Nigeria to give free uniform to all students.

    The first government that will say that you don’t need to buy textbooks for your children in the high school, Opon Imo and its targeted at 150,000 students. One of the attractions is that it reduces the cost of book. With that number and with what it cost us to procure the e-book, N200m for 53 books. If you divide N200 million by 53, you will get the cost of per book on that basis.

    If you now divide the outcome with 150,000, do you know that the cost of the book will be N2? Opon Imo should be celebrated by all because it reduces the capital outlay on books. Tell me any government anywhere in the world that can provide eight textbooks free of charge to students. How many parents can buy all books required by their children, but we have changed this by putting into the hands of all our students in high school a library of 53 textbooks.

    Our students here keep it with them, go home with them, and sleep with them for as long as they are in school. That was why I said that we have saved our state N8 billion to procure these books for the students. Immediately they heard that I said we have save the state of N8 billion naira, they said Aregbesola has stolen N8 billion. That was the genesis of the money they said my son took from Opon Imo.  Let’s asked them where the N8 billion is.

    How much of an impact do you expect what is now referred to as ‘stomach infrastructure’ to have on the poll this weekend?

    To those who people who are elite and are therefore separated from the people, this term may make a new meaning to them. I am a product of the popular forces, the people and I am part and parcel of them. I emanated from them and a product of their struggles. What is now known as stomach infrastructure is what we know as interaction, engagement, living with the people and meeting their aspirations and needs.

    That is what we have been doing from the very beginning of this administration; I feed their children every day meal. The Akara seller knows that I feed her child every day.  I identify with them on a daily basis in their struggle to live and they understand that everything we do is to make live easy for them. My administration does not suffer alienation from the people, it is one and same with the people and that is the basis of our confidence in their ever ready support at all times.

    Is there any aspect of the state that you think you have not touched?

    There is no trade, commercial or social group in the state of Osun that we have not impacted.  There is no aspect. Apart from Lagos, we are the only state government that has an emergency call centre but has been made dysfunctional because the federal government just refused to give us short code to make it work.

    I am telling how totally insensitive some of us are to the critical issues of our people. Whether you are APC or PDP, is your commitment not to improve the lot of your people? And when you get to these offices you must show shun partisanship because you have sworn to an oath of allegiance to the Constitution and service to the people. I challenge anybody to say that my programmes are discriminatory? Why should it be anyway, are they not our citizens? We have a nation to build and a people to serve

     

  • The choice before Osun

    The choice before Osun

    Next Saturday’s governorship election in Osun State is strictly speaking between the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Any other party staking a claim to the state’s Government House is simply making up the number. Should PDP win, the party, and by inference, President Goodluck Jonathan, could create a roaring momentum that would be hard to stop going into the 2015 general elections. Not only would the party make a serious and plausible claim to reclaiming the Southwest for the PDP, as many of the party’s leading political philosophers suggest and desire, even Dr Jonathan, whose life and politics consistently defy gravity and logic, could feel considerably animated about his chances. The president’s life is full of happenstances; indeed, it relies on happenstances; and his politics, strangely energised by its mediocre pauses, now relies almost entirely on brute force, intimidation, harassment and constitutional subversion.

    But should APC win, as its beleaguered apparatchiks earnestly hope, it would check the heresy triggered by the Ekiti governorship poll, buoy up the party in general terms, create a fresh momentum for the opposition towards the 2015 polls, especially the presidential election, and arrest the PDP frenzy in the Southwest. In short, the APC needs Osun much more than the PDP does. Ekiti proved during the June governorship poll that the Southwest is not as ideologically driven as many analysts, including this columnist, hoped. Ideology is therefore unlikely to play a dominant role in shaping Osun’s electoral choices on Saturday. Instead, rather than party preference, Osun will more likely than not vote for personality. But secondarily, I suspect, Osun will also try to distance itself from the unwholesome factors that tarred the Ekiti poll, especially the specious reasons given to justify the revolt against Governor Kayode Fayemi.

    The contest in Osun will be narrowed down to a straight fight between Governor Rauf Aregbesola and Senator Iyiola Omisore. Both, it is obvious, have been tried in one office or the other; the former as governor, and the latter as a senator, former deputy governor, ruthless machinator, and maverick politician. Choosing between the two politicians should not present Osun with a hard task, though both gentlemen have an insatiable knack for courting controversy and for sailing near the wind. Governor Aregbesola is not unbeatable, for after all, I have had reasons to disagree with him vehemently, and still do; but it will require someone acutely cerebral, much calmer, more reflective and more genuine than the challenger. Senator Omisore is none of these, and no matter how hard he tries, can’t be. Indeed, the most poignant part of the challenger’s persona is his absolute lack of reflection, not to talk of his impatience, dangerous and intuitive iconoclasm, which he displayed in his numerous battles with the late Minister of Justice, Bola Ige, and complete vacuity. Like Ekiti’s Governor-elect, Ayo Fayose, who neither believes nor stands for anything substantial, Senator Omisore feigns disingenuous eclecticism by borrowing bits and pieces of disjointed ideas from all sources.

    In politics, it is said that you can’t beat something with nothing. But it happened in Ekiti last June where a hollow nothing beat a full something. The misfortune of Senator Omisore is to live in a state like Osun eager to buck the trend of the so-called PDP reclamation of the Southwest rather than in a vengeful Ekiti full of vendetta. Though he has tried his valiant best to put on the Fayose airs – of spontaneous roadside meals, of wisecracks and rural jocosity, and of a risible attachment to indefinable pragmatism – the fact remains that he is not Mr Fayose, and Osun is not Ekiti.

    Governor Aregbesola, on the other hand, and in spite of his fondness for leftist/Marxist regimentation, has managed to capture popular imagination in Osun. More, he is a workaholic, someone genuinely interested in affecting the course of history, in overthrowing the citadel of privilege, making a name for himself, touching lives, and demystifying governance. His passion sometimes makes him overreach himself, but he at least shows courage in tackling societal problems even at the risk of alienating sections of his society. I doubt whether Osun will punish him for this. Even after the election, the fight for societal redefinition will continue, and I think by and by, he will have to face reality and reach an accommodation with his critics.

    But perhaps the main reason I expect him to win is because Osun, more than Ekiti, recognises that the battle for the soul of the Southwest is raging fiercely. They recognise that if the tide is to be turned, Osun will have to set the pace, similar to what they did during the 2011 presidential poll. They recognise instinctively the consequence of the return of Mr Fayose. They know it is a harbinger of bad news for the zone, a return to vagrant politics, mediocrity, and social and cultural anomie. They know a vote for Omisore, especially with the unresolved Chief Ige murder for which he was at a time detained and even interdicted, will open the door for the return of Adebayo Alao-Akala and other underachieving politicians without programmes and without reputation. They know Senator Omisore and Mr Fayose will get the Southwest sucked once again into the vortex of another silly season.

    To prove that Ekiti made a grave error of judgement, Osun will likely and very sensibly re-elect Governor Aregbesola. It will not be a wholesale endorsement of all his policies in his first term. But it will be their way of repudiating Senator Omisore who is so unfit for high office it is inconceivable he is at all fit for anything. It will also be their way of showing the federal government that the unconstitutional madness of militarising polls does not intimidate them, let alone yield anything productive for the Jonathan presidency. Finally, it will be their way of showing they recognise that the disinformation and misinformation that perverted the Ekiti poll will not be accommodated in Osun. I endorse Governor Aregbesola without reservation. I would rather reason and disagree with an Aregbesola who can feel the weight of criticism, notwithstanding his sometimes inflexible approach, than a pliant and dissembling Omisore whose lack of character and distorted worldview make him inured to criticism and change.

  • Let Aregbe do it again

    Let Aregbe do it again

    Osun August 9 election on my mind

    Only the uninitiated will attempt to compare the state of affairs in Ekiti with that of Osun State, particularly with regard to the June 21 governorship election in the former, and the fast approaching August 9 gubernatorial election in the latter. One undeniable fact about Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State is that he is a grassroots man to the core. Indeed, the impressive crowds that have been attending his rallies since his campaign for reelection started have been confounding the opposition, particularly the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) whose members have been alleging that the crowds are rented. But they know deep down their hearts that they are lying. Such is the allure of the man, Rauf Aregbesola: downright factual; no pretence.

    Aregbe, as he is fondly called, understands the language of the grassroots as he knows the lines on his palms. He knows his people just as his people know him. This is one major hurdle that those who might want to repeat what they see as the ‘Ekiti feat’ in Osun State have to contend with, come August 9.

    Aregbesola’s mission statement is encapsulated in the six-point integral action plan of his administration. One is ‘Promotion of functional education’, under which the decayed educational infrastructure in the state is being gradually replaced while at the same time ensuring quality control. His government has reclassified schools into elementary school (five years); middle school (four years) and high school (three years), against the national policy of 6-3-3. This radical departure was informed by the government’s belief that pupils need more time at the middle school so as to prepare them for maturity into high school.  The state has had to build 25 mega schools in order to bring children from diverse backgrounds together to learn in a conducive atmosphere. However, political jobbers have criticised this policy on the alleged ground that it constitutes an erasure of religious lines, especially in schools with bias for religion. Mercifully, the tension that initially attended this policy has since given way, with the government’s explanation of how it came about, i.e. that it was the idea of Prof Wole Soyinka’s team, designed as a way out of the education decay that the state was in when Aregbe took over.

    Of course, other aspects of the Aregbesola government’s educational programme include the one nutritious meal given free to 254,000 primary school kids daily under the state’s O-MEAL Programme. This is to help develop their brains as well as serve as incentive for them to go to school. In addition, it is a way of getting ready markets for farmers in the state to sell their farm produce that is used in preparing the meals. Then the Opon Imo or ‘tablets of knowledge’ that have been distributed to about 150,000 secondary school pupils in the state. The tablet has 56 e-books, 10 years of past West African Examinations Council (WAEC), National Examinations Council (NECO) and the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) questions, as well as the Holy Bible, Holy Quran and traditional religion content. This is saving the government huge sums of money under its free education programme.

    The other legs of Aregbesola’s action plan are banishment of hunger/unemployment, enhanced security/welfare, restoration of healthy living and promotion of communal peace, etc.

    Aregbesola knows the importance of the agricultural sector and has done so much in so short a time that farmers would not forget him in a hurry. He has liberalised access by farmers to soft loans to improve their yield and lessen their burden; he has also complemented this with good roads to enable the farmers transport their produce with ease to the market. Indeed, it is in the area of road network that the governor, an engineer, has brought professionalism and ingenuity to bear. All over the state, the administration is building durable roads and rehabilitating dilapidated ones. And, in order to ensure that the state gets value for its money from the contractors, some of whom are notorious for disappearing after collecting mobilisation fees, the Aregbesola administration insists on delivery of the roads before paying the contractors. The benefit here is that roads are constructed to specification since the contractors know that they would not be paid if they deviated from the terms of the contract.

    In like manner, new hospitals are being built all over the state even as old ones are being renovated and all equipped to enhance the free health treatment for a section of the people. The government has also taken away from the streets a lot of youths who otherwise would have been jobless and thus constitute social menace to law-abiding citizens. Although there is still work to be done in this regard as it is impossible to mop up the huge number of jobless youths that the government inherited, the fact is that through its O-YES Scheme, the government has reduced their numbers significantly by about 40,000.

    The security agencies could not have had it better as the Aregbesola government has done a lot for them by way of empowerment, to ensure peace and reduce criminality in the state. The government has assisted the security agencies with some 125 patrol vans, among other things.

    Of course, like most other performers and change agents, Aregbesola has had his own unfair share of criticisms. Like the typical woman who, for lack of what to say, says it is in her husband’s house that she would sleep tonight! Where else could she have slept? Even if she would sleep in a place where she is not supposed to, could she have made that a public service announcement?  For lack of what to say, the few but vocal critics of the Aregbesola administration say he is a religious bigot. One would ordinarily have ignored such idle criticism but for the fact that those who want to succeed the governor are so desperate that they can cook up anything. In a situation where people celebrate the replacement of an administration, not for non-performance, but on the flimsiest of excuses, it is good to put all the cards on the table to enable the electorate, who should be the ultimate deciders in the August 9 governorship election in the state sift the wheat from the chaff. The truth is, the composition of Aregbesola’s cabinet does not support this claim. In the 34-member cabinet, only 12 are Muslims just as we have only 12 Muslim permanent secretaries of the 32 in the state. With regard to the state house of assembly with 26 members, only nine are Muslims.

    Through his robust management of the economy, the state internally generated revenue (IGR) has grown from N300million that the administration inherited in 2010 to about N1.5 billion monthly. Thus, the government has been able to steer the economy from its near-bankruptcy in 2010 and is still doing the ‘balancing act’ in a predominantly civil servant state despite the drop of its revenue from the federation account from N5billion to about N2.5billion monthly. The oversubscription of the Sukuk Bond from its envisaged N10billion to N11billion is a measure of investors’ confidence in the state economy; so is the other N60billion bond out of which N30billion had been drawn.

    This is only a fraction of what the man, Rauf Aregbesola, has done in Osun in less than four years. He has literally breathed life into virtually all sectors of the state that were dead when he took over the reins of government after a protracted legal battle to reclaim his mandate from the PDP usurpers. What makes these achievements particularly praiseworthy is the fact that Osun is not a rich state. It is a predominantly civil servant state, one in which few resources are being chased by overwhelming demands. Yet, Aregbe has been making sense in spite of the financial limitations. Positive developments that hitherto were thought to be unimaginable have become possible in the state.

    So, “a good turn”, as they say, “deserves another”. It is time for Osun people to tell those who have nothing to offer to steer clear of governance in the state. What the state deserves now is the continuation of the streak of successes that it has been witnessing since Aregbe’s administration took over. It is only unfortunate that people who should be in jail in decent climes are some of those now seeking to rule a progressive and pace-setter region like Nigeria’s south-west. That tells us something about the depth to which the country has sunk, especially under the PDP.

  • Photo: Aregbesola’s rally

    Photo: Aregbesola’s rally