Tag: Osun State

  • Tablet of knowledge

    Tablet of knowledge

    Ifeoluwa Odetayo, a secondary school student in Osun State in South West Nigeria now has something he treasures as much as his cell phone.  It is the Opon Imo (Tablet of Knowledge), a hand-held computer tablet pre-loaded with educational resources that can ease her study.

    Though the Opon Imo was only officially launched by the state government about two weeks ago, Ifeoluwa has had it for more than two months now, during which he has come to value it more than his physical textbooks.

    “I treat it the way I treat my own phone.  I treat it with a lot of respect,” said the pupil of Ilesa Grammar School, in an interview with The Nation at the launch.

    Ifeoluwa is one of the 150,000 SS1 and SS2 pupils that the Governor Rauf Aregbesola administration is providing with the tablet in its bid to digitalise education as well as provide public school pupils with all the relevant textbooks and other materials to enhance performance in school and national examinations.

    The tablet features an e-library containing 63 e-books – 57 covering the 17 subjects examined by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) for the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) – and six others including a bible, dictionary, history of the Yorubas, Opon Ifa, and a book on enterprise education.

    It also features a virtual classroom where the pupils can take tutorials; an integrated test zone, where they can access more than 40,000 past questions for the SSCE and Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations; and educational games like chess, scrabble and others that can develop their intellect and critical thinking skills.

    With all these content packaged into the device that weighs just 1.1kg, 10 times less than the normal secondary school Physics textbooks, Aregbesola said the state is relieving the pupils of backache from carrying so many textbooks; the parents of the financial burden of buying textbooks for their wards, and saving the government at least N50 billion it would have needed to provide such rich content in hard copies.

    It is no wonder Ifeoluwa handles the device like a treasured possession so nothing happens to it.

    “I charge it all the time.  When I am not at home, I keep it in its box,” he added.

    Ifeoluwa said he finds using the tablet to study more interesting than his hard copy textbooks.

    “I find it very useful – more than my textbooks.  To be sincere, when one is reading textbooks one will get bored.  This is more interesting.  It is more equipped than our textbooks,” he said.

    Ifeoluwa’s classmate, Temitope Alake, is already implementing a personal timetable using his tablet.  He said he gets more knowledge from the device.

    “I read from 5am to 6.30am in the mornings, and then I also read in the afternoons.  For today, I have English and Biology on my timetable.  I read English in the morning; in the afternoon, I will read Biology.  The tablet gives me more knowledge,” he said.

    The tablet has replaced hard copy textbooks at Ilesa Grammar School.  Ifeoluwa and Temitope said teachers come to the classroom with their own and just instruct the pupils to open to specific areas.

    “We use it in the classroom.  All the teachers have it so they use it to teach us.  Every student just clicks on the page the teacher calls and read,” Ifeoluwa said.

    With the use of the tablets in schools, the Osun State Deputy Governor and Commissioner for Education, Mrs Titi Laoye-Tomori, expects a reversal in the abysmally poor performance in the West African Senior School Certificate Examinations from next year.

    Mrs Yomi Mohammed, Head of Science Department at Ilesa Grammar School shares her hopes.  Already, she has noticed her pupils are more attentive.  She added that the tablet has equipped them with the relevant textbooks they needed, unlike before when not all of them had textbooks.

    “They have been using it very well.  It enables them to improve in their education because they have the different textbooks they need for the sciences.  And after each topic, they have questions they can answer on their own,” she said.

    However, the pupils are urging the government to decode some of the tablets as it is denying them of enjoying all its features.  For instance, Ifeoluwa said because his tablet has been fully decoded, he can have access to the virtual classroom, view diagrams on his textbooks and take mock examinations in the integrated test zone.  Not so for Temitope.  He said he does not enjoy all the features because when he gets to certain environments, the device asks for a code he does not have.

    “Some of us have this problem.  The government should decode all the tablets so we can enjoy everything available,” he said.

    The government has assured it has taken care of durability and power issues.  Aregbesola said the tablet battery can last up to eight hours between recharges, while the device has been reinforced to survive rough handling by the young ones.

  • Osun 2014: PDP waits on best candidate

    A chieftain of the Osun State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Abiola Ogundokun, has said that the party leadership is waiting on the lord for the best governorship candidate to win the 2014 governorship poll in Osun State for the party.

    Speaking with reporters yesterday in Iwo after holding a meeting with party supporters in Osun West at the residence of late Prince Alade Lamuye, the PDP stalwart said the party is set to reclaim the state from the ruling Action Congress of Nigeria in 2014.

    “We are praying to God, consulting all stakeholders and holding meetings where necessary. We so much believe that God will not disappoint us, because we are waiting on Him to give us the best candidate,” he said.

  • Osun wears new look

    Osun wears new look

    Aregbesola consolidates clean environment policy

    The traffic on Gbongan Road, Osogbo, Osun State was unusually heavy. A group of new green trucks formed a straight line, moving at snail speed. As you tried to count, you discovered that they were too many. On the median was an excited crowd of people cheering what they saw as novel in this part of the world.

    In the procession was Mouka Ray, an actor, entertaining residents of the town. He, alongside other residents, stood in the morning sun to see the new set of green painted trucks procured by the state government to add to the number of existing waste disposal trucks in the state.

    As you began to wonder what the excitement was all about, you heard a voice.

    “This government is very serious about the environment. These are O-Clean trucks,” someone said excitedly from the crowd.

    Would you blame them for being happy? Many of them were there when their environment was rusty and neglected. The recent efforts by the government of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola to create a friendly environment is paying off.

    Buoyed by the success recorded with O-Clean, which the governor has described as personal and environmental cleanliness, the government took further steps to launch the new intervention project tagged O-Clean Plus.

    The O-Clean Plus is an effort of the state government to make the task of cleaning the environment, not just that of government, but also of citizens. According to the Special Adviser to the Osun State Governor on Environment & Sanitation, Hon. Bola Ilori, the programme entails a lot initiatives like: Private Partnership in Waste Management, Tree Planting, O’ Clean Gas, O’Clean Marshal, Highway Managers, Mosquitoes Reduction Programme, Environmental Awareness & Advocacy, Nylon/Plastic Buyback Programme and Local Government Technical Committee on Waste Management, among other things.

    For those who are smart enough, aside the initiative of creating employment for jobless youths, it will afford them the opportunity to make money with less sweat from the nylon buy-back project. The government is now ready to buy ‘pure water’ sachets which are not only environment-friendly but constitute a nuisance to the public.

    A modern dumpsite has also been constructed with modern facilities to convert all the waste into biogas. Good enough, the bio-gas is currently being used by the governor to cook. At the launch of O-Clean Plus, the governor came out boldly to vouch for the bio-gas, saying, “it is safe and healthy”

    The occasion was another opportunity for the governor to tell the people of Osun that the present government is a responsive and responsible government. He disclosed that the waste collection vehicles were bought on credit; the citizens have to pay a token to dispose their waste of so that the state would be able to pay for the trucks.

    The trucks will be stationed in designated parts of the streets to collect refuse.

    For those who think the project will not last, Ilori was quick to point out that the government did its home work before embarking on it. The streets were enumerated five months for easy operation of the project.

    The environmental enforcement marshals were inaugurated by the governor and mandated to enforce environmental laws by arresting environmental offenders. Aregbesola did not mince words when he warned that the days of flouting environmental laws with impunity were over.

    Though the launch was full of fanfare, Ilori also pointed out that the state was serious about making Osun State clean. “We have done a lot of public awareness in terms waste disposal and managements, we have also provided very many alternatives for our people to get rid of their waste properly. So anyone seen dropping refuse indiscriminately would be handled by our Oclean Marshals under the various existing laws. “

    With the present arrangement, each local government will have O-Clean offices with representatives.

    The occasion was also used to launch a tree planting project in the state. About 2.5 million tree seedlings of various species are ready to be given free to citizens of the state for planting. The Commissioner for Commissioner of Environment & Sanitation, Olubukola Oyawoye, who was upbeat at the launch, reiterated the commitment of her ministry to the tree-planting, saying that the ministry has zero tolerance for indiscriminate waste disposal and breaching of the state environmental laws.

    All things being equal, mosquitoes are going to relocate from the state as the state government is bent on continuous aerial spraying with its helicopter. The helicopter acquired by the state had generated much controversy before the launch of O-Clean Plus. At the launch of O-Clean Plus, Ilori put paid to the controversies surrounding the purchase of the helicopter. The state has saved N4billion which would have been used in fighting mosquitoes.

    “After calculating how much we would spend in hiring helicopters, we discovered that it would be more that what we would use in buying the helicopter that would do the aerial spraying of the state. With the helicopter, the governor is saving the governor is saving N4bn which would have been spent on fighting mosquito alone.”

    Speaking at the occasion, 50-year-old Ramota Salami, a petty trader, was happy, especially with the way the state has been able to control the perennial flooding. She welcomed the recent N500 monthly levy on refuse collection, saying “it would go a long way in stopping from indiscriminate dumping of refuse in rivers and streams.”

    Joseph Alebiosu, who recently relocated from the northern part of the country, was happy about the tree planting initiative, saying “government should sensitise people more on tree planting as tree makes environment friendly.”

    Steve Adeyemi, a student in one of the secondary schools, was happy about the buying back nylon/ polythene projects, saying he would do the business to support his family. “I’m not ashamed to collect nylon in exchange for money.”

    The Chief of Staff to the Edo State Governor, Hon Patrick Obayagbon; wife of the Lagos State Governor, Dame Abimbola Fashola; representative of the wife of Senator Oluremi Tinubu, Mrs Doyin Olusoga; traditional rulers, politicians, unions and associations, were around to witness the launch of O-Clean Plus.

    Aside the 500 commercial motorcycle riders who came to add colour to the event, artistes like Alabi Pasuma, Saidi Balogun, Mouka Ray, Kayode Sadiq, 70- year- Alabi Ogundepo and others were around to sensitise the citizens on the need to embark of clean environment.

  • Council provides N27m tools

    THE Odo-Otin Local Government of Osun State has lifted the spirits of artisans and traders in the area.

    At a ceremony attended by party leaders, traditional rulers and prominent indigenes, about 150 artisans and traders who had undergone three months training under the Osun State government Youth Empowerment Scheme received cash donations of between N25,000 and N50,000 while 34 motorcycles and 22 deep freezers, 22 generators and 30 plasma televisions were given out to others by the council.

    Apart from this category of residents, all traditional rulers in the local government area also benefitted from the largesse as each of them got one set of 29-inch plasma television, complete with a DSTV decoder and one 3KVA generator.

    Two ambulances purchased and fully equipped by the council were also donated to two health centres in Inisa and Oyan towns to boost their community healthcare programmes. The keys to the ambulances were received by the Olunisa of Inisa, Oba Joseph Oladunjoye Oyedele and Oloyan of Oyan, Oba Kilani Adekeye.

    Speaking during the ceremony, the Executive secretary of Odo-Otin Local Government, Hon Tope Adejumo said the gesture was in fulfilment of the state government policy to empower the people of the state and make them productive citizens.

    He disclosed that the council is committed to ensuring that all traders and artisans in the area are fully assisted to become productive and independent financially stressing that the empowerment programme is being done in phases to ensure that everybody in the area benefit from it.

    “It is one of the programmes of the state government and we are committed to its implementation in Odo-Otin Local Government area. We are going to  implement it in phases to ensure that all our people become financially independent. I urge all of you to be patient because everybody will benefit from what we are doing today.” He stated

    He reiterated the commitment of the council to ensuring that all the health centres in the area are fully equipped to enable them perform optimally pointing out that this was the motive behind the donation of two fully equipped ambulances to community health centres in two towns within the local government.

    “To boost community health, we are going to give out free treated mosquito nets to everybody and we are going to ensure that it is a continuous thing until we are able to fight malaria to a standstill. Above all, we must ensure that we don’t pour refuse into our gutters to avoid flood disaster and we must keep our environment clean always” he added

    He urged the people to support the government by paying their taxes and rates at all times stressing that without the support of the people it would be difficult for the government to achieve many of its good programmes.

    Also speaking at the ceremony, the Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Osun State, Elder Adelowo Adebiyi said the state government is committed to the full implementation of the empowerment programme stressing that it was part of the promises made by the State Governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola during his electioneering campaign.

    He urged the people to support the state government to ensure that all the people oriented programmes of the state government are implemented successfully in all the local government areas in the state.

    The Odo-Otin local government Chairman of (ACN), Alhaji Jimoh Asa also stressed to need for the people to support the government to ensure that the dividends of democracy are delivered to them pointing out that the party was committed to the welfare of the people.

  • ‘Why we partnered Osun State’

    ‘Why we partnered Osun State’

    Evans Brothers (Nigeria Publishers) Limited, the content provider for the Opon Imo (tablet of knowledge) initiative of the Osun State Government, has explained its involvement in the project.

    It said it partnered Osun to improve the quality of education.

    The company’s Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Wale Olaniawo, said the tablets contain the e-version of all subjects offered in secondary schools.

    They also contain textbooks, lesson notes, past questions and answers on the West African School Certificate Examination (WASCE), National Examination Council (NECO) and the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

    Olaniawo said the initiative would improve the performance of pupils in internal and external examinations.

    He urged the company’s Chairman, Otunba Adekunle Ojora, directors and employees to remain focused on “the cherished core values and historical antecedents that made Evans a household name in the country, the United Kingdom (UK) and many parts of Europe and Africa”.

  • ‘I started what grew into Oduduwa University as a tutorial centre’

    Dr. Ramon Adedoyin, 56 and President, Oduduwa University, Ipetumodu,  Osun State and Our Saviour’s University, Delware, United States of America, is a man  who has turned passion to wealth,  like some other rich people who are  self-made. Adedoyin tells his grass to  grace story, in this encounter with  Gbenga ADERANTI, Asst. Editor

    Except for the retinue of aides and his dress sense, Dr. Ramon Adedoyin, the president and founder of three tertiary institutions within and outside Nigeria and the CEO of hospitality, security and medical outfits, would pass for just anybody on the street. The fact that he smells opulence would make you look at him more than once.

    “This is Dr. Ramon Adedoyin, “ one of his aides introduced our correspondent to the President of Our Saviour’s University, USA; Oduduwa University, Ipetumodu, Ile-Ife, Osun and The Polytechnic, Ile Ife, Osun State.

    He grew up in a polygamous home, a lifestyle that toughened and prepared him for future challenges. According to the Ife High Chief, getting to this level was not idyllic. It is common among the successful people to say that they had an humble beginning. Adedoyin insisted that it was not as if his parents were rich, but they could meet his needs. “Oh! I come from a very good family. Though my father died when I was seven years old, my mother was comfortable at that time, selling some items.”

    Adedoyin whose monthly wage bill is now N8 million told The Nation that fate brought him to where he is right now. His first contact with education was his enrolment into Ile Kewu , a koranic school, at Maha-Had Islamic Foundation, Isale Alfa, Ibadan in 1960. His formal education, however, started in Ansar-Islam Primary School in Ile-Ife (1961-1969).

    He also attended Oduduwa College, Ile-Ife (1970-1974), and Muslim Grammar School, Odinjo, Ibadan (1975-1976).

    He still remembers very vividly how he lost his father at age seven and how he had to battle with difficulties of life. According to him, his was a polygamous house and his father left 26 children when he died. After the demise of the old man, it became everyone for himself, the survival of the fittest, as his mother was left with the onus of single-handedly taking care of him.

    “It was at this time that things became extremely difficult for my mother to pay my school fees, especially when I wanted to sit for my West African School Certificate Examination, (WASCE). She had to sell a few of her property to pay for my examination.”

    Loathing laziness, after he completed his secondary education, he started teaching, though he had an opportunity to do something else, but preferred teaching just because he didn’t want to put on tie. “Well, maybe that was how God wanted it. Really, after I finished my secondary school, I got a job in an insurance company and they told me that I needed to put on tie and suit, but I wondered why I should do that when I was not a big man! I didn’t like it at all. So, I preferred teaching in a primary school to working in an insurance company. Maybe God planned it that I would be a teacher all my life; so, that could be the reason He directed my steps that way,” he recalled.

    Getting admission into university was a tug of war. He sat for entrance exams twice before he got admission into the university.

    Currently, he has a doctoral degree in Mathematics and Education from All Saint’s University of America, New York, United States of America. He is also a visiting professor in one of the universities outside the country.

    Probably, he would not have had tertiary education but by a chanced encounter with a man. How? Music was an attraction and as a young man, Adedoyin got attracted to music and he would have become a musician but for the encounter that changed his destiny. .”I was copying the late Fela Anikulapo- Kuti and even now, I still love him. One day, a traditional ruler( now of blessed memory) visited my mother and found out that there was a nuisance in the compound who was always disturbing the house with drumming and noise, claiming to be a musician.

    ”But really, that was me! That was me then. So, he asked me why I was not in school. I told him that I had ‘F9’ in all my subjects in the ‘O’ Level examinations. So, he took me in his car to the secondary school where I finished from, Muslim Grammar School. When we got there, he asked for my result and I gave him. He was shocked to find out that I actually had ‘Al’ in all my subjects, including Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry and Biology. So, from there, he took me to the University of Ibadan to obtain a form. That was where my ambition to become a musician died! Then, I began to think of studying Medicine,” he said smiling.

    Unfortunately, he could not get admission to study medicine. ”The following year, I went to the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University), obtained the form and sat for the examination to study Mechanical Engineering. But I was still not offered admission. So, Prof. Dibu Ojerinde of the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board, JAMB, advised me to choose another course, though he admitted that my result was good. But I told him I didn’ t want to be a teacher. He said my result was good. That was how I accepted to study Mathematics and Education”.

    As an undergraduate, he augmented his mother’s contribution by teaching Mathematics by private arrangement. He recalled:“There was this Professor who invited me to teach his children Mathematics, having studied my performance. As I started doing that, another Professor also invited me. So, that was how I discovered that I was a good teacher. I believe this was what brought me to what I am doing today. Therefore, immediately I graduated, I never wanted to do anything other than ‘home lesson’.”

    Having graduated in Mathematics Education, he put what he learnt in the university into practice; he started what later became the popular Universal Tutorial College, Ile-Ife. So, what many see today as big institutions was started as a lesson at the back of Adedoyin’s mother’s house. “I put up a makeshift classroom in our backyard where I was teaching people Mathematics. I also put up a beautiful signboard outside the house. When some people came, they thought we were using the entire house as the school. So, people started coming to my coaching centre,” he explained.

    He had competitors too because many thought he was big and making so much money. “In our street alone, we had more than 10 schools that later sprang up. But I think it is God’s calling to have started like that. Some people saw what I was doing and they set up their own side-by-side. But today, I still have my own, which has metamorphosed into a university.”

    He is proud to declare that while many think that the reward of teachers are in heaven, he has got his own reward right here on earth and he is comfortable. “It is said that when you are a teacher, and the chalk touches your hair, you will not make it. But today, I’m a billionaire; there is no doubt about it. I was almost blaming God for not allowing me to do what I had wanted to do (music), not knowing that He (God) had planned that I would be a class teacher,” he said.

    Adedoyin, who is the Balogun of Parakin Eleyele Community, Ile-Ife and Maye of Ife, which was conferred on him Oba Okunade Sijuade, the Ooni of Ife, does not see impossibilities; rather, he sees possibilities in everything. The success of both the Universal College and The Polytechnic emboldened him to conceive the idea of a university. The dream became a reality when on November 3, 2009, he got the licence to operate a private university in Nigeria. And the institution has become a success.

    Though he is into other businesses, he prefers to be seen more from educational perspective. “I prefer to be identified with education. I handed the hotel business over to my wife to manage. “

  • Islam is anti-terrorism  say Sultan, Aregbesola

    Islam is anti-terrorism say Sultan, Aregbesola

    Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State and the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar say Islam is against terrorism, and want those using the religion to perpetrate heinous crimes treated not as Muslims but common criminals.

    While the governor insists that a true Muslim must not be a promoter of conflict, contradiction or crisis, the Sultan maintains that Islam will, for ever, remain a religion of peace and development.

    They both spoke in Osogbo at the weekend at a dinner organised in honour of the Sultan by the Osun State Government.

    The Sultan was delighted at the governor’s achievements and what he called his ability to carry every resident of the state along irrespective of religion and ethnicity.

    He stressed that no Nigerian should be treated or regarded as a settler in any part of the country, adding that everyone should be able to find home wherever he chooses to live in.

    He said the Osun government has openly demonstrated this by allowing and treating natives and non-natives in the state as equal, which is what the entire nation needs to be able to guarantee peaceful co-habitation among all groups, ethnicity and religions.

    He said that terrorists, wherever they are found, must therefore answer personally for their crimes by being treated as common criminals that they are.

    He said: “Those who claim to be doing what they are doing in terms of terrorism in the name of Islam are on their own. They are not doing anything for Islam or Muslims but for themselves. Nothing more, nothing less! And that is why when I hear people refer to these terrorists as Islamic terrorists, I always feel bad. I have said it so many times that Islam does not approve terrorism or the taking of anybody’s life.”

    Aregbesola said a Muslim, who promotes chaos and disharmony has deviated from the teachings of Islam and a good Muslim is required to exemplify the best in conduct through accommodation, tolerance and forbearance for him to be called a good Muslim.

    His words: “Any Muslim that promotes conflict, contradiction and crisis is a heretic. I should not use that word because it is wrong to say that somebody is not a Muslim. But I want to say without equivocation that a Muslim that promotes hatred, bitterness and discord is very far from Islam.”

  • My vision for 2013

    My vision for 2013

    The out-gone year, 2012, is not one any of us would forget in a hurry. It was therefore deservedly laid to rest as we look forward to 2013. Actually time is a continuum.

    I am therefore concerned with the linkage between the past, present and future even as I outline my vision for this year.

    A major international conflict has emerged with the Syrian civil war and it has spread to Turkey and Lebanon with grave potential to broaden to Iraq, Jordan and Israel. There is enough trouble in the Middle East to trouble world peace. I am therefore looking forward to the resolution of the Syrian crisis this year. Every conflict is a humanitarian disaster. This is deplorable and we should put an end to it.

    In Africa, I look towards greater integration in business, commerce, transportation and leisure. Africa is such a compact continent yet so divided. Except for oil, African countries trade more with European and Asian countries than with themselves. This could be said to be the fallout of colonialism but after more than half a century of independence, the colonial argument no longer holds and Africans must begin to look inwards.

    Things are not going to change so dramatically in one year. However, it is my hope that new groundwork will be laid for integration, especially in transportation, trade, manufacturing and tourism. One of the problems of trade is that African countries produce raw materials which they don’t use, while they buy finished products they don’t produce. If they can come to new understanding on manufacturing and maximise their comparative advantages in all areas, they can cut off much of their dependence on Europe and Asia. This might just be the fountainhead of African renaissance.

    The African leads inexorably to the Nigerian. The biggest problems facing the country today are unemployment, insecurity and worsening infrastructure. This year, a large number of the army of unemployed youths must be engaged. Job creation is not exactly nuclear physics. God helped us in Osun to engage 20,000 people in less than 100 days of being in office. We have since raised the ante with jobs created directly or indirectly through our various empowerment programmes in agriculture, works and social services. Directly and through the multiplier effect, we have engaged not less than half a million people in two years. The Federal Government and other states can take a cue from us and we will be willing to share our strategy with any government so interested.

    Insecurity, especially of the type we have in this country has three roots – the environment of poverty, deprivation and neglect; wrongheaded government policies; and failure of law enforcement. Addressing any of these is necessary but not sufficient. They must be approached in an integrative manner. I have made the case in the past that the poverty and alienation of the people from the state provided a ready recruitment field for malcontents and disgruntled elements in the North. With a renewed effort at education, poverty alleviation and inclusiveness, the pond will be drained.

    Of course, I am in support of law enforcement. The police and other law enforcement agencies must be well equipped and motivated to fight crime. With their intelligence gathering and penetrating capability enhanced, they will be positioned to break the back of any group that might pose threat to the security of Nigerians. However, as Mitt Romney, the Republican Party presidential candidate, told President Obama on his anti-terror strategy in one of the debates preceding the last election, ‘You cannot kill your way out of these things’. Force alone and in itself cannot be effective to defeat issues deeply rooted in culture, ideology and religion. This is where there must be engagement. We may not accept what is offered but we must never be afraid of dialogue, of communication and of engagement. I look forward to the resolution of the ethno-regional and religious conflicts in the Niger Delta, Plateau and the North this year.

    This year should be a big one for infrastructure in Nigeria. We have done enough talking on the problem. It is high time we started fixing it. We have in the past set targets that have been defeated by politics, fiscal illiteracy and bad planning. This year, we should set realistic new targets of one year, five years, 10 years, 20 years and so on, on power, roads, railways and steel development and stand faithfully on their implementation.

    More importantly, we must get into the much needed constitution reforms this year. We can no longer afford to pretend that all is well. We have engrafted the logic of unitarism on a supposedly federal constitution and this has been responsible for much of the crisis of state. The Nigerian people in their heterogeneity must come together and agree upon and fashion a people’s constitution established unmistakably upon the principles of federalism. Our most recent history taught us that the most prosperous and progressive period was when we practiced federalism both in politics and finance.

    In our state, Osun, this year is very significant for us. Every politician operating a four-year political calendar knows that the third year is crucial. That is the last year for an incumbent to impress the electorate. This year therefore will be the culmination of the silent revolution that had been going on in the four corners of the state. We have exerted much efforts in job creation, agriculture, education, culture and tourism, roads, rural development, healthcare, social welfare, youth development, urban renewal and so on. These are overwhelmingly coming to fruition this year. It is indeed the year of great deliverance for the people. It is going to convince our people beyond any shadow of doubt that government indeed is serious business and will make the desired impact when serious people man it.

    This year will therefore bring the consolidation of the first phase of our pact with the people and the beginning of the next phase in our development march in Osun. I am as excited as I am sobered by the prospects that the year will yield for us in Osun, Nigeria, Africa and the world.

    Happy New Year.

  • We saw hell wrestling power from PDP- Osun commissioner, ACN scribe, others

    We saw hell wrestling power from PDP- Osun commissioner, ACN scribe, others

    The period between 2005 and 2007 is one that opposition groups and supporters of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Osun State, particularly the political associates of Governor Rauf Aregbesola, will not forget in a hurry. It was a time that many of them suffered harsh treatment in the hands of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP), led by the then Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola. For acting according to their conscience, members of the opposition parties, particularly those of the ACN, were rewarded with holidays in prison custody. For opposition groups, the environment was far from being clement; a situation that forced the lucky ones among them to flee the state for refuge elsewhere. And those who were not so lucky were consumed by the political crises that engulfed the state. Majority of the victims of the political upheaval have put the experiences behind them, but they have not forgotten the period described by some of them as the years of the locust. Some of the actors who claimed to have seen hell before a ruling by the Appeal Court nullified Oyinlola’s election as the governor of the state relive their experiences to GBENGA ADERANTI, as Governor Aregbesola marks the second anniversary of his administration.

    The Owonikoko family

    The story of the Owonikoko family is as shocking as it is interesting. For them, the period between 2005 and 2010 was a trying one. How else would they describe a situation where three members of the family were clamped into detention at the same time?

    One of them, Quadri, was remanded in prison for several years over an offence he insists he knew nothing about. His brother was also convicted of murder and he was awaiting the hangman’s noose before he was set free.

    An elderly member of the family, 71-year-old Suleiman Owoniko, was arrested a day after the April 14, 2007 governorship election in Osun State. According to him, he was arrested at about 1: 45 am and was taken to the police station. “There, I was tortured on a daily basis. The police were beating me with hot machete on a daily basis for 10 days before they sent me to Ilesha Prison. After spending 11 days in prison, I was set free,” he recalled.

    Suleiman was rearrested on November 11, 2009. This time, he was accused of killing somebody and was again remanded at Ilesha Prison.

    He said: “I spent three years, three months and nine days there. I was there when my mother died. I did not hear about my mother’s death until nine months after.

    “I fell sick. I was operated upon, yet I was not allowed any bail. I was at the General Hospital, Ilesha for four months and 14 days without being granted bail. But later, I was discharged and acquitted.”

    Today, Suleiman still bears the scar of the doctor’s knife on his stomach. But he is full of praises for Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesla who footed the bill for his treatment.

    Recalling how his son, Ahmed, was sentenced to death, he said: “I begged them to let me take his place but they would not listen.” The aged man said life has not been the same for him again because the power that be in Osun State between 2005 and 2007 ruined him. He said his businesses were crippled as a result of long term detention and the physical damages he suffered.

    Showing our correspondent the remnants of broken chairs which formed part of his rental business and the carcasses of his grinding machine that were left of his business, he said: “As at today, I am yet to recover. The thugs that invaded my house destroyed everything.”

    If Quadri had known the fate that awaited his family, he probably would have faced his cocoa business instead of dabbling into the murky waters of politics. But his resolve to serve his Oba Oke community in Olorunda Local Government Area as a councillor pushed him into politics.

    His problem started when the PDP took over the reins of government in Osun in 2003. He was the only candidate in his local government elected on the platform of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) after the 2003 election. According to him, his colleagues in the PDP chose not to have anything to do with him.

    His problem started when the PDP discovered that he had pitched his tent with Aregbesola in the ACN, which was then considered as the party’s arch rival.

    He said: “I saw hell from 2004 when the PDP took over the reins of power in Osun. In July 2004, my house was torched by PDP thugs. The house was completely burnt down.”

    Quadri was also one of the people manhandled during the 2005 Oroki Day celebration in Osogbo. In the melee that occurred during the event, Quadri was stripped naked by thugs believed to be loyal to the PDP.

    And after the 2007 governorship election in the state, events took a turn for the worse for Qaudri. He was declared wanted by the police. With his party winning the governorship election, thugs of the then PDP connived with security agents to invade his house.

    He said: “On April 17, I heard it on the radio that I was one of the people declared wanted by the police. By 2 am, a policeman led a team of Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) to my house. I scaled through the fence and walked a long distance to another town before I went to Lagos.”

    Since he was convinced that he did not commit any crime, he later returned to Osogbo and surrendered himself to the police alongside other ACN members like Alhaji Moshood Adeoti, who was the chairman of the party and now Secretary to the State Government; Prince Gboyega Famodun who is the current Secretary of the party; the late Hon. Biyi Adedotun and Alhaji Suleiman Aderemi.

    Unfortunately, they were remanded in prison.

    He said: “In my own case, the witness that police brought said I inflicted injuries on him on April 21, whereas I was nowhere near Osogbo on the said date. I left Osun State on April 17. I challenged the police to show me where I had inflicted bodily harm to their witness. Rather than listening to me, they detained us. In the morning, we were taken to the Magistrate’s Court. From there, we were remanded in Ilesha Prisons where we spent a week before we were sent to the Ife Prisons where we spent another 49 days before we were granted bail. The first three days we got to prison, none of us could sleep because the spirit of prison is something I can’t describe.”

    Although he was freed, he was later rearrested and he spent about three years in prison before Aregbesola came to his rescue.

    Besides the psychological trauma he went through, he said he lost money too. The house he rebuilt but was torched the second time by the PDP thugs remains in ruins. His cocoa store was destroyed and the thugs made away with N1.1 million worth of coacoa seeds. This was besides the two scales they damaged while his store was raided.

    “Since then I have not been able to rebuild the store and the house,” Quadri said.

    Ahmed has every cause to thank God. He had been sentenced to death but escaped the hangman by a whisker. Fully dressed in a Muslim outfit on a Monday morning, he cut the image of a man that would not hurt a fly. But for providence, he would have been killed for a crime he said he knew nothing about.

    He said: “It was on April 15 that SARS men invaded our house at Oba Oke. I was arrested and detained for three days in their office. They said I burnt somebody’s house in Osogbo. But when they could not pin anything on me, I was released. But that was not until they had made me to suffer.”

    If Ahmed had thought that was the end of the case, he was mistaken. On November 10, 2007, persons suspected to be PDP thugs allegedly invaded his shop, beat him up and arrested him alongside his father. He was accused of murder and they were remanded in prison. Ahmed was eventually convicted of murder. It was in the process of waiting for the hangman that he regained his freedom. He spent four years in prison.

    Recalling his prison experience, he said: “The situation in the prison yard was hellish. There was a thing we called ‘bound over’ or ‘no talking tone’. If you are sentenced to no talking tone, you weren’t allowed to talk or be talked to. It is only people that God really loves that go to prison and come back alive and are still useful to themselves and the society.”

    Ahmed said he knew from the time his case started that his travails would not consume him because he had shut his mind against his problems. “When I was sentenced to death, I said I was embarking on a journey and I would still return home. I did not kill anybody. I knew I was not going to die but live. The first thing I did was to shut my mind out of the good things of life and my wife, my children and material things that I possessed. I knew that if I had to think about those things I could die suddenly.”

    Ahmed is not happy that many who benefitted directly from their travails have looked the other way. “If not for the governor (Aregbesola), things would have been too tough for the family,” he said.

    Sunday Akere, Commissioner for Information

    Sunday Akere was the Director of Information and Strategy of the ACN between 2004 and 2011. Among the ACN chieftains, he would qualify as the most loathed by the PDP. A fearless man, Akere, who would most likely have been a gladiator in the old Roman Empire, was a thorn in the flesh of the PDP during the early days of the struggle to reclaim Aregbesola’s mandate.

    He was in charge of most of the articles and stories the ACN published in the media. For every move made by the ruling party, he had a counter-move, and he did this effectively. He was famous for saying things that hit the opponents where it hurt most.

    Several times, he was fortunate to escape from the claws of security agents and those who planned to ‘take care’ of him. He would have been arrested and detained long before the October 17 episode, but he was always lucky to have his ears close to the ground, especially in the camp of the then ruling party_.

    Right from the time that INEC declared that the ACN had lost the election, Akere knew there could be trouble for the ACN leaders. His fear was confirmed earlier than he had thought.

    He said: “I was in my house when the journalists that were covering the Magistrate’s Court called me and said the Magistrate had just declared me wanted and that I should be arrested anywhere they saw me. I did not take anything from my house that day. I could not drive into town again, so the only thing I did was to get two or three pieces of clothes and left the town.”

    For the about three and a half months that this lasted, Akere became a persona non grata in his homeland, and could not walk the streets of the state as a free man.

    “On the day I was to be arrested, as I was driving, I saw a Peugeot Boxer car coming behind me. The night before, I learnt that they arrested one of our leaders. I told my brother who was sitting beside me that the bus belonged to the police and I was sure they were coming for me. As I accelerated, they did the same thing. I slowed down and they did the same thing. And suddenly, four of them came down fully armed. They said I was under arrest. It was Sunday, September 17, 2008. I said they could not take me away unless I saw an arrest warrant. The man showed me the folder he was holding and brought out the arrest warrant that was signed by a Magistrate.” To his surprise, the warrant had been signed five months before the day he was arrested.

    As he was being taken away, he was not sure of what was going to happen. They all wore bullet-proof jackets and were carrying AK 47 guns. It was a harrowing experience. “Unfortunately, the day I was arrested, I was wearing a pair of shorts. And in detention, it was extremely cold. So, I had nothing to cover myself. I just squatted until morning. The detention room was full of faeces and smelled badly. I was put in the midst of the people that had been tortured by the police and were nursing their wounds.”

    It was a success of sorts for the special force because Akere was a big catch. Not minding his big frame, he was put in an overcrowded cell where sitting down or standing up was a luxury. At that point, for the first time since the struggle, Akere thought he might not survive. “Within minutes, they opened the detention camp where they were keeping hardened criminals and dropped me there. The following day, around 2 pm, the other leaders and I were arraigned. The Magistrate said a formal application for bail should be made. He said pending when the bail would be perfected, we should be remanded at Ile Ife Prisons.”

    But whatever hope Akere and his lawyer shared about his bail soon came to naught when they realised that the Magistrate had changed his earlier stance and refused to grant Akere and his co-accused persons bail. After the formal application had been perfected, there came another shocker for Akere.

    “The Magistrate said he had no formal jurisdiction, and that we should be remanded. Two weeks after they remanded us, we decided that our lawyer should go to the high court to fight for the enforcement of our human rights and he went.”

    It was a harrowing experience for Akere and his partners in prison. He said from the way they were being treated in detention, it was obvious that they wanted him dead. He said overtures were made to a fellow leader who was arrested with him to be released on bail while leaving Akere in the detention. Rather than consenting to what could be described as an easy way out, the man, according to Akere, insisted that the two of them were brought in together and would leave together.

    “They transferred the doctor at the clinic because he recommended that they should give us bail.

    “After four weeks, the High Court granted bail to the two of us, but with different conditions. While my partner was granted immediate bail, they said a public office holder, preferably a member of the House of Assembly, must sign my bail bond. Unfortunately, all the members of the House of Assembly then were on vacation in the US.

    “___You needed to be at the prison that day; it was an emotional thing when my partner insisted that he would not leave the prison; that he would prefer to stay with me. “Everybody was crying. I said it was just for seven days and that we have people who do all- round fasting for 21 or 41 days. I decided not to take any food from anybody except my blood relations for those seven days. But to the glory of God, it was an experience.”

    Gboyega Famodun, ACN scribe

    Soft-spoken Gboyega Famodun is the Secretary of the Action Congress of Nigeria in Osun State. He is a prince with the mien of a reverend gentleman. But his gentility is akin to that of a tiger, which is said to be no indication of timidity. He _ has the gift of displaying candour in the face of threat and oppression. And like Oyeduntan, he is not easily intimidated.

    Famodun was one of the arrowheads of the party when it started, which soon began to attract serious and deep-seated concern from the ruling party. “When we were eventually permitted to hold gatherings and rallies, they were done with fear. Most of the time, we were attacked,” he said while stating the plight of the ACN.

    As a way of intimidating the leaders of the ACN, they were declared wanted by the police, who claimed that they instigated the protest that followed the announcement of the results of the governorship election.

    This singular act forced the majority of the leaders of the ACN out of the town for three and a half years. Matters got to a head when 14 of the ACN leaders were declared wanted by the police.

    “I could recall one nasty incident. One day, after I had left home, about 20 policemen converged here looking for me. They came in the middle of the night, and when they did not see me, they returned very early in the morning. A lot of leaders and people died as a result of all these happenings. So, for three and a half years, one could recall some events and some others we couldn’t because the momentum was so high that about three times, we were put in prison for frivolous charges.

    “They used all the tricks in the books to get the leaders of ACN behind bars. The most ridiculous of all the charges was the issue of the explosion at the Osun State Secretariat, which was blamed on the ACN leaders. They were charged with attempted murder, arson, and when they were eventually detained, “the experiences were not too good,” Famodun said.

    He continued: “The situation looked like a script from the children television cartoon series, Tom and Jerry. They used other sinister and covert means to monitor the activities of the ACN leaders. For instance, the telephone lines of most of the leaders were bugged. But unknown to the PDP, the ACN leaders knew that their telephones were no longer safe to discuss strategies. We had to employ another strategy.”

    Famodun said the night before his house was invaded, he had received a warning from the most unlikely quarters. A stranger, who knew the details of the invasion plot called and asked him to run, warning him of the dire consequences of his failure to heed the advice.

    Fatai Oyedele, ACN chieftain

    Alhaji Fatai Oyedele aka Diekola was arrested at the wrong time. The two-time chairman of Osogbo Local Government was battling serious health problems when he was arrested. He was a chieftain of the PDP before he moved to the ACN.

    He said: “When I met Aregbesola in 2005, I told him that it was not going to be easy for us. They were ready for battle the moment they realised that I had pitched my tent with the ACN.

    “It was a long process. There were intimidations before the election. Even I had a meeting with Oyinlola a week to the election. I said: ‘Look, I don’t look back.’ As far as I was concerned, we were going to meet at the April 14 election.”

    He left for Lagos after he had made sure that his party won in his constituency. This angered the government and he was declared wanted. Because they were unable to arrest Diekola, his father was picked up. The old man was in detention for three weeks.

    Diekola was hauled into prison the day after he surrendered himself to the police. He was there for two weeks. “But they were very cautious because at that time, my health condition was bad. I told them that if I died there, their government was finished because I believed that my people would not allow that to go in vain.” He was later released.

    Israel Oyagbile, an activist

    Sixty-year-old pharmacist human rights activist, Israel Oyagbile, is excited that he is alive to tell the story of the trying times in Osun State. Oyagbile said it was a bad period for human rights activists, as they were molested not only by the government but security agencies too.

    “They molested us. Twenty four of us were arrested. We spent five days in police cell before they decided to take us to court,” he recalled.

    He said at a time, 24 of members of the human rights community in the state were clamped into Ilesha Prisons for participating in a protest against the government. He recalled that after they were released the first time, they became regular visitors to the prison yards in the state.

    “They were sending us to prison whenever there was going to be judgment at the tribunal, thinking that we would make trouble. Each time there was going to be judgment, they would cancel our bail and send us to prison,” he said

    Some of them would not forget in a hurry how they missed their examinations and the risks they had to take to attend court sessions in Osogbo from their hideouts in Lagos and other parts of the country. “But the spirit was there,” Oyagbile said with excitement.

    Sunday Laoye, deputy governor’s brother

    Sunday Laoye is the elder brother of the Osun State deputy governor, Titi Laoye-Tomori. The Gestapo invasion of his home at about 3.30 am on Tuesday, April 15, 2008 over the June 14, 2007 bomb blast at the Osun State Government Secretariat irked his friends and foes. Many were shocked that the old man could be linked to a bomb explosion at the Governor’s Office.

    On the day he was arrested, the 10 armed policemen who invaded his house in the early hours of the day didn’t disclose their identities or where they were taking him to. Those who were conversant with the political chess game that was playing out in Osun were not surprised because they saw it coming. He was a big factor as far as Osun politics was concerned.

    Laoye, a kingmaker of sorts in Osun State, had been a big loss to the PDP. His Renaissance Front was a force to reckon with in Osun. At the risk of being tagged boastful, he is not afraid to flaunt his influence.

    Recalling his travails, he said: “I was picked up by the police. They wanted me to implicate my good friend, my leader, the governor of Osun State, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, but I refused to do so. They took my statement away.

    “The following day, they sat me down. I was surrounded by three AK-43 guns, during interrogation.”

    After 33 days as a guest of SARS, he was taken back to the Magistrate’s Court. From there, he was sent to Ife Prisons. At Ife Prisons where he spent another 30 days, the experience changed. He was to share a cell with 32 other inmates in Cell B, Awaiting Trial Male (ATM).

    Having stayed with prison inmates for more than 30 days, he had become accustomed to prison life. So, when it was time to go, it became a problem of sorts. Although it was not the first time he would be detained, this time around, he had developed emotional attachment to the inmates. It became very difficult for him to leave the prison yard. It took some scolding from his wife to summon the courage to leave the prison yard.

    Recalling the experience, he said, “I was almost weeping. There was this emotional attachment.” In fact, he still has not forgiven himself that he did not say goodbye to the people that ‘accommodated’ him for more than 30 days in Ife Prisons.

    Gbenga Fayemiwo, Aregbe’s ex-media aide

    Fayemiwo knew the near-death implication of his actions when he decided to team up with the Aregbesola group to confront the opposition. As Aregbesola’s spokesperson during the turbulent times, the opposition gave him close monitoring.

    He said: “I was in my house on a certain night in 2006 when I received a strange telephone call. The person just called me, saying, ‘Gbenga, where are you?’ and I said I was in my house. Then he asked, ‘What are you doing?’ I said I was trying to sleep. He then said, ‘Leave that house now with your wife and children.’ Strangely, he hung up.”

    Shortly after the call, memories of what Aregbesola told the party members at the beginning of the struggle started flushing back. He did not need a seer to tell him that the brief encounter with a stranger, if not addressed, could spell doom. He knew he was in big trouble. Consequently, he became a nomad, moving from one place to another at the shortest notice.

    After surviving the first attempt on his life and those of his family, he started playing hide-and-seek with his assailants. But he was arrested while reporting a case to the police.

    According to him, “We got to the police headquarters in Osogbo so that I could report an incident I considered a crime. I thought I had a right to protect the law as a citizen. But immediately a police chief saw me, he ordered my arrest. I was taken back to Ibokun for detention.”

    All efforts to explain his actions to the police chief fell on deaf ears. At Ibokun, the accuser became the accused. “My ordeal started from there. They ordered me to write a statement. I wrote a statement and I was transferred to the state’s CID, where the case was being investigated. Consequently, the accused person that we brought now turned to be a witness against me.”

    He was later left off the hook. He had a long spell of freedom before he was arrested and detained again in 2009.

    Layi Oyeduntan, former commissioner

    Those who know Layi Oyeduntan, a former health commissioner and local government chairman in Osun State, would tell you that he does not brook nonsense. A devout Muslim, Oyeduntan has been described by close associates as having the spine of steel.

    Unfortunately for Oyeduntan, he also became a target. And it was an open secret that he was Aregbesola’s friend.

    He said: “There were assassination attempts, threats and, of course, all kinds of harassment. This continued until we won the nomination of the party and then it became full blown. During the campaign for the governorship, we were attacked with guns and cutlasses.

    “We experienced all manner of harassments to the extent that at the Oroki Day 2006 celebration, our candidate, Aregbesola, was virtually manhandled and prevented from honouring my invitation to the festival.”

    Knowing that coming to the PDP would weaken the opposition, entreaties were made to him to defect. But rather than do so, he acted his conscience and stayed put in the ACN. Unfortunately, the bubble burst on the evening of October 18, 2008 when at about 8 pm, some men invaded his house.

    “They came to my house early evening, around 7:30 pm and with blazing guns. They shot their way into my premises, killed my guard dog and put the residents under severe and terrible intimidation at gun point. Fortunately for me, they were unable to get into the house.”

    It was in the heat of the invasion that he called his friend, the then governor, Prince Oyinlola, for assistance. Although Oyinlola was then outside the country, he promised to help.

    “By the way, Oyinlola is a friend, and he is still a friend. I had known him even before Osun; we played golf together. He is a friend of quite a large number of people. I refused to join the PDP.

    “At that time, I thought I was being attacked by armed robbers. I made calls to several people, including the Commissioner of Police. A lot of people from outside the state started making calls, seeking to know what was going on and whether to mobilise the police to my side.”

    He was shocked when he discovered later that the intruders were working in tandem with the police. “The police told me they knew they were arresting me. There were witnesses to the assault. I was never invited by the police. There was no warrant of arrest.”

    With the gunmen gaining access into his compound and his guard dog killed, it was still impossible to arrest him. The steel doors of his house were too much of a task for the them to break down. As this was going on, the ‘drama’ was being reported on TVC.

    “When they were frustrated and some neighbours came out and it was impossible for them to continue the dastardly act anymore, I surrendered and was taken away from the house.

    “From about 9 pm to10 pm, they could not determine what to do with me. It was around 3 am that they decided to charge me with throwing bombs.

    “It was so strange. I was told to write a statement on the bomb explosion that occurred at the Secretariat, and I kept asking, ‘Which bomb? What bomb in Osogbo?

    “They asked me to write a statement on bombs. I was never a soldier, and I couldn’t imagine bomb. I became frustrated and refused to write any statement. I spent two days in detention before I was sent to jail. We were remanded in the prison, where we spent 33 days.’’_

     

  • Readers’ comments

    Readers’ comments

    Communication among humans is a two-way track. It may be oral or written. If it is oral, there must be a listener (or listeners) while the speech is on. If it is written, a reader (or readers) must have read the written thoughts of the writer before reacting. This logical process is generally recognised as the etiquette of communication. A one-way communication is either a sign of despotism or no communication at all. And such can only at best create a situation for soliloquy or monologue.

    As a participatory column the only means of confirming that ‘The Message’ is globally read is to get reactions from its readers which may be randomly published in this column. For each weekly outing of ‘The Message’ there are scores of reactions from various sectors of the society home and abroad. Such reactions are a proof that preaching is like mud bitten with a stick. When it splashes to all directions, not even the preacher will be spared. Below is a cluster of examples especially in respect of last Friday’s article in this column.

    The contents of last week’s article in ‘The Message’ about Hijrah holiday (as constitutionally declared by Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola) was precipitated by the obvious mediocrity displayed in the editorial comment of a self acclaimed ‘most widely read newspaper in Nigeria’ based in the Southwest of the country. It will be recalled that the points marshalled to counter that editorial in this column were meant to put the falsehood arrogantly exhibited in the said editorial to shame while letting Nigerians know that some elements in our local media are like rolling stones that gather no substance.

    A newspaper is worth the quality of its editorial. If the editorial of a supposed foremost newspaper in Nigeria could be what was published in that paper on November 20, 2012, one can then imagine the real weight of such a paper and that of the forces behind it in concrete terms. In the intellectual realm, monopoly of knowledge is surely an anathema to which only an ignoramus can condescend. Journalism is a major segment of that realm. It is only a nonentity that will rubbish intellectualism in that realm by not conceding facts to where or who facts belong. Professional charlatans are known not only by their naivety but also by their insistence on ignorance even where and when knowledge has been evidently established. This was the case with the pedestrian editorial written to draw the public into unwarranted controversy.

    Religion, as we all know is perhaps the most volatile issue to handle in the media. That is why a renowned poet came up with the following relevant stanza:

    “There are good men in every land; the tree of life has many branches and roots; let not the topmost twig presume to think that it alone has sprung from the mother earth; we did not choose our races by ourselves; Jews, Muslims, Christians, all alike are men; let me hope I have found in you a man”.

    It may be necessary here to recall the genesis of the ongoing media campaign by a fanatical newspaper against Osun State Governor if only as a reminder. In his holiday declaration speech, Governor Aregbesola stated inter alia thus:

    “When we gathered here last year, the Muslim Community requested for three things: that the Islamic lunar year should be officially recognized. We did not give immediate response to this request. We only said if God so permits, we would assist Muslims in the state to celebrate the New Lunar Year. We are grateful to God that He grants us the opportunity to make it. This is beyond human capacity. I am glad that as a Muslim, God used me to make this day.

    There is a difference between how days are counted in Islam as against the way it is done outside Islam. A fresh day commences after sunset. A day ends after Maghreb (early evening) prayers. Many Muslims do not know this. In Islam, a fresh day commences after sunset. The scholars will explain this further….

    “So, we have been having this celebration for Muslims to also know that they have their own way of taking counts of periods of day, days of the month and months of the year.

    I therefore rejoice with Muslims of the world. We thank God for granting us the opportunity to witness this new lunar year. May God make it a blessed year for us all. Amin!….

    It is pertinent to state that whatever affects the eyes, gets to the nose. The turmoil currently being recorded in the northern parts of the country is affecting both ends of the North and other parts of the country. Those who take eggs to the North for commerce now feel the effect. They have nowhere to take them to; just as those who buy goods from there no longer have that opportunity. These are the consequences of instability. That is why we need to pray that God grants us peace, stability and tranquility. We should pray that He gives us the grace to live in harmony.

    The world has changed from the trend of brazen and crude imposition; hence we need to ask God to grant us the grace to relate with one another peacefully.

    Let us ask ourselves; what does Islam require of us? Does Islam preach hooliganism or violence? The little knowledge I have concerning the religion is not as much as many of the scholars here today. However, the little I know of the religion tells me that a high sense of decency is required of every Muslim. Islam preaches such virtues as due respect for all creations, humility, tolerance and obedience to God and all properly constituted authorities. This must be practiced by whoever professes the faith. Allah states in (Quran, Chapter 3 verse 110) that Muslims are the group he created to enjoin goodness among people and forbid evil. If this is what Allah says of us; should any Muslim be nefarious? A Muslim that engages in bad act contravenes God’s injunction….

    As a demonstration of the impact of this celebration, I enjoin all Muslims of the world; starting from those in Osun, to move away from vices. Let us move away from hypocrisy and other bad lifestyles. Let us be good examples in every sense. It is best that we stand out as good examples for people around us always. A school established by a Muslim should be the best in terms of administration, dissemination of knowledge, and character building. Also in commerce, a Muslim trader should be a best exemplar of his trade; so that people would say if you want to have good bargain, go and get it from ‘“Iya Sikirah”’. In addition, as civil servants, Muslims should take the lead in diligence at work. Every Muslim should be a good exemplar.

    “…..Every Muslim here today and those that would be listening to me elsewhere should be reminded that this year’s celebration is a re- awakening. For us to admit that we are really celebrating, we should get back to our various homes and say to ourselves “I relinquish my bad ways no matter how little. I want to be God’s representative on earth in good deed”. May God make it easy and possible for us to accomplish. Amin. Secondly, do not relent in supplicating to God. Our state requires prayer; just as we personally do. Every living soul requires supplications to God.

    I would like to urge us all according to what God says in Suratul-An Nissai (Quran Chapter 4). He enjoins that we be fair to everybody; not to Muslims alone, even if it is against our interest. We get this injunction in Nisaa (chapter 4 verse 135), yes. He says we should do justice even if it hurts our parents, our loved ones, self etc….I would not go further than this. As we are happy and celebrating our New Year now; we should take cognizance that there are some others who desire to have their own festivals that government has not so far given recognition. If we do so don’t be hurt. We would only be following God’s injunction to be just….”

    Despite this self-explanatory address by the Governor, the zealot newspaper in question ignorantly but arrogantly engineered a media brouhaha over the issue with the aim of causing religious hostility among the people who have all along lived together in harmony. It was in reaction to that unwarranted fanatical provocation that ‘The Message’, as usual, came out to put the records straight in this column last Friday.

    Even the Osun State Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) issued a statement rejecting any alleged religious hostility in the State. According to him, “the celebration of Hijrah in the state does not disturb us as Christians and we don’t have anything against it. There was no Christian that calls to show any displeasure to it or complaint from any quarters because we believe that it is promoting Islam. I as the Chairman of CAN in the state I sent congratulatory message to Sheikh Mustapha Ajisafe and Governor Rauf Aregbesola on the celebration to wish them well”. Aladeseye who admonished all to tolerate one another, maintained that the nation could only develop where there was peace and stability emphasising that there was peace in the state and calling on residents of the state to give the current administration maximum support to succeed.

    He also disclosed that most religious issues were resolved at National Religious Council (NAREC) meeting in the state adding that the controversy surrounding the use of hijab in public schools had been resolved amicably at the meeting. According to him, “Governor Rauf advised us to go and resolve the matter at the NAREC meeting where agreement was reached that it should not be enforced at the Christian Public Schools across the state and one year after, there has been evidence that the matter had been put to rest.

    In its own comment on this issue, the Muslim Association of Nigeria congratulated the Governor and good people of Osun “for this unique performance in recognizing the yearnings of the Muslim Community and their right with a declaration of Hijrah holiday. To us this will foster unity among various religious groups in the state and usher in peace and economic development. This is a state to watch for good things in years to come in Nigeria. Alhaji Yusuf Sulaiman, President of MAN.

    Also in a lengthy comment digging deep into the archive of Islam in Nigeria, a veteran journalist and former, manager of programmes, North Africa and Overseas service in Voice of Nigeria (VON) who was also the National Missioner, Muslim Association of Nigeria (MAN), Sheikh Najmudden Binuyo stated in part as follows:

    “The people of Osun, especially Christians in the state, who are well aware that the Governor has good intentions, are certainly not complaining. The state chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Evangelist Abraham Aladeseye confirmed this during a chat with journalists on the matter. The venerable man of God stated that Christians in the state are not against the declaration of the Hijrah holiday. “I even sent congratulatory messages to Governor Aregbesola and the chairman of the League of Imams and Alfas. We Christians don’t have anything against it,” he said. So, why is this particular newspaper crying more than the bereaved?

    On its own, the National Council of Muslim Youth Organisations (NACOMYO) views with serious concern controversial editorial of Tuesday, November 20, 2012 (p.18) in a Southwest based newspaper. But we were not surprised that the newspaper in question viewed the decision Governor Aregbesola on declaration of holiday for Muharram 1 (Islamic New Year) as “odd and totally uncalled for”. The newspaper proceeded from a perverted logic when it asserted that “many predominantly Muslim states do not even have public holidays for hejira” (sic).

    For avoidance of doubt, Hijrah is remarkably significant to Islam both in form and in content as it represents for Muslims an epoch-making event that culminated in the rapid growth of Islam from Madinah. Hijrah, in fact, exemplifies the basis of the mutual understanding between the Muslim global community and the people of other beliefs, especially the Christians and the Jews.

    It (Hijrah) symbolises for Muslims, movement from dehumanising oppression to liberty, escape from danger to security, exodus from ignorance to knowledge, abstinence from corruption, adoption of accountability, eradication of infanticide and disentanglement of women from the bestiality of the ignorant past (Jahiliyyah) as well as general transformation of humanity from all traits of evil to the illuminating light of Islam. These and many others which are hardly found in other religions are the causes of envy that might have led a section of Nigerian media to grow so wild.

    Nevertheless, despite any unwarranted provocation, we, as Muslims in the Southwest, will continue to discuss our differences, in good faith as we have always done, to avoid any recourse to actions that may threaten our peaceful co-existence, as brothers and sisters, in a just and united Nigeria. By Mustapha Balogun

    Chairman, NACOMYO, Southern Zone