Tag: OSUN

  • Pray for successful poll in Osun, Aregbesola tells intending pilgrims

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has urged intending pilgrims to Saudi Arabia to pray for the successful conduct of next month’s governorship election in the state when they arrive in the holy land.

    The governor said the prayers became necessary since this year’s Hajj is the closest to any election held in the state since he assumed office about eight years ago.

    Aregbesola spoke during a farewell ceremony at the state secretariat in Osogbo, the state capital, for this year’s pilgrims from the state.

    The governor urged the 599 intending pilgrims from the state to seek God’s guidance for free, fair, credible and peaceful election.

    He said: “We need prayers for the success of the governorship election as it is not a coincidence that this year’s Hajj is the closest period to our governorship election since we assumed office almost eight years ago.

    “So, the only thing I need from you (intending Hajj pilgrims) is to pray for the success of the 2018 governorship election in the state because we want peace to continue to reign in our state.

    “Since Saudi Arabia is the Holy Land where prayers are answered, I want you all to dedicate prayers for the free, fair, credible and peaceful election to elect a worthy successor who will continue from where we will stop.

    “However, it is on records that Osun has witnessed all-round growths and development in all aspects of life, a feat that can never be allowed to stop.

    “We have recorded giant strides in all sectors, we have made a difference in the socio-economic and political landscape of our state as these claims could be attested to in the successes we made in the last seven and a half years of our administration.

    “So, we appeal to our people to continue to support our administration and display same gesture by voting for continuity as our state cannot afford to be backward again.”

    The Commissioner for Home Affairs, Dr. Simeon Obawale Adebisi, said 599 intending pilgrims were leaving the state for this year’s Hajj in Saudi Arabia.

    He said: “The last editions of Hajj were success stories. It is our plan and hope that this year’s exercise will be much more successful in terms of planning, execution and result.

    “At the beginning of this year, the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) in Abuja allocated 964 Hajj seats to the state on the strength of which forms were sold to the public and people from other states.

    “For this year’s Hajj, 599 self-sponsored pilgrims and officials are embarking on the holy journey to Saudi Arabia.

    “To make adequate arrangement, the preparation for this year’s Hajj started last November with the interview and screening of intending pilgrims to ensure their physical, medical and spiritual fitness for the exercise.

    “Mr Governor has magnanimously approved all the expenses for the board to organise the Hajj operation and our pilgrims have been provided with uniform dress, bags, Saudi sim cards among other incentives.”

     

  • Osun: Looking back, looking forward

    Guess how the Osun governorship electioneering would go?

    Davido belts out sexy and seductive music.  Uncle, and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, Ademola Nurudeen Adeleke aka Jackson (though, no Michael) turns instant amoeba, with neither shape nor form, in a fit of free-wheeling caper.

    The dancing senator, in his true elements, earns boisterous and thunderous roar, as the merry campaign partisans catch the fire!

    Reminds you — doesn’t it? — of the Biblical King David, doing his vigorous twist-and-turn, before the Ark of Covenant; a wild gyration that drew an instant rebuke from Queen Michal, Saul’s daughter, who felt it was scandalously un-kingly?

    But that itself drew David’s counter-rebuke: Michal’s womb would never bulge with babies; or her legs ever leap with joy, while cuddling infants — a dire decree with Jehovah’s final seal!

    Still, this Jackson caper can’t be to high Jehovah?  No.  But to the low voter, baited to use his heart, not his head.

    From the Iyiola Omisore end, if the impasse over the Social Democratic Party (SDP) ticket gets resolved in his favour?  Perhaps bewitching claims bordering on flagrant untruths; and threats, rude and crude, bordering on the sinister.

    And from the Osun traditional politicians, progressive, conservative or reactionary?  Hot bile over “Tekobo” (returned Lagos emigre) versus the home-bred — sterile controversies that add nothing to wise voting.

    Then, blatant lies; vicious and virulent personality attacks, laced with wicked rumours, that turn the voter into an unthinking, self-destruct mob.

    It’s the old Osun bile-driven electioneering, to whip up base instincts.

    But it has always proved the Biblical wide and merry way, that leads nowhere but perdition and eventual gnashing of teeth, by that same mob, when the emotions ebb.

    Flashback 2003.  Governor Bisi Akande — not the best of glib politicians, being blunt to a fault — was heckled out of office.

    Baba Akande got pummelled, as the hated apostle of enduring present pains for future comfort.  It was a classic mob verdict, all passion, no reason.

    But his replacement?  Almost eight years of near-total paralysis, under Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola.  Of course, you can’t claim Oyinlola did “nothing”, as excitable partisans are wont to argue and ripple.

    But whatever he did, almost everything about Osun headed south, until the Rauf Aregbesola restoration years, starting 2010, after a three-year judicial battle to reclaim the stolen mandate of 2007.

    Even then, the Osun Government Secretariat at Abere, complete with the Bola Ige House, the Governor’s Office Complex, was the grand vision Akande left behind to mock the Oyinlola-era ruins — and the voters’ grand folly.

    So, what should the Osun voter do, in the midst of the unimaginable din of electioneering?  Look back, before looking forward.

    That way, (s)he can make an informed decision on the ballot.  How was Osun seven years ago?  How would (s)he want it to be four years from now?

    Security?  Kwara was created, first as West-Central State; shortly later, Kwara State, in 1967.  It was one of the original 12 states, created from the four 1st Republic regions, of North, East, West and Midwest, by Gen. Yakubu Gowon.  Osun was created in 1991.

    Yet, the Offa robbery of 2018, probably the worst in that state’s history, caught Kwara napping.  For Osun, however, it was a glorious “so near, yet so far away”, for Offa is virtually Osun’s next door.

    Crime could happen anywhere.  But it was no accident such a hideous robbery didn’t take place in neighbouring Okuku (in Osun) or even relatively far-away Lagos.

    The difference is clearly the rigour Osun put into its security architecture, these past eight years, contrasted to the relatively sloppy thinking across the border.  Yet, Osun is 26; Kwara, 50.

    Yeah, at a time, such robberies were common place in Lagos, Kwara’s 1967 contemporary.  But again, by sheer superior thinking, such became history in Lagos.

    Education.  Eight years ago, how many of those futuristic schools dotted the Osun skyline?  How many kids were being daily fed, at the lowest rung of the Osun school system?  Indeed, how many of these kids, from the poorest of the poor, were even in school?

    Yet, barely two years into the period of reference, the Nigerian economy collapsed, no thanks to the cumulative rot in the Goodluck Jonathan presidency, precipitating the nationwide salary crisis.

    But pray, how many states lugged that burden, yet didn’t allow its education and youth empowerment vision to be impaired?  Again, ode to superior, if punishing, thinking!

    Infrastructure.  For eons, the Gbongon junction, on the Ibadan-Ife Expressway, like the Mobalufon junction, Ijebu Ode, on the Sagamu-Benin Expressway, was the grave of many travellers, victims of avoidable road crashes.

    Now, that junction boasts the Bisi Akande trumpet bridge.  Sure, many may crow about its beauty, as a novel landscape.  But its most vital intervention, again thanks to smart thinking, is saving life.  Travellers, that Gbongan grave is sealed, forever!

    Still, that trumpet blares Osun’s great infrastructural strides, these past eight years.  Yet, it was a period of high adversity!  With high prosperity, what might it have been?

    The Oba Adesoji Aderemi ring road, Osogbo, serves as the bewitching beauty of that new thinking, which manifests, like dazzling pearls, in the Osogbo city centre!

    Yet, there is nothing like infrastructure for infrastructure’s sake.  Though still work-in-progress, history would laud these efforts as critical drivers to prise Osun off its economic puddle, as “civil service state”.

    A civil service state is a euphemism for economic stagnancy.  That had been the fate of Osun, since creation in 1991, till these past eight years.

    Despite this delicate upswing, if you peruse the Osun Media & Allies Forum, a WhatsApp Osun community news forum, you could sense some renaissance flaring, on the Osun plain of sports.

    Sundry posts, on that forum, include a community cricket test at Ilesa, the Ogunjobi Gold Cup, a yearly youth football championship for U-20 and below, some Osun youths winning continental titles in weightlifting and canoeing, and some inter-collegiate basketball championships, using as hubs, the courts in the new government high schools.

    Again, these are just no accidents.  They are natural responses to certain policy stimuli, which is the way to go — just as the raft of hotels and event centres, that now dot the Osogbo city centre and other Osun major towns, are the logic of business following better infrastructure.

    As electioneering hots up, a lot of passion would burn around “afsa” (the Osun cynical street lingo for “half salary”).

    The “debt burden” would be amplified and especially vilified, with sloppy thinkers and blabby talkers waxing poetic but empty.

    Opposing partisans would howl, scream and bawl about scandals, real or imagined, in a sweeping condemnation of the present order — hardly undemocratic!

    Still, all things considered, even after addressing the valid queries, is Osun better now than it was eight years ago?

    Osun’s future is best secured by a higher notch of the current policies.  Anything less, the state risks a tragic drop into Oyinlola-era ruins.

  • SDGs: Nigeria may miss 2030 deadline on sanitation, access to safe water

    Nigeria may likely not meet the 2030 Sustainable Development Goal 6, with the continuous decline in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH), it was learnt.

    The SDG goal 6 states that countries must achieve universal and equitable access to potable water for all achieve access to adequate sanitation and hygiene for all and end open defecation.

    The Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS 5) has revealed that access to basic sanitation has steadily reduced in Nigeria between 2000 and 2015.

    This is as 70 million people still lack access to potable water despite efforts by governments and partners.

    The survey also revealed that open defecation has worsened between 2010 and 2015.

    According to the report, Sanitation in the country is quite alarming, as over 110 million people lack access to improved sanitation in 2013 while about 46 million people still practice open defecation.

    Open defecation and poor hygiene have been linked to increased diarrhoea cases, which in turn affects the nutritional status of children. Every year, an estimated 124,000 children under the age of 5 die because of diarrhoea.

    Though there are efforts to address the situation through the European Union (EU) assisted Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Reform Project (WSSSRP) has continued to build strong institutions and systems for effective and sustainable water services delivery.

    Six states which include Anambra, Cross River, Jigawa, Kano, Osun and Yobe states are benefiting from the initiative.

    Speaking during a recent media dialogue on WASH in Anambra State, a specialist with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Mainga Banda, said about 130 million Nigerians use unimproved sanitation facilities, with majority of them living in rural areas.

    Read Also: Soldiers embark on sanitation, sweep Kaduna streets

    Mrs Banda, while quoting the MICS5 published in 2017, said that over 46 million people still practice open defecation, which ranks Nigeria 3rd among countries in the world with such people.

    She said, “Despite all effort, sanitation is declining instead of improving and this calls for concern. The trend in water availability between year 2000 and 2015 revealed that the gradient is going up instead of declining, same with sanitation especially in the rural area.

    “WASH plays a critical role in improving health, nutrition and hygiene in Nigeria. So it is a necessity for Nigeria to curb issues of water borne and sanitation related diseases to meet its SDG 6 by 2030,” she said.

    Mrs Banda also noted that most people in rural areas still lack latrines, basic hand washing tools, among others, ”which if not provided will keep worsening sanitation in the country”.

    A visit to Ononaku Ezinifite, a community in Aguata LGA, Anambra State with over 2,000 residents, reveals the benefit of the project to the people, especially those in the rural communities.

    The secretary, WASHCOM unit in the community, Ike Christian, said the project has relieved them (residents) of a lot of stress.

    He noted that before the introduction and completion of the project, children used to go to a distance to fetch water for home use and ”people made use of the nearby bushes to defecate.”

    Mr Ike said since the provision of the facilities, there has not been reported cases of any water-borne disease in the community. He added that people now take care of their environment “because of the orientation they are getting from WASHCOM officials in the community”.

    He also said the officials are making efforts to ensure that the facility is secured.

    A resident of the community, Nathan Ofoma, said since the completion of the project, people no longer defecate openly.

    He laments that before now, residents rely majorly on rain water  “as there is no single river in the community”.

    The Programme Manager, Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (RUWASSA), Ministry of Public Utilities and Water Resources, Anambra State, Ezekwo Victor said the state government was committed to WASH. He also said they have ”completed 33 water supply schemes, the compilation of phase 11 rehabilitation works for non-functional boreholes, among others.”

    He noted that the state has also rehabilitated 116 non-functional boreholes across the state.

    The project was co-funded by EU and the Anambra State government with 70 per cent EU/UNICEF support and 30 per cent from the state government. It was a public procurement concept awarded to the lowest bidder.

  • Two drivers face manslaughter charge in Osun

    Two drivers Yemi Fasooto and Dada Segun were on Friday brought before an Ile-Ife Magistrates’ Court in Osun for knocking down a pedestrian on a highway.

    The accused were, however, released on bail in the sum of N200,000 each with two sureties each in like sum after pleading not guilty.

    The accused Fasooto, 40 and Segun, 30  whose addresses were not provided, are facing a three-count charge of conspiracy, reckless driving and manslaughter.

    According to the Prosecutor, Insp. Sunday Osanyintuyi, the duo committed the offences on July 3 at 8.00 pm at Fasina on Ile-Ife-Ibadan Expressway.

    Osanyintuyi said the accused drove a Vanette bus with registration no. FFE 357 AE and a BMW car marked GGE 675 DC recklessly and caused the death of a pedestrian, Elutide Yemi.

    Read Also: Police nab one chance robbers in Edo

    The offences contravened Sections 81 of the Road Traffic Law and Section 135 of the State Criminal Code.

    Counsel to the accused, Mr Nicolas Babatunde, urged the court to grant them bail on liberal terms, promising they will not jump bail.

    In his ruling, Magistrate Olalekan Ijiyode granted the duo bail in the sum of N200,000 each with two sureties each in like sum.

    Ijiyode said the sureties should swear to affidavit of means and should also reside within the court’s jurisdiction.

    In addition, one of the sureties should be a civil servant of not less than Grade Level 04, while the other surety should be a relation of the accused.

    The case was adjourned until Aug. 3 for mention.

  • ‘How Osun is using technology to checkmate farmers/herders clash’

    Osun State has taken refuge in technology to nip potential farmers/herders clash that has claimed millions of lives in some parts of the country in the bud.

    Commissioner for Innovation, Science and Technology, Oluremi Omowaye, who spoke in an interview with The Nation in Lagos, said the government has put in place an inquiry call centre and invested heavily in unmanned aerial vehicles that would gather data and relay same to the centre which would be analysed for action.

    According to Omowaye, the response of the Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s government to the menace of herder/farmers incessant clashes was to think out of the box for a technological solution that would allow seamless flow of information about the movement of livestocks and their owners across the state.

    He said: “We needed to set up an inquiry call centre and we needed a short code so that it will be easy for people to reach us.  We approached the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) which granted us the code after detailed presentation by our team.

    “This technology will be deployed this week using unmanned aerial vehicles that would interface with the call centre. We want a scenario whereby all livestock in Osun would have a unique individual identity so that when a livestock strays into your farm, all you need to do is text the first three digits to the short code issued by the NCC and once you do that you will get a response from the call centre to check the owner.

    “From the call centre too, the owner would be called. Aside that, we are also going to use it for other services such as ambulance services because in the call centre, you have the security operatives too so, we thank the NCC for quick response.

    ‘’I know the NCC is trying to establish a call centre at in Osun so we have an agreement that when they come up with their own, we will.’’

    On supportive infrastructure on which the technology would ride, he said the state is one of the leading states in the federation in terms of the providing infrastructure.

    He said:  “Osun is one of the leading infrastructure states in Nigeria. Governor Aregbesola has opened up a lot of roads, health and educational infrastructure. The government is even working in the area of electricity since it is the major challenge IT has. We are working on boosting power generation in the state but one thing that is unfortunate is that companies do not pay tax.

    “There is no government that can function well without paying tax. What is coming from Abuja cannot pay salaries so we enjoin the companies to cooperate with the state government and pay tax. I am sure with the level of investment in infrastructure so far, Osun is the place to be for investors, both local and foreign.

    “We are deploying IT solutions to ease tax collection but no matter the solution you deploy, computer is garbage; garbage out, if they do not cooperate, it won’t work. But we have deployed a lot of solutions that will enhance tax collection. There is always this allegation of multiple taxation by state governments too. We have also deployed solution that would end the regime of multiple taxation in the state.”

    On the monthly internally generated revenue (IGR) of the state, he said it is less than N1billion while the wage bill for both employees of the state and local governments is above N5billion, stressing that a lot needed to be done in the area of increasing the state’s IGR so that the monthly wait for Abuja would become a thing of the past.

    On the state of the art infrastructure put in place in the state, he said: “What Governor Aregbesola has done Osun is a world-class design, world class standard. The government encourages that the two ducts were built so that not only fibre optics would fly. The government is also thinking of building an industrial park so that the infrastructure would not be scattered all over the state. We are working on the industrial park. We are also talking to some Chinese investors for the industrial park and in the park, there will be a segment for IICT park,” Omowaye said.

  • Osun 2018: Issues, factors that’ll determine outcome

    As the September 22 governorship poll in Osun State draws closer, Sunday Oguntola writes on factors and issues that will produce the winner

    WITH the conclusion of primaries by contending parties in the September 22 Osun governorship election, the race for the successor of Governor Rauf Aregbesola has become wholly heightened.

    Chief of Staff to Aregbesola, Gboyega Oyetola, emerged the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate while Senator Demola Adeleke will fly the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) flag.

    Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Moshood Adeoti, did not only withdraw from the APC’s primary but also resigned his membership of the party. He went on to pick the governorship ticket of the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

    The Social Democratic Party (SDP) held two parallel primaries that produced former Deputy Governor, Senator Iyiola Omisore and Munirudeen Atanda. But the National Chairman of the party, Chief Olu Falae, has thrown his weight behind Omisore, allegedly because of his war chest and perceived electoral value.

    The leading candidates

    Political observers believe the governorship contest is largely a three-horse race, involving Oyetola, Adeleke and Omisore. Incidentally, the candidates hail respectively from the three senatorial districts in the Southwest state. Oyetola (Osun Central), Adeleke (Osun West) and Omisore (Osun East) are not only the candidates to watch out for; informed analysts said one of them is certainly guaranteed to mount the governorship seat. This conclusion is primarily based on the perceived popularity of the individual candidates and the strength of the political parties they are flying their flags.

    Party/ candidate strength

    On the account of being the ruling party, the APC is considered the strongest in the contest. Aside from the power of incumbency, the party is believed to be the choicest among Osun indigenes with mass membership across the 30 local government areas.

    Its candidate, Oyetola has also adopted the Ileri Oluwa(God’s promise) slogan for his campaign, a slang that sits well with most of the voters. He is seen as a technocrat and the engine room of the policy thrust of the Aregbesola’s administration. The governor, even critics acknowledge, has performed creditably well in the areas of health, education, road construction, agricultural upliftment and civil service reforms, among others.

    With the perception that he represents continuity of the developmental strides in Osun State, Oyetola is highly favoured to clinch the governorship seat. There is the belief in many quarters that a change of party and government might reverse the many policy directions of Aregbesola that brought about massive development.

    The Iragbiji-born politician has wide experience in public administration, finance management, private business and politics. Unlike other Chiefs of Staff who run into troubled waters, Oyetola has managed to traverse the intricate pitfalls in the office, building confidence with his principal, the public and political class without rocking the boat.

    For this, he has the utmost trust of critical stakeholders in governance, winning wide thump-up for his conflict skills. The insurance expert established Silvertrust Insurance Brokers Limited in 1991, serving as its Managing Director from 1991 until he emerged Chief of Servant in 2011.

    He bagged a Bachelor in Insurance in 1978 from University of Lagos and Master of Business Administration (MBA) in 1990 from the same institution. In 1980, he joined Leadway Assurance Company Limited as Area Manager.

    In 1987, he left for Crusader Insurance Company Limited as Underwriting Manager. In 1990, he moved to Alliance and General Insurance as Technical Controller and served in that capacity until 1991.

    If narrowed down to popularity and what government sources describe as ‘competence,’ Oyetola is seen as the most favoured to win the race.

    But he faces stiff opposition from Adeleke, who is from a political family with mass followership.  The senator is also running on the strength of calls for power shift to Osun West, which his supporters pointed out, has not produced a governor since the late Senator Isiaka Adeleke in the Third Republic. What he has going for him is the political dynasty the family has built for decades in the state.

    The PDP on which ticket he is flying has however suffered serious misfortunes since former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola was thrown out of office by the Court of Appeal. The primary that produced him was keenly contested with Dr. Akin Ogunbiyi, who lost by a meagre seven votes that left a bitter pill to swallow for Ogunbiyi supporters.

    Ogunbiyi did not only reject the primary, describing it as rigged, he also proceeded to court to contest the educational qualifications of Adeleke. This is after he sent a petition to the Primary Appeal Committee. Ogunbiyi’s antagonistic and combative moves are seen as polarising just few weeks to the governorship poll.

    They have left PDP supporters in the state heavily divided and disillusioned over the disunity among their leaders. Adeleke is hugely popular in Osun West, especially in his Ede hometown. He also has the means to prosecute an electoral battle of this magnitude.

    Should the court decide in favour of Ogunbiyi on the qualification suit, the PDP might be left with no choice than to adopt him as its candidate. But even if Adeleke wins, the party will still have battles to face in healing wounds and building consensus among supporters and stakeholders.

    Either way, it would be too close to the election for the party to mend fences and face others as a formidable entity.

    Though Omisore has left the PDP, there is no doubt many of his supporters are still holding out to fight the party from within. Without united front consisting supporters of Ogunbiyi and remnant forces of Omisore, it is hard to see how far the PDP will go at the September 22 poll.

    Omisore, the third force, is certainly not a pushover in Osun State’s politics. He is blessed with vast war chest and a cult-like followership, especially in many parts of Osun East, which he once represented at the Senate.

    But he is seen as a politician with too much baggage, which was why the PDP was happy not to give him the governorship ticket in the first place. Besides, some voters in the state are believed to be indisposed to having anything to do with him, no matter what. With a depleted support base and weak party structure, Omisore’s quest to govern may remain a mirage.

    Plans for Osun

    The three candidates have unfolded their policy thrusts and agenda for Osun in different fora. They will certainly play major role in who the voters would eventually decide for. Oyetola said the state cannot afford to retrogress following the vast improvements recorded in the last seven-and-half years of the current administration.

    According to him: “Having been a privileged member of the team that has brought the current transformation our state has witnessed these past seven and a half years, I know what the issues are.

    “I know that what our people need is an agenda of continuity and revitalisation that will deepen the current gains in infrastructural development.

    “I know what we need is to continue to work and even harder to increase our revenue base to support the payment of salaries, pensions and other deserved emoluments of our teeming workers.

    “In furtherance of the enormous achievements we have already made, we need a leader with steady hands, whose words are his bond, who can further invest in the prosperity of our people.

    “We need a bridge builder, who would continue with the leadership values of the incumbent administration to unite our people, inspire them to jettison primordial sentiments and work for the development of their people, and secure a prosperous state for the benefits of our generations yet unborn.

    “What our state needs urgently is to further soar with inclusive, innovative and unwavering governance. We cannot afford to retrogress. Not anymore. The job at hand is too urgent to be left alone for just anyone unprepared.”

    Adeleke, on his part, promised not to loot, if elected. He said he is already a blessed and comfortable man seeking the governorship seat only to benefit the masses. According to him, “I’m contesting because of the people. Our people are suffering and we need to liberate them.

    “If I become governor, I cannot steal money that belongs to people. I have achieved everything that I could need money for in life.

    “I have built houses, I have cars; I have everything. So, what would I do with stolen money? So, I won’t steal as a governor. I only want to serve.”

    Omisore, on his part, said: “If I become the governor of Osun State, the salary and wages of the workers would be paid promptly and there was a testimony to this when I was the deputy governor.

    “I would treat workers with dignity and respect. I will focus on building major infrastructure in the state, such as roads. We will carry out the dualisation of Gbongan junction to Kwara boundary, ensure the development of Osun airport, and see to the construction of the Ilesa/Ife dams, rehabilitate of Ede headworks, Ejigbo water supply scheme.

    “We will also see to the dualisation of Mayfair Junction to Lagere-Enuwa-Moore-Ilesa bypass and the construction of Gbongan-Oyo boundary. Most of these projects were initiated and facilitated when I was chairman, Senate Committee on Appropriation between 2007 and 2011.

    “But all these were discontinued and their prices inflated. We shall give them utmost priority when I become the governor. Education and health shall take their pride of place in my government. I shall stop capital flight of Osun’s money.

    “Osun’s money shall be spent by our people and not Lagosians. Unemployment shall be tackled using my professional and entrepreneurial goodwill to benefit Osun people.”

    Come September 22, electorate will head to the voting polls to decide whether continuity is the way to go or a change in government might be another option to consider. Whichever of the considerations carry the day will certainly determine who wears the governorship crown in Osun State.

  • Osun, S. Makintosh sign MoU on materials testing lab

    Osun State Government and S.Makintosh Nigeria Limited have signed a public private partnership, PPP Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in the running and management of civil engineering materials testing laboratory.

    In a statement signed by the Managing Consultant of the company, Shola Abel Famakin, the MoU, which is at no monetary cost to the state government, “will provide the much needed awareness, improved revenue generation, employment and pride of development to the state infrastructure.

    According to Famakin, the benefits of the materials testing laboratory include improvement of service delivery by reducing incidence of structural failures, which result in building collapse, roads and infrastructural facilities.

    He said it would also establish an organizational structure for learning of sound engineering practice and ensure compliance to standards.

    Apart from creating employment opportunities for the indigenes of the state, Famakin added that the MoU will boost the internally generated revenue, while at the same time function as the quality control unit for the building and civil engineering industry.

    Famakin commended the commitment of the state governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, State House of Assembly for passing the enabling law, the Commissioner for Works, Engr Kazeem A. Salami, the Permanent Secretary, Engr  Nurudeen Adeagbo to the MoU.

    S.Makintosh Nigeria Limited was established in 1982 as procurement specialist in materials test equipment. It is a home -grown company which specializes in civil and mechanical engineering procurements, installations, training, maintenance, repair, refurbishing and general engineering equipment consultancy services.

  • Osun: 48 parties will contest, says INEC

    Forty-eight political parties are to contest the Osun State governorship election, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has said.

    The election will hold on September 22.

    The commission also announced August 18 as the date for Rivers and Taraba states’ by-elections.

    This brings to six the by-elections the commission will conduct before the Osun poll.

    INEC Chairman Prof. Yakubu Mahmood, who spoke yesterday at the swearing-in of two Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs), said the commission was processing  forms for the Osun poll.

    The two RECs – Mr. Garba Attahiru Madami and Ahmad Bello Mahmud – are to resume work immediately.

    He said: “A record number of 48 political parties have nominated candidates for the election. The commission is currently processing the nomination form.

    “Our preparation for the Osun State governorship election continues in earnest. Nomination of candidates closed yesterday (Tuesday) in line with the timetable and schedule of activities released by the commission in October last year.”

    For the by-elections in Rivers and Taraba states, Mahmood said the timetable and schedule of activities would be out today after the commission’s weekly meeting.

    Also, Madami and Mahmud were posted to Kwara and Kebbi.

    Madami hails from Niger State, while Mahmud is from Zamfara State.

    In line with INEC rules, they are not allowed to serve in their states of origin.

    Mahmood urged the RECs to familiarise themselves with the relevant provisions of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended), the commission’s plans, guidelines and regulations as well as established processes and procedures.

    He assured them of the commission’s support as they discharge their duties.

    Madami promised the RECs will obey the oaths of office and contribute to free, fair and transparent elections.

  • Babatope predicts PDP’s victory in Osun governorship election

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Ebenezer Babatope, on Sunday said the party would win the Sept. 22 governorship election in Osun.

    Babatope, a former Minister of Transportation, spoke in a telephone interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    He said that people of Osun were fed up with the All Progressives Congress (APC) – led administration under Gov. Rauf Aregbesola in the state and were earnestly yearning for PDP.

    NAN reports that Sen. Ademola Adeleke, representing Osun West at the Senate, emerged the PDP’s candidate in the party’s primary held on Saturday.

    He polled 1, 569 to defeat his closest rival, Chief Akin Ogunbiyi, Chairman, Mutual Benefit Trust Assurance Plc, who scored 1,562.

    NAN reports that Mr Gboyega Oyetola, the Chief of Staff to Gov. Rauf Aregbesola, had clinched the APC’s governorship ticket at the party’s primary on Friday.

    Babatope said: “Our great party will win the governorship election in Osun on Sept 22. I am confident.

    “I am optimistic of the PDP’s victory, because our people are fed up and tired of APC-led government.

    “People are tired of APC and are yearning for our party. With the renewed belief of our party in us, I have no doubt that PDP will win,” he said.

    The former minister, however, urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ensure credible conduct of the election for the will of the people to prevail.

    When asked if the exit of Omisore would not affect the fortunes of the party at the polls, the PDP chieftain answered in the negative.

    He said though, Omisore was a prominent member of the party before his defection, people would still vote for the PDP.

    On the July 14 governorship election in Ekiti, Babatope said that he was still surprised by the outcome as announced by INEC.

    He said he knew Ekiti people were for PDP, saying Gov. Ayodele Fayose had done well to warm the party into the hearts of the people.

    “I am surprised at the outcome. I know Ekiti people very well, I know they love PDP because they appreciate our party.

    “Honestly, I am surprised. I am bewildered,” Babatope said.

  • Osun: Of progressive politics and democratic participation

    The approval by the national working committee of the All Progressive Congress (APC) of the use of direct primaries for the Osun State governorship aspirants represents a welcome reinstatement of the ethos and the building blocks which is at the very heart of the party system. Pluralism predisposes of course that there must be a choice of political parties from which the electorate will make a choice. The operations of political parties are therefore fundamental to the health and smooth operations of a democracy.

    It is unfortunate that the military intervention of January 15, 1966 by prohibiting the political parties of colonial times and the first republic tore apart the cloak of political socialisation and has subsequently prevented two generations from understanding how political parties are supposed to be structured, operated and driven. The twists and turns of the military handover to civil rule in reality led to the emergence of hurriedly cobbled together electoral special purpose vehicles who are only now by a natural process of evolution, transforming into real political parties in the sense that would have been incompatible with the initial military oversight.

    Democratic centralism is the propelling mechanism upon which the modern party system is based and for over 150 years, much like the separation of powers is bedrock of democracy. To be succinct, we might use the definition from Wikipedia – “Democratic centralism is a method of leadership in which political decisions reached by the party through its democratically elected bodies are binding upon all members of the party “. Anything else by deduction and indeed in common-sense will be a recipe for indiscipline leading to anarchy and the party’s reason for existence. The subordination of the interests of individuals, groups and factional interests to that of the overall collective interests of the party as a whole is therefore the lubricant of the modern political party. Overall it leads to greater accountability and provides a mechanism for genuine oversight and if all else fails, the right of recall, the ultimate sanction and corrective mechanism.

    In Nigeria’s political history over the past 70 years, it has been a perennial issue. It led in the 1940s to the well recorded turbulence in the pioneering anti – colonial Nigeria Youth Movement. In the 1950s the interpretation of party supremacy in the NCNC led to a faction led by Dr K.O. Mbadiwe breaking away. The eventual reconciliation was cemented on the firm acceptance of the efficacy of the principle of democratic centralism by the reuniting factions and tendencies. The defining momentum for the supremacy of democratic centralism in Nigeria is of course, the party convention of the Action Group party in Jos, now the capital of Plateau State in 1962. The issue was straightforward, the necessity of the regional government controlled by the Action Group to be in alignment with the expressed wishes of the membership of the party as interpreted by the elected organs of the party. The rest is history, too well known to be recounted here.

    Democratic centralism and the expressed position of the membership of a political party cannot be sensibly translated through the anti-democratic invention of military rule – election by delegates. This mechanism is a reflection of the unitarist mind-set of the military; it is inevitably propelled by corruption in which a handful of delegates are up for sale to the highest bidder. Using this framework, the members of the party, those who conscientiously build the party by attending party meetings, sustain it by paying their dues and doing the hard work of mobilisation as well as logistics coordination, are frozen out. Inevitably they are marginalised and become in essence extras in someone else’s movie. This is not the way in which modern political parties are operated. The party activists must control the party and be at centre stage. Through this mechanism of common ownership, their concerns and interests will become paramount. The candidates of the party must be chosen by them and must reflect their wishes and desires. Two decades after the exit of military rule and the reinstatement of democracy is more than enough to reinstate the control of the party by the membership. It is unacceptable that this is just happening; it must now become the conventional wisdom as well as the entrenched practice.

    In many instances in the recent past, Osun State has broken the mould; the approval of the national executive of the APC is yet another path breaking move which must be institutionalised. The strength of a democracy is best reflected in the resilience and the entrenchment of a democratic framework in the operations of its constituent political parties. Through democratically operated political parties, the culture of mass participation and communal ownership becomes entrenched in the polity. Mass participation acts as a bulwark for democracy, this should be of great importance to a country which has gone through the debilitating effects of military rule. In this way, mass participation through the trajectories of political parties anchored on distinct philosophical positions become the bulwark and a key line of defence against any anti-constitutional move. We have to provide solid lines in the defence of our democracy.

    What is going to happen in Osun State is a reinstatement of the central ethos of mass participation which is so central to the health and vigour of a democracy. A democratic spring is on course in the state, it should be applauded and as in a lot of areas in which the state has blazed the trail it is worthy of emulating.

     

    • Ademiluyi is a public affairs analyst.