Tag: OSUN

  • Osun: History meets the historic

    Osun: History meets the historic

    You can’t step in the same river twice 
    —Heraclitus, Greek philosopher

    The excitement reached a head, as the party hit the November 27 interchange, that flies over Gbongan road, in Osogbo.
    He was no yokel; but in his excitement, prancing and skipping, he yodelled like one.
    “Ogbeni, the Awolowo of our time,” he chirped, “don’t forget the Bisi Akande trumpet!” — and, all zeal and fervency, he pointed towards Gbongon.
    The Bisi Akande Trumpet Bridge was some 40 kilometers away, at the old Gbongan junction, with Ibadan-lfe expressway.  But this enthusiast couldn’t imagine Osun Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, letting go of his Guild of Editors guests, without showing off his architectural wonder.
    It was March 18.  The Guild of Editors chose to hold its committee meeting at Osogbo.  The governor also seized the occasion to show the elite of the Nigerian media Osun’s developmental strides.  Though Ripples is no member of the Guild, he was invited to join the August visitors in March.
    The bussed company, with the governor himself in-situ, set out, from the Oke Fia Government House, quietly enough.
    But they lost their anonymity that moment, at the Olaiya junction of Alekuwodo,  in Osogbo’s commercial hub, someone sighted the  governor, and let go a yelp.
    Before you knew it, an excited, beaming, dancing company was pumping fists and flashing “V” (for victory) signs, with their two fore-fingers, a sign original to Winston  Churchill, Britain’s World War 2 hero; but popularized in these climes by Chief Obafemi Awolowo, first premier of the old Western Region.
    The governor, himself a study in boyish excitement, returned the “V” compliment;  and an impromptu carnival of love, mutual doting and appreciation ensued.  As the convoy rolled slowly by, on the newly named Workers Avenue, so did the excited people swell in their numbers.
    But everything got to a head on the November 27 bridge, when the governor and his entourage disembarked, the accompanying officials explaining the work-in-progress; and the governor himself chipping in now and then, especially the engineering and technical details.
    The first leg of the tour was on the Oba Adesoji Aderemi ring road, that ripples with history, old and contemporary.
    Oba Aderemi (1889-1980), was Ooni of Ife (1930-1980); and was first indigenous governor of Western Region, during which time Chief Awolowo, as Premier, performed his social transformation wonders, that hauled the old West clear of the other regions, of North and East.
    But, as Oba Aderemi offers today’s Osun a symbolic tieback to the Awolowo golden age, so does its 17.5-kilometre stretch project, to a future Osun, clear historical landmarks.
    Those monuments capture its infrastructural remake, from a backwater “civil service” state that rose and fell by Abuja’s dole; to a land poised to harness its resources, in the finest tradition of the Yoruba Omoluabi.
    It is a classic case of history meeting the historic-minded.
    Those monuments?  Four bridges, really.
    Five Judges, to commemorate the five Court of Appeal justices, whose verdict reclaimed the Aregbesola mandate, after almost a four-year struggle; November 26, the day that judgment was given; November 27, when the first Aregbesola administration birthed, and August 9, the day the governor won re-election, despite the hideous plots to skew the vote, by the Jonathan Presidency, flush with success in a similar gambit in Ekiti.
    By design or by accident, November 27 and Bisi Akande Trumpet bridges appear the grandest of the signature road projects, wrapped in political symbols, that would in history, define the developmental temper of the Aregbesola years.
    Bisi Akande immortalizes Osun’s very first attempt at serious governance (1999-2003), since its creation in 1991.  But that attempt was scuttled, during the Obasanjo South West electoral tsunami of 2003.  November 27, on the other hand provided a doughty root for August 9, that day in 2014 the Osun local forces trumped illicit “federal might” to renew Aregbesola’s mandate.
    The rest of the project tour, the Osogbo Government High School, one of the 11 avant-grade public schools springing up in different locations of the state; and the Nelson Mandela Freedom Park, Osogbo, are no less impressive symbols of developmental governance.
    But the Mandela Freedom Park offers something somewhat novel — an informal museum of leisurely history.  Mingling with park seats, on close-cropped lawns, is a special section bearing busts of Titans of the progressive politics of the West, from different ages: Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Chief Bola Ige, Chief Bisi Akande and Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.
    Yet, another section of mini-galleries, boasts marble plaques, that encapsulate the tenure of every Osun governor, military or civilian, from Col. Leo Segun Aborisade, the first governor (military administrator) to Aregbesola himself.  So, as loungers relax, they can read up their history and civics.
    Dominating the park landscape is the impressive Atewogbeja Fountain, a tribute to the Osun river and its trove of fresh-water fishes.  The fountain waters are electrically programmed, at night, to tumble down in a rainbow of colours.
    Incidentally, the tour ended at Olaiya junction, with the unending tryst between an appreciative people and their governor!
    From the tour revelations, Osun, of the Aregbesola years, would appear in a flux of rapid change; to justify the Heraclitean quip: you can’t step in the same river twice!   Indeed, Osogbo had come a long way from the old rural town,  to a growing modern city, gradually holding its own in serenity and winning infrastructure, drawing new businesses across different sectors.
    So has Osun shrugged off its laggardness to, despite its puny resources, point the way in the schools feeding programme, which the Federal Government just adopted on a national scale.
    Surely then, the Aregbe legacy is assured, came what may?  Not exactly.
    Indeed, Osun is painfully poised at a critical juncture between the short-lived but enduring Western Renaissance under  Awo, before the SLA Akintola Demo forces blighted everything; and the  post-1999 Lagos of sound developmental governance and golden continuity, which has become a national reference.
    You could feel palpable panic, the way some Osun conservatives, in concert with Yoruba irredentists, tried to mould themselves into emergency Yoruba warriors against phantom Hausa-Fulani threat, when the Ife disturbance was nothing but mutual criminality.
    The Afenifere veterans that dived into bed with Femi Fani-Kayode’s subversive Yoruba nationalism would appear splashing in the Osun political river, panic-stricken that, after the Aregbe years, so much has changed you can’t step in the same river twice.
    So is Iyiola Omisore, with his trademark spew of verbal rot, perhaps gripped with the fear that, with the balance of forces, he might just be graduating, from serial failure to veteran failure, in his quixotic gubernatorial quest.
    Still, that would appear no done deal.  Even as Heraclitus declared nature was in a flux, Parminides, his Greek contemporary, countered nature was static and unchanging! That contradiction could give the conservatives some hope, no matter how tenuous.
    So, Osun could well be changing; but maybe not rapidly enough to banish that 2003 electoral ghost, that traded solid gold for glittering tinsel.  For that, the state paid a stiff price in hideous stagnation, in the dreadful pre-Aregbe years.
    However it goes, Aregbesola’s personal legacy, like Chief Awolowo’s before him, appears secure.
    But not the Osun developmental fate, ironically again, like the old West, where Awo wrought wonders only for the Demo renegades to blight everything.
    Osun’s best bet, therefore, is a post Aregbe-era of stellar developmental strides, anchored on present efforts.  That way, Osun may yet emerge the ultimate development wonder of the 4th Republic, just as the old West was the 1st Republic’s.
    Ay, Lagos holds that honour now.  But even the most doting of Lagosians would admit the post-1999 Tinubu movement (which incidentally Aregbesola was part of) only re-engineered a decaying former federal capital.  Osun, under Aregbe, never had such a head start.
    But the threat to Osun enjoying a Lagos-like golden continuation, and not enduring the old West’s reactionary roll-back, would appear to lie less with the Osun conservatives, no matter how desperate they may be, but with the governor’s own internal foes, craving pork but pretending all is cool.
    That is the direction to address, if Aregbe must, like Tinubu in Lagos, get the successor(s) to further entrench Osun’s unfolding renaissance.

  • Focus on science, technology, Aregbesola urges varsities

    Focus on science, technology, Aregbesola urges varsities

    Gov. Rauf Aregbesola of Osun has called on Nigerian universities to focus more on science and technology development in the country.

    Aregbesola made the call while delivering a speech at the   10th year anniversary and 6th convocation ceremony of Osun University on Thursday in Osogbo.

    The governor said technology would have changed the world dramatically in a few years.

    According to him, Nigerian universities need to start preparing the youths toward a digital future for the country to remain relevant in the new world order.

    “We need to begin to prepare for a future where so many amazing things will be done technologically.

    “In the next 10 years, technological knowledge would have changed the world dramatically to the extent that cars will begin to drive itself without a driver.

    “In 10 years time, your mobile phone will be able to tell you a lot of things about your health and so on.

    “We need to be prepared for this future as a country,” he said.

    Aregbesola also urged Nigerian universities to engage in research that would impact positively on the society.

    In his opening remark, the Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of the university, Malam Yusuf Alli, said 10 years of the existence of the institution was a period for preparation, adding that now was the time for consolidation.

    Alli, who noted that the university must be committed to science, technology and information technology, pointed out that the institution would not be able to be a global participant if it relies on obsolete and outdated knowledge.

    Earlier in her address, the Chancellor of the university, Dr Folorunso Alakija, expressed delight over the transformation the university was witnessing.

    Alakija, who promised to build a state of the art paediatric hospital for the university, called on all stakeholders to support the institution in charting a new course with a view to attaining greater height.

    The Vice Chancellor of the university, Prof.  Labode Popoola, said the institution had made tremendous progress in the last 10 years of its existence.

    Popoola said the university had also graduated 6,493 students.

     

  • Ooni’s wife visits Yoruba, Arewa communities, urges peace

    Ooni’s wife visits Yoruba, Arewa communities, urges peace

     

    The Yeyeluwa  (queen) of Ife,  Wuraola Ogunwusi, has called for the return of brotherly love between the Yoruba and Arewa communities which existed before the recent communal dispute in Ile-Ife.

    The queen made the call when she visited the communities in Enuwa and Sabo, Ile-Ife, Osun, on Thursday to commiserate with them on the recent clash in which some persons died and properties were destroyed.

    At Enuwa, Wuraola was received by the committee that the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi, set up to look into the crisis.

    ‘’Peace is sacrosanct and we should pursue it with all we have because violence has nothing to be gained from rather, it will destroy what has been laboured to achieve,” she said.

    Wuraola commended the committee for the work it had done.

    “I am impressed with what you have done so far since His Imperial Majesty set up this committee as you daily gave Kabiyesi (king) report even when he was in United Kingdom promoting African tradition and culture.

    “Ile-Ife is the source and you have shown that to the entire world that peace  is what we need,”  he said.

    At Sabo, the queen was received by the Arewa community led by Alhaji Malami Nasidi.

    She said, ‘’I am here formally to commiserate with you on the incident that happened and I pray that may never happen  again.

    “We are all one and should live as such.

    ‘’You are established here and this is the only place you know as home.

    ‘’Please, let us forget the past and move on.

    “Those who went with the sad event cannot be brought back but our prayer is that God should be with all they left behind as we cannot quench fire with fire, peace is the only way forward.

    “I was touched by the incident and took it upon myself that I must be here personally on behalf of the palace to commiserate with you on the unfortunate incident.”

    Nasidi, who responded on behalf of the Arewa community, said:  “we have been here for several decades and cannot even fathom why a very minor incident escalated to this magnitude.”

    He expressed appreciation to the queen for the visit and prayed for long life for her and Ooni Ogunwusi.

    Meanwhile, the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons has donated food items to the communities.

    The National Commissioner, Hajia Sadiya Farouq, represented by the South-West Zonal Coordinator, Mrs Margaret Ukaegbu, warned against the diversion of the items.

    “We are brothers and sisters, therefore we cannot afford to be divided.

    She appealed to the communities to forget what had happened, but to look for a way forward and allow peace to reign.

    Farouq called on Nigeria to dialogue within each other and pass their grievances to appropriate quarters rather than destroy lives and properties.

    ” We believe in one Nigeria and we believe in peace. What are we fighting for?

    ‘’United we stand and divided we fall.

    “Without peace, no progress and without progress, Nigeria cannot grow and with that, we cannot develop nor achieve any success,’’  she said.

    The commission donated bags of rice, beans, salt and sugar as well as palm-oil and vegetable oil to the communities.

     

  • South West states bid to prevent outbreak of communicable diseases

     

    As the outbreak of meningitis in some states continues  to elicit concern across the country, many states in the South West zone are making spirited efforts to prevent an epidemic.

    In Oyo State,  Dr Oyewole Lawal, the Director of Public Health  in the Ministry of Health, said government had beefed up its surveillance  and tracking  mechanism in order to check outbreak of communicable diseases.

    “Our surveillance committee has reported two patients in the Hausa community of  Ojoo  in Akinyele Local Government Area  who manifested some of the symptoms of meningitis.

    “ These  cases are  yet to be confirmed. We have beefed- up tracking and increased surveillance efforts in all primary health care centres at the local government level,  state hospitals (secondary health care level) and all private hospitals around Ojoo.

    “Oyo State Government is making spirited efforts to ensure that our officers at the Disease Notification and Surveillance unit are working assiduously to monitor suspects.

    “As soon as we got the alert at the state office, we immediately alerted the Disease Notification and Surveillance officers in the 33 local governments in the state.

    “The year 2014  was the last episode of meningitis outbreak we had in Oyo State and we had adequate and effective vaccines to tackle it.

    “In all areas and all fronts, I can say that Oyo State is fully equipped and ready to prevent or reduce the scourge of any outbreak of meningitis in the state,” he said.

    Lawal added that there was an ongoing  collaboration between the state Ministry of Health, Disease Control Unit and all the 33 local government health officers.

    “We hold meetings every first week of the month  where we analyse reports from these local governments.

    “Information on disease outbreak is strictly officially managed; the lcal government officer concerned usually sends alerts to us at the Ministry of  Health, we in turn send alert to the National Centre for Disease Control, a unit in the FMOH (Federal Ministry of Health)

    “The ministry then alerts the WHO office and Presidency at the same time. So we are on top of events in Oyo state,” he said.

    Lawal also explained that there was no cause for ordering for vaccines to combat meningitis,  saying such  procurement was the sole responsibility of the FMOH.

    According to him, the type of meningitis recorded in Oyo in 2014 is different from that of this year which is Zero Type C.

    Dr Mercy Popoola, the Director of Hospital Services in the state, told NAN that government was ready to treat those who might be carriers of  Zero Type C meningitis.

    “Our State Hospital at New Adeoyo has been prepared for any such emergency while other government hospitals and private hospitals have been alerted,” she said.

    Popoola also said  some NGOs were  involved in advocacy and sensitisation on communicable diseases while the media were assisting in publicity.

    She also said that officials of the Public Health Nursing Department often  visit  churches and mosques to administer vaccines to people.

    In  Ondo State,  government also gave an assurance that proactive measures had been put in place  to prevent an outbreak of communicable diseases.

    Dr Taye Oni, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Health,  said a response team had swung into action to forestall an  outbreak.

    He, however, warned residents to avoid over crowding, ensure proper ventilation, increase hand washing, maintain proper hygiene and avoid shaking hands.

    Oni also urged residents to refrain from unnecessary petting and kissing while  ensuring  good coughing and sneezing behaviour.

    He enjoined residents to report to the hospital immediately they experience symptoms such as fever, headache, respiratory track infection, sneezing as well as pain in the neck and back which could lead to stiffness of the neck.

    In Osun, the state Epidemiologist,  Dr Adeola Musa, said government had set up a  Disease Surveillance Committee to monitor any outbreak of communicable  diseases in all the 30 local government areas in the state.

    Musa told NAN that committee members  as well as  notification officers had been going round  the state to vaccinate residents against communicable diseases.

    ” The state government has set up rapid response team to checkmate and prevent any epidemic of communicable diseases.

    ” Our health officers don’t sit down in the health facilities set up by the government but rather they move around to carry out surveillance.

    ” Their findings are in a weekly report which would be submitted to us for further analysis.

    “They also move round to give daily report of what they find on  the field,’’ she said.

    According to her, several sensitisation programmes had also been embarked on.

    Musa also said vaccines had also been despatched to all the local government areas, adding that surveillance would be an ongoing strategy.

    The expert, who noted that the state had not recorded any outbreak of communicable diseases, said surveillance had been effective.

    She said government’s epidemic preparedness committee was working hard to prevent any emergency.

    Musa said, the ministry from time to time held stakeholders meetings to forcast any outbreak of disease and what to do in terms of logistic and the necessary measures to put in place.

    In Kwara, a state in the North Central Zone, the Commissioner for Health, Dr Atolagbe Alege, said proactive measures were critical in putting in check communicable diseases.

    He told NAN that the state had not recorded any cases of Type C meningitis raging in some parts of the country.

    The commissioner said government had convened meetings with the state epidemiology and disease control officers.
    According to him, the meeting was to ensure all the 16 local government areas  of the state had  been adequately  sensitised  to report  any case  that may occur.

    Alege said the ministry also had meetings with the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and the Department of Public Health on preventive measures.

    “We are on  alert and we are pooling  our resources together,” he said.

    Also speaking with NAN on the outbreak of meningitis, Dr Uthman Mubashir, a Public Health Physician at the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, urged Nigerians to be vigilant and report symptoms such as fever, stiff neck and seizure.

    Other symptoms, he said, are molten skin, cold hands and feet as well as severe headache.

    He also advised members of the public to live in a well ventilated environment, warning that over-crowded places were predisposing factors.

    Mubashir described meningitis as the swelling of the membranes of the brain and spinal cord, adding that this could be due to viral, fungal or bacterial infection.

    He, however, said that the most common cause of the epidemic is  viral infection although bacterial meningitis remained  one of the most dangerous forms of the disease.

    The medical practitioner said early diagnosis and treatment could  help to prevent  complications and potential long-term effect.

     

  • Meningitis: Expert calls for effective response strategies

    “The committee should be responsible for reviewing the antibiotic vulnerability of Neisseria meningitis serotypes in the country.

    “Such committee can then use current trend and data on antibiotic resistance to formulate appropriate prophylaxis and treatment by state, zones or the country as a whole,’’ he said.

    NAN reports that there has been an outbreak of Cerebro Spinal Meningitis (CSM) across 16 states of the country since November 2016, of which a new strain of the disease called “stereotype C’’ had emerged.

    As at April 3, there were 2,524 suspected cases with 336 deaths recorded in 90 local government areas in the affected states.

    The states included Zamfara, Katsina, Sokoto, Kebbi, Niger, Nasarawa , Jigawa, FCT, Gombe, Taraba , Yobe, Kano, Osun, Cross Rivers, Lagos and Plateau.

    Meningitis outbreaks peak in the dry season in certain states in the Northern region due to low humidity and dusty conditions and usually end as the rainy season approaches.

    The bacteria that cause it can be spread through exchange of saliva, which can occur during common activities such as kissing, sharing utensils and drinking glasses.

    The risk factors for meningitis also include living in close quarters such as dormitories, sneezing and coughing as well as smoking or being exposed to smoke.

    Also, particular lifestyle such as staying out late or irregular sleeping habits could put people at greater risk for meningitis, by weakening their immune system.

    Some common symptoms include high fever, stiff neck, confusion, sensitivity to light, headaches and vomiting.

    According to the WHO, even when the disease is diagnosed early and adequate treatment begins, five per cent to 10 per cent of patients die, typically within 24 to 48 hours of the onset of symptoms.

    Vaccination against the three types of bacteria that can cause meningitis still remains one of the most effective ways to be protected against certain types of bacterial meningitis, alongside avoiding the risk factors.

     

  • Omisore’s ambition delusional, says Osun APC

    Omisore’s ambition delusional, says Osun APC

    The  All Progressives Congress (APC) has advised the people of Osun to disregard the latest ranting of Senator Iyiola Omisore on the politics of Osun and the performance of Governor Rauf Aregbesola.

    Omisore’s interviews published at the weekendclaimed he won the 2014 governorship election.

    Omisore, in the interviews, “produced evidence” on You Tube to show how the election was “manipulated” to favour Aregbesola.

    In a statement by its Director of Publicity, Research and Strategy, Kunle Oyatomi, the party described Omisore’s claim as “irresponsible, false and unbecoming of a politician of his status and experience”.

    The APC said it could appear that Omisore’s dream of becoming a governor had turned delusional.

    According to the party,  Omisore’s political career since 1999 till date has been fraught with disgraceful failure and comprehensive defeat in the hands of younger politicians like Senator Babatunde Omoworare and Aregbesola.

    The statement reads: “A politician of Omisore’s political pedigree of disloyalty, falsehood and incredible political association with violence cannot be trusted to provide the state of Osun with progressive leadership.

    “No matter how much he dreams or how craftily he put a new spin to an old lie, Omisore remains quintessentially a bad material for the governorship of the state of Osun,” the APC said.

    The party insisted that Omisore cannot claim that 2014 election was manipulated because everybody saw the violence which the PDP government in Abuja brought to Osun to intimidate residents to vote PDP.

    “Omisore is not in a position to understand how all the lies he produced at the tribunal, the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court failed to impress the judges.

    “Osun people have become immune to the lies of PDP. And that has completely destroyed Omisore’s credibility in the state.”

  • Osun school get boost

    With less than two years to the end his tenure as   Osun State Governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola seems poised to bequeathe a lasting legacy to the state by re-invigorating the education sector with state-of-the-art classrooms that are second to none in the nation.

    One hundred elementary, 50 middle and 20 high schools benefited from the construction of these classrooms. Of the 20 high schools, 11 had earlier got the classrooms built for them, while four others – Wole Soyinka Government High School, Ejigbo; Osogbo Government High School, Osogbo and Adventist Government High School, Ede, were inuagurated between November 2015 and last November. The last of them: Ataoja Government High School, Osogbo, was opened last week.

    It was a joyful moment for the governor when pupils took possession of the school last week after the inauguration and commencement of learning.

    Traditional rulers, religious leaders, pupils, ballad singers, cultural performers and politicians, among others graced the occasion.

    An excited Aregbesola described the completion of the school as  a fulfilment of one of his administration’s vision for the state.

    The vision, according to the governor, was part of his six-point agenda at the inception of his two-term administration, which kicked off in 2010.

    The focus of the initiative, the governor recalled, was to prepare ‘highly skilled individuals’ that would supplant the much-anticipated high tech as against the fast-fading menial jobs.

    “The overall consequence of what is happening in the society now is that low skill and menial jobs will be eliminated, meaning only highly skilled individuals would be relevant in this brave new world. This is the future we are preparing our children for. Any society without this vision is going to be backward and dependent when this future arrives. We are celebrating today because we can see the future and we are confident we are on the right path,” Aregbesola said, while delivering his address tagged ‘We have seen the future.’

    The governor was optimistic that next year, about 11,000 well- educated pupils would have passed out of the high schools and trained in various professions, including  science and technology, entrepreneurship, priesthood, sports, arts and entertainment.

    Aregbesola said each of the 3000-capacity school has four principals with three superintending over 1,000 pupils each, and an overall senior principal.

    He recalled his secondary school days when seriousness and discipline were the order of the day, noting that such grooming could be replicated with responsive teachers and committed management in the state.

    “We were stylish (in our school days) in the way we walked, combed our hair and ironed our uniforms. This is the grooming, the informal education that makes a complete educated person. I want to see this return to our schools. Those that are not ready to play this role have demonstrated that they have no place with us,” Aregbesola warned.

    On the schools’ specifications, Aregbesola said each  has 72 classrooms capable of sitting 49 pupils, six offices for study groups; six laboratories; 48 toilets for pupils with additional eight for the teachers, one science library, one arts library, facility manager’s office, a bookshop and a sickbay.

    Others were Olympic-sized football field, ample parking space; multi-purpose hall; three general staff offices, a record store, fully furnished security shed/reception, borehole and power transformer, among others.

    The governor noted that the state established the Osun Education Quality Assurance and Morality Enforcement Agency to keep to the benchmark, while also enforcing morality.

    “It is not because we have these in surplus. It is because of the value we place on education, being fully persuaded on how it will shape the future,”he said.

    Aregbesola’s deputy, Mrs Titilayo Laoye-Tomori, likened the state’s intervention in education to the need to make Osun schools centre of excellence.

    “The motive of government is to make the new high schools centres of excellence in Nigeria that will produce excellent students well-grounded in Omoluabi ethos,” she said.

    She continued: “It is against this backdrop that the diverse interventions of government become understandable and reasonable to the ordinary citizen. It becomes obvious therefore, that the building of new ‘state of the arts’ schools and the rehabilitation of existing ones are just steps towards the goal.”

    Principal of the school, Dr. Taiwo Adeagbo, reassured the government of workers’ determination to teach and maintain the facilities.

    “We will always be grateful to you. It will remain green in our memory,” Adeagbo promised.

    Both head boy and head girl of the school, Afolabi Israel and Victoria Egunranti, urged the government to remain committed to qualitative education.

    “He (Aregbesola) is a trail blazer and a governor with an indomitable spirit. He is the Awolowo of our time and in terms of security, he has been able to secure the school. If anyone had said it was impossible to have this structure, now, the impossible has been made possible,” Afolabi said.

  • Aregbesola inaugurates commission of enquiry on Ife crisis

    Aregbesola inaugurates commission of enquiry on Ife crisis

    Gov. Rauf Aregbesola of Osun has inaugurated a five-man judicial commission of enquiry into the crisis that erupted between the Yoruba and Hausa  in Ile-Ife on March 8 in which  lives were lost  and property destroyed.

    A  media aide to the governor,  Mr Semiu Okanlawon, made this known  in a statement in  Osogbo on Monday.

    The statement quoted the governor  as urging  members of the  commission to investigate and determine the remote and immediate causes  of the mayhem.

    He also mandated them to recommend appropriate civil or criminal actions  to be taken against the perpetrators and make appropriate suggestions to the state government  in order to prevent a  future occurrence.

    The governor  further urged the commission to recommend appropriate monetary sum as compensation(s) for damages or injuries that may have been suffered by any individual or group of individuals during the crisis.

    He said: “You have four weeks to carry out this assignment.

    “The report that small arms and light weapons were deployed freely during the crisis was disturbing and frightening.

    “It has implication for security of lives and property and the potential for more conflicts beyond the immediate theatre of war, if not nipped in the bud.

    “I want you to look into this. The sources and the current location of these arms and their custodians should be investigated, determined and all should be recovered.’’

    The Chairman of the commission, Justice Moshood Adeigbe, said the commission would  ensure that the perpetrators of the dastardly act were brought to book.

    “Mr Governor, I assure you that we will not let you and the people down, we will carry out this task you have given us to the best of our ability, ” he said.

    Other members of the panel are  Mrs Bose Dawodu, Mr Ismail Ajibade, the State Commissioner of Police, the State Director of DSS and Mr Bisi Babalola ,who will act as the secretary.

  • Osun council polls to hold before Dec

    Osun council polls to hold before Dec

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has said local government elections will hold before December.

    The governor dropped the hint in Osogbo, the state capital, at a workshop for information officers.

    According to Aregbesola, this will spread good governance to the grassroots.

    He challenged information officers to promote state activities, especially in the rural areas.

    “What we have is a situation where most of our activities are under reported.

    “You must work hard to become information specialists that we desire to provide good information to the public,” he said.

    Aregbesola described the hues and cries following the state’s debt burden released by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) as “insignificant to the achievements of his administration”.

    The governor said the financial credit incurred was judiciously utilised.

    He added that the report should not be overblown as justifiable projects have been executed.

    In their presentations, the resource persons, Sanya Oni of The Nation, Wale Adebisi of the Ola Oni Centre and a media aide, Sola Fasure, challenged information officers to be aware of new trends in their profession.

    They urged them to be more vibrant and resourceful to achieve better results.

  • Fed Govt hails Aregbesola for infrastructure in Osun

    Fed Govt hails Aregbesola for infrastructure in Osun

    The Federal Government yesterday praised Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola for improving learning atmosphere in schools.
    Minister of Education Adamu Adamu, who was represented by Prof. Kamoru Olayiwola Usman, at the opening of new high schools, said the Federal Ministry of Education is proud of the governor’s efforts.
    Thousands of pupils officially began learning at the Ataoja Government High School in Osogbo; Wole Soyinka Government High School, Ejigbo; Osogbo Government High School and Adventist Government High School in Ede with an opening ceremony that happened simultaneously at the four venues.
    The minister also lauded Osun for realising that education can only thrive in an environment that is conducive, saying education should not be limited to a situation when a person can only read and write, but how such person can impact positively on the larger society.
    He held that Osun would enjoy the seed being sowed by the present administration with the building of the state-of-the-art schools across the state.
    “If we want to forestall what happened in Ife, we must continue to educate our people by making sure that we build more schools with an atmosphere that is conducive to learning,” the minister stated.
    The governor, in his opening address, noted his administration has redefined the architecture and environment of quality education.
    According to him, each school has four principals with three superintending over 1,000 pupils each, and an overall senior principal.
    It is standard that each school has 72 classrooms of 49 square-meters, each capable of sitting 49 pupils”.
    “It has six offices for study groups. It is also equipped with six laboratories, 48 toilets for pupils and another eight for the teachers, one science library, one arts library, facility manager’s office, a bookshop and a sickbay.
    “Other facilities are the senior principal’s office, three principals’ offices, a bursar’s office, three general staff offices, a record store and security shed/reception. They are all fully furnished. The schools have borehole and power transformer.?”