Tag: OSUN

  • Osun: Savouring the fruits of innovative governance

    Osun: Savouring the fruits of innovative governance

    As South Western Nigerian leaders of thought, policy implementors and technocrats converge at the ancient city of Abeokuta for the Southwest  governance innovations summit, I am moved to recall two past incidents;  the one, a historic meeting which started at about 6pm and rounded up just before 6am sometime in December 2010.

    The venue was the “situation room” at the Bourdillion Road, Ikoyi residence of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. A new Governor had just been sworn in, a week prior, after three and half years of protracted litigation to regain a misappropriated mandate. That Governor is Rauf Aregbesola.

    The purpose of the meeting was to share thoughts with the core leadership of the then Action Congress and a handful of key elements who served in the Lagos cabinet when  Asiwaju Tinubu held sway as the Chief Executive, on the policy thrusts and the direction in which the new government in Osun was going to drive the implementation of its electoral promises. Seated at the long table were the party chairman, Chief Bisi Akande, the National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, and, as I recall vividly, also present were Prof Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, Yemi Cardoso, Dele Alake, Leke Pitan,   Dr. Charles Diji Akinola,  the Osun Deputy Governor, Mrs Titilayo Laoye- Tomori , this writer, and a couple of other associates from Osun.

    At this meeting, those of us close associates of the new governor who were key architects of the Osun renewal took turns to unfold the vision and invited those with cognate experience to critique our game plan and how we were going to execute the “PACT” of Rauf Aregbesola with the people of Osun. The conversations were robust, and centred around the narrative of “Government unusual.” This new governor was going to demystify the office and get really down to the task of serving. Key radical reforms were going to be put in place in vital areas of massive food  production, roads, infrastructure, functional education, youth empowerment, communal security, affordable healthcare delivery, restoring the status of Osogbo as a vital commercial hub, and engendering socio- economic inclusion.

    During the course of the night, we addressed the issue of the declining economic fortunes of the country insofar as it continued to rely only on oil as its main revenue base, and came to the conclusion that something drastic had to be done to address the humongous cost of governance occasioned largely by an over bloated bureaucracy, as it was not sustainable. We told the audience that our principal was going to make a stab at pruning down the number of MDAs and collapsing them into efficient and manageable units with appropriate nomenclature.

    Recalling the glorious days of the old West with nostalgia, the necessity to harness individual strategic strengths of the  sub-region’s components was not lost on anybody around that long table. We therefore agreed that impetus was to be given to the on-going endeavour efforts to  institutionalize the peer review mechanism that would allow the weak to benefit from the experience of the strong through cross border replication of success stories with a view to better the lot of our peoples  and create sustainable even development.

    One key point that stood out is Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola’s declaration that there was going to be a Ministry of Regional Integration and Special duties that would institutionalise  the interface with other states in the region and that other Governors in the South West were to be encouraged to establish similar structure in their respective states.

    The other incident; sometime in 2011, I had a one-on-one discussion with a Southwest governor in his private study which, again, drew far into the night during which the Governor lamented with regret: “ Papa Awo (Chief Obafemi Awolowo) had no business trying to rule at the centre.”

    According to him, he had it very well made and the old West was notches ahead of the pack at a pace which, if sustained, would have engendered unprecedented growth and development. The forays into national politics, in his view, truncated the rapid economic growth of our people. I couldn’t agree with him more. Six years on, current trends in the polity has reinforced my conviction that this error has now become a conundrum which the Southwest  must quickly disembark from.

    Although the  “error” seemed an unending dialogue, akin only to the conversations on Nigeria’s proverbial “potentials” , yet some people were not going to just sit down and moan.

    Not surprisingly, a community of interests and tendencies had arisen, working tenaciously parallel to the self-determination, restructuring and diverse agendas, to ensure that the economic emancipation and therefore the developmental growth agenda of the South-west was to be rigorously pursued. And how better to do this than to create a United  common platform for the actualization of the noble task of reversing the diminished opportunities of the South-west for advancement and developmental growth.

    It soon began to dawn (pun intended) on Yoruba thinkers that the future portends grave danger for any component of our federation tying its economic fortunes to handouts from the centre which, itself depends on a failing international commodity.

    It was time to be creative and innovative. And those elements eventually found a round peg for this round hole, in the person of Oladipo Famakinwa. A new platform was formally launched  and called Development Agenda  for Western  Nigeria.( DAWN) with this dynamic young man as the first Director General. This is not an attempt to rewrite the DAWN story. Indeed it has been, and continues to be written by the appropriate authority through the plethora of initiatives and activities it has undertaken so far in pursuance of its mandate either suo motu, or in collaboration with other agencies.

    Perhaps, one Governor who personified innovation in governance is Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. He hit the ground running in 2010 and in a matter of days he embarked on the rebranding project which saw Osun having an Armorial bearing (a replica of the Old Western Nigeria coat of Arms), a state anthem, flag, the components of which, when interpreted, speak to the struggle, rich historical, socio-economic and cultural heritage of Yorubaland. Then of course was the flagship Osun Youth Employment Scheme (OYES), through which the governor had promised 20,000 jobs in the first 100 days – a promise that was actually delivered in 97 days!

    What followed was a comprehensive package of radical reforms in the Education sector; notably, the introduction of the Educational Learning Aid (Opon Imo), an unprecedented schools infrastructure project, and, perhaps, the largest volume of road construction projects ever embarked upon by any government in Nigeria. But he didn’t stop there. He wanted an OMBUDSMAN and due process office that would put all policy implementers on their toes, in order to achieve maximum delivery.

    And this brings to mind the remarks of Ban Ki- Moon, the then UN Secretary General in his remarks to the Council on Timor- Leste on December 19 2009:

    “…as we all know, infrastructure is not just a matter of roads, schools and power grids. It is equally a question of strengthening democratic governance and the rule of law. Without accountability, not only of the government to its people but of the people to each other, there is no hope for a viable democratic state. .”

    This statement aptly describes the mission of the Bureau of Social Services (BOSS). Having been involved in the design, incubation and execution of this pioneering initiative, I am moved to congratulate Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola for the success stories that Osun has brought to the table during the just concluded Southwest Governance Innovation Summit 2017.

    Ogbeni’s reforms in good governance through radical interventions are too numerous to be mentioned here, but permit me to single out three particular polices reforms which have been selected by DAWN and deemed worthy of replication by other states. The first is the Agricultural Land Holding and Development Authority Bill, which, though yet to be passed by the State of Osun House of Assembly, however,the Executive Order has has been signed by the Governor in order to meet current exigencies. This Law is designed to mitigate hardships occasioned by the Land Use Act militating against agricultural land ownership by small holder farmers and cooperatives.

    The second is (O-Meal) the elementary School Lunch programme which received high acclaim and concerning which the governor had course to address a session before a committee of the British House of Commons.

    The third one is the establishment of the Bureau of Social Services (BOSS), an OMBUDSMAN agency with overarching powers to ensure accountability and public value delivery across the parameters of Programs, Policies, and Projects.

    Innovation has thousands of differently documented definitions. There are diverse interdisciplinary perspectives to defining this word the simplest of which is to be found in WIKKIPEDIA:  ”innovation is a new idea, device, or method”. In the domain of practical economic analysis, and I daresay, governance, innovation can generally be considered to be the result of a process that brings together novel ideals in a way that they affect society. (Still quoting Wikkipedia), innovation drives idea to value. Creativity is the capacity to generate novel and pragmatic ideas, but unless applied, it remains just an idea.

    Innovation therefore can safely, in my view, be described as Applied Creativity.

    What Ogbeni has done in Osun is not only to bring creativity to designing his ‘government unusual’, but also to apply that creativity in the delivery of public value. It certainly gives one a sense of pride to be part of that effort.

     

    • Ifaturoti is the Director General, Bureau of Social Services, Osun State.

     

  • Osun warns against illegal homes

    The Osun State government yesterday warned against setting up illegal healing and rehabilitation homes.

    This followed the discovery of an illegal rehabilitation home on the Iwo-Osogbo Road, on Thursday.

    A statement by the Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Office of the Governor, Semiu Okanlawon, said with government’s investment in a care centre for people with mental challenge, no one had reason to patronise unqualified homes.

    The statement said: “The government’s attention has been drawn to the existence of an uncertified rehabilitation home where about two dozens of mentally challenged persons have been discovered.

    “Preliminary investigations have indicted the person who claims to be in charge of this rehabilitation home; the entire environments of the location and other relevant factors have shown that this is unacceptable.”

    The statement explained that the government has evacuated the emaciated mentally challenged persons, who were found to be in deplorable states of health to its facilities at the state hospital and rehabilitation home while the police continues with its investigations.

    The statement added: “This is therefore to state categorically that the government will not permit the setting up and running of rehabilitation homes in any part of the state.”

  • Osun traditional ruler convicted for contempt

    An Osun State Magistrate Court, sitting in Osogbo, has convicted the Olokini of Okini, Oba Okanola Akadiri (65) and his secretary, Rasaki Sulaimon (45) for contempt of court.

    However, at the resumption of the hearing of the case on Friday, the presiding judge, Magistrate Olusola Aluko, granted the two of them bail on self-recognition.

    The judge warned that they should not be contemptuous of the court in future proceedings.

    The prosecuting counsel, Muyiwa Ogunleye, told the court that the monarch had failed to show up in the case Mos/192c/2013 instituted against him without any justifiable reason.

    The defendants were facing 8-count charge, including conspiracy, forceful entry, threat to life and assault.

    In his submission, Ogunleye informed the court that the monarch and his secretary committed the offence on December 2, 2012 at about 4 pm around Awoniyi Street, Okini.

    He added that the defendants conspired to breach the peace of the area by unlawful incursion into a piece of land, belonging to Mr. Rasheed Awoniyi, stressing that the offence contravened section 133 (2) of Criminal Code Cap 34 Vol. 11 laws of Osun, 2003.

    But, counsel to the monarch and his secretary, Abimbola Ige, urged the court to temper justice with mercy in sentencing the convicts.

    Magistrate Aluko subsequently adjourned the case till April 7, 2017.

  • Osun agency gives ultimatum on signage

    The Osun State Signage, Hoarding and Advertisement Agency, also known as O’Signage, has issued a two-week ultimatum to owners of billboards, posters and other forms of advertisement signage, to register with the agency and adhere to standard practice or face prosecution.

    Executive Vice Chairman Mrs. Dupe-Ajayi Gbadebo, in a statement at the weekend, said it became imperative to regulate the pasting of posters and placement of signage given the indiscriminate way major streets are defaced with posters and illegal billboards.

    She warned that pasting of postal indiscriminately will no longer be allowed and only duly registered persons will be allowed to use public space for advertisement.

    Her words: “Whether political or religious, any other type of poster or signage, the owners must be properly registered with the government while the agency will guide on the appropriate places to paste posters or erect billboards.

    “We can no longer tolerate the manner major streets are defaced. We appeal to whoever wants to use public space for advertisement to register and follow regulations”.

    Mrs. Dupe-Ajayi warned that any individual, religious organisation, political party, company or business owner, who attempts to use public space for advertisement without O’Signage’s permission, will be arrested and prosecuted.

  • Osun politics beyond jokes, says APC

    Osun politics beyond jokes, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State yesterday described the political alliance of some parties, plotting to “wrest power” from the APC in 2018 as a “joke”.

    The ruling party said politics and governance in Osun State had gone beyond “jokes and wishful thinking”.

    In a statement by its Director of Publicity, Research and Strategy, Kunle Oyatomi, the party said promoters of the new alliance were political featherweight.

    It said: “In the last 16 years, these are people who have not been able to develop worthy ideas, talk less of having the capacity to achieve what Governor Rauf Aregbesola has accomplished in over six years.

    “Politicians who lack the ability to think out of the box and initiate progressive development cannot compete with the APC and Aregbesola.

    “Despite its low federal allocation, Osun still out-performs many states.

    “For the benefit of those who care about facts and figures, there are some states where workers have not been paid in seven months.

    “Osun State, therefore, cannot be worse off on that score as the new alliance uninformed leaders claim. How can such a collection of people and parties upstage a party like the APC in Osun?”

  • Osun tasks council administrators on community development

    The Community and Social Development Project (CSDP) in Osun State has charged the managers of the local government councils in the state to fast-tract development in their various local government areas by adopting Community Driven Development (CDD).

    The General Manager of the agency, Mrs Aderomke Oluwafunmilayo Abokede gave the charge at a one day strategic workshop organized by Osun CSDP to intimate the council managers on operational procedures of the body to stimulate and enhance community development in the state.

    Abokede said the workshop became necessary given the critical roles of the Local Government Authority (LGA) in the implementation of developmental projects in various local communities across the state. CSDP is a World Bank assisted programme.

    She observed that since the local government authorities as the third tier of government is the closest to the communities, they are expected to work with the people of the grassroots to improve their welfare and better their life by maximizing resource in executing meaningful projects for the people.

    She explained that, “There is paradigm shift in development now. As against the top-down supply approach that has been discovered to be responsible for past project failures, CSDP prefers the Community Driven Development approach which is bottom-up and demand driven.”

    “CDD gives control of the resources and the decision to the people of community based on their need. With this, there is focus on the ownership and sustainability of the projects because of the active community participation.”

    Abokede urged the council managers to abide and adhere to the laid down procedures of CSDP implementation. She disclosed that Osun State Government has paid its counterpart fund and commended the state governor, Mr Rauf Aregbesola for his commitment to development of local communities in the state.

  • LAUTECH: Oyo, Osun set up technical committee

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi, and his Osun State counterpart, Rauf Aregbesola, have set up a 10-person technical committee to produce a white paper from the visitation panel’s reports on the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH), Ogbomoso, Oyo State.

    The visitation panel, chaired by legal luminary Wole Olanipekun (SAN), set up by the two owner-states to investigate the crises rocking LAUTECH and recommend short-term and long term solutions, submitted its report to Ajimobi and Aregbesola last week.

    Ajimobi’s Special Adviser on Communication and Strategy Yomi Layinka announced this at a briefing in Ibadan yesterday.

    The technical committee, chaired by Ajimobi’s Chief of Staff Gbade Ojo, will begin its sitting today.

    It is expected to submit a white paper on the visitation panel’s report within two weeks.

    The Director of Higher Education, Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, Oyo State, Kunle Adeosun, will serve as secretary.

    The owner-states set four-point terms of reference for the committee, which include looking at the recommendations of the panel and review whatever inadequacies that might be in the recommendations.

    The committee is also expected to come up with pragmatic recommendations for the reopening of the school and its sustainability without necessarily bringing financial burden to the owners.

    Members of the committee also from Oyo State are Commissioner for Justice and Attorney-General, Seun Abimbola; permanent secretary, Ministry of Finance, David Olatunde; permanent secretary, Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, Mrs. Ronke Makanjuola and Chairman, Oyo State House of Assembly Committee on Education, Afeez Adeleke.

    Members of the committee from Osun State are former permanent secretary, Cabinet Office, Obafemi Akinyele; permanent secretary, Ministry of Finance, Adebimpe Ogunlumade, permanent secretary, Ministry of Education, Sunday Olajide; Chairman, House of Assembly Committee on Education, Folorunsho Bamisayemi.

  • FGM will reduce in Osun, says govt

    FGM will reduce in Osun, says govt

    The Osun State government has said its high Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) rating will drop next year.
    Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Health, Akinyinka Esho said this at the grand finale of the End FGM Poster Art Competition organised by Value Reorientation for Community Enhancement in Osogbo.
    Esho hailed the Rauf Aregbesola administration’s provision of necessary logistics in creating awareness, sensitisation, monitoring and the progress made in making erstwhile circumcision specialists renounce their source of livelihood.
    State Coordinator of the International Awareness Campaign, Mrs. Aduke Obelawo, explained that UNICEF and other agencies will not rest until the practice is at its lowest ebb.

  • Osun signs MoU with mining firm

    The Osun State government has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with a private firm, Soundcore Agriculture and Mining Limited.

    Representing the government, Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Forestry, Natural and Mineral Resources A Ajilore and Acting Executive Secretary of Ministry of Forestry, Natural and Mineral Resources S.O. Lanlehin said the partnership would enable the state effectively tap mineral resources.

    The firm’s Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Anthony Nwakalor, said the agreement would be the first of many in the solid mineral sector.

    He added that although the mineral sites were not in the state, they belonged to the government.

  • Osun partners German experts on cancer

    Osun partners German experts on cancer

    A team of German oncologists, who came for a three-day visit to Osun State on cancer management and training of primary health care workers on early detection and awareness of the disease, has promised to collaborate with the state government to stem the scourge of the deadly disease in the state.
    The German oncologists, who commended Governor Rauf Aregbesola for showing serious concern and tackling the cancer disease headlong, said that they were ready to support the state government on capacity building for the medical personnel at the PHCs on early detection, awareness and treatment of cancer patients.
    Stating that the level of cancer awareness in the state was low, the German oncologists, led by Professor Hans Lippert, said there is need for improvement on the cancer awareness programmes in the state. The experts are from the Institute for Operative Medicine of the Otto-yon Guericke-University, Germany.
    Lippert and a member of the team Professor Slefoune Wolff said their assessment during the three days health facilities across the state showed some gap between available data on cancer and the facilities to take care of the scourge. The team had visited and inspected facilities at the general hospitals in Iwo, Ilesa and Osogbo where they interacted with patients and obtained data on cancer.
    In his comment, a the Vice Chairman House committee on Health Hon. (Dr) Olaolu Oyeniran, a gynecologist , admitted the state was short of the required facilities necessary in the fight against cancer. He stated that the renewed commitment of Aregbesola’s administration to fight cancer to a standstill in the state spurred the government to facilitate the three day training and assessment tour by the German oncologists.
    He maintained that the PHC is the critical in early cancer detection , hence the need for the state government to trained medical personnel at the primary level on early cancer detection, awareness and proper referral of patients. The lawmaker said all cancer related treatment at both private and public hospital would now be proper documented for data collation and cancer management in the State.