Tag: OSUN

  • Public holiday in Osun

    Public holiday in Osun

    The Osun State government yesterday declared today a public holiday to mark the Islamic New Year (Hijrah 1437).

    The governor, in a statement by the Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Office of the Governor, Semiu Okanlawon, said the declaration followed the government’s practice to declare holiday for Muslims.

    The statement states: “The public holiday is to allow Muslim faithful to fully observe the celebration of the Islamic New Year.

    “The public holiday is in line with the policy thrust of the present administration which provides equal platforms for all religions to promote communal peace and progress.”

     

     

  • Osun invests N1.7b in LAUTECH

    Acting Chief Medical Director, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology Teaching Hospital, Osogbo, Prof. Akeem Lasisi, has said the Osun State government had invested N1.7 billion in capital projects in the hospital.

    Lasisi told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Osogbo that the amount was spent on the projects in the hospital in the last four years.

    He, however, said that in spite of the huge investment, most of the projects had remained undone and uncompleted.

    The Acting CMD said one of the projects, a laboratory complex, was without furniture.

    Lasisi, who assumed office, last month, said the hospital was “comatose”.

    He added that forensic examiners were scrutinising the books to check details of finances of the institution ‘’in the last four years and come up with recommendations’’.

    “Aside the investigation on financial transactions, the forensic experts will also probe the sudden upsurge in the number of staff between 2012 and now,” he added.

    According to him, the investigation became necessary in the face of acute shortage of core clinical staff in the hospital.

    “When I assumed office three weeks ago, I met a comatose hospital; resident doctors were on strike and there was total paralysis.

    “More so, documented evidence shows that government has invested N1.7 billion as capital project in this hospital.

    “In spite of that, there are many projects that are undone or not properly done. One of these is the new laboratory complex; the building is there but there is no furniture,” Lasisi said.

  • Osun urges Soyinka not to resign as Centre chairman

    Osun urges Soyinka not to resign as Centre chairman

    The Osun State Government has urged Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka to rescind his decision to resign as the Chairman of the Centre for Black Culture and International Understanding (CBCIU), Osogbo.

    In a response personally signed by Governor Rauf Aregbesola, the government stated that in the interest of the public and the culture of the people of the state to which Soyinka is passionately committed, he must continue in his capacity as the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Centre.

    “Yes, Wole Soyinka has resigned but he himself has conceded the fact that the Governor must accept it.

    “We cannot accept the resignation even though we hold him in the highest of esteem, because of the responsibilities attached to his chairmanship of the Centre for Black Culture and International Understanding which is beyond him and even beyond us,” the governor stated.

    “It has to do with the culture and tradition of our race which we believe that the CBCIU is meant to preserve and promote.

    “We call on all people of goodwill to prevail on Prof. Wole Soyinka an international personage of Culture, in the interest of our race, not to go ahead with his decision to resign.”

    The government stated that though the former chairman of the Centre had the vision to build the centre in his capacity then as the Governor of the state, he cannot be the chairman of the Centre in perpetuity as stipulated by the Law establishing the Centre.

  • Ooni: Lafogido  ruling house  stakes claim

    Ooni: Lafogido ruling house stakes claim

    The Lafogido Ruling House has described the recognition of the Giesi Royal Family House as the ruling house to produce the next Ooni of Ife, by Osun State Government and Ife kingmakers,  as unfair. Insisting that it was its turn to produce the next Ooni, ‎the family said it is wrong for the state government and kingmakers to declare Giesi as the only ruling house that is qualified to present candidates for the exalted stool.

    Addressing journalists in Ile-Ife, the head of Lafogido Ruling House, Sooko Adeleke Adewoyin, accused the state government and kingmakers of ignoring the report of the 1992 Justice Bolarinwa Babalakin Panel of Inquiry into the Ife Chieftaincy. Adewoyin also disclosed that the Lafogido Ruling House has instituted a legal action to stop the selection process pending the determination of the case in the court.

    Adewoyin said that Lafogido reigned last as Ooni of Ife in 1930. He lamented that efforts of the Lafogido ruling house in the past to allow the state government and other stakeholders to correct the injustice to the ruling house had been futile.

    “In 1992 we made an attempt to call on the government to re-arrange and address the lopsidedness in the ascendancy to the throne of Ooni. Justice Babalakin in his recommendations on the review put it down black and white. He noted that there was conflicting information about the historical background of Lajamisan, that the best thing the government should do is to call all the ruling houses together and address the matter,” he said.

    Speaking further, he quoted the recommendation which read in part: “In view of all the researches that have been carried out in the Ife history, when the first declaration on the stool of Ooni was made, there would appear to be an urgent need for all the ruling houses in Ife to meet, discuss and agree on the number of Lajamisan’s children, the outcome of their meeting will dictate weather or not there is a necessity to amend the present Ooni of Ife chieftaincy declaration, the commission therefore recommend to the state government to cause this to be done. That is a document already with the government since 1992, after the 1980 which they are now relying on.

    “The Attorney General of the state at that time is still alive and he is Chief Adegboyega Awomolo, SAN, now the Asiwaju of Igbajo during the administration of Alhaji Isiaka Adeleke government. He will answer the question of what we have been doing since 1980 because the 1980 edict was hurriedly carried out after the 1976 when an Oba got to the throne. How then can we now rely on the 1980 declaration that has been discredited in 1992 by Justice Babalakin Commission of Inquiry?”

    Adewoyin expressed the fear that Lafogido Ruling House might go into extinction if it allows the injustice against it persist. He said they the Lafogido would continue to sensitise the public about the injustice in the interest of the people of Ife and Yoruba, lamenting that the wrong person should not be allowed to occupy the exalted Ooni stool.

  • Cooperate with Aregbesola for best result, Omoworare urges Osun workers

    Cooperate with Aregbesola for best result, Omoworare urges Osun workers

    The people and workers in Osun State have been enjoined to cooperate with the governor, Mr. Rauf Aregbesola, in his effort to deliver on his electoral promises.

    The Senator representing Osun East Senatorial District and Chairman Senate Committee on Rules and Business, Babajide Omoworare made the call yesterday.

    In statement by his Media Assistant Tunde Dairo, Senator Omoworare said  the financial difficulty currently experienced in the state is an imposed national crisis which the APC led Federal Government is working round the clock to resolve.

    While commending President MuhammaduBuhari for his fatherly gesture through the bailout plan,  Senator Omoworare said: “The  bailout is a short term measure to ameliorate the economic hardship imposed on the federating states by the previous PDP led administration. Hence, states must look inward to generate more resources with people friendly and acceptable policies if they intend to break even.

    “Workers in Osun should be commended for their perseverance and understanding as shown during this trying period. A collective solution for a lasting result and economic repositioning of the state is a necessity which must not be trivialised or politicized.”

  • Osun begins  payment of  outstanding salaries

    Osun begins payment of outstanding salaries

    The Osun State government yesterday began the payment of outstanding salaries to workers.

    The state Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Jacob Adekomi, announced this to reporters after a meeting with government representatives at the Government House, Osogbo.

    He praised Governor Rauf Aregbesola for disbursing the bailout loan for the payment of backlog of salaries.

    The NLC chairman said there was no disagreement between Labour and government on whether or not the bailout loan would be used to pay salaries as speculated in some quarters.

    He added that labour was sure that the fund was intact but was meeting with the government on the modalities of how it would be disbursed based on the July 13 Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).

    The NLC boss said the funds to be disbursed would cover the payment of outstanding salaries for January to June.

    “In order to ensure sustainability of payment of salaries in Osun, the first disbursement from the bailout loan should cover the payment of outstanding September and December 2014 deductions, balance of January and February salaries and full payment of March, April and May  salaries for government workers.

    “Local government workers and primary school teachers will be paid the balance of March and April salaries as well as full payment of May and June salaries.

    “State pensioners will receive the balance of December 2014 pensions and full payment of January to March pensions. Their counterparts in the local government and primary schools will be paid up to June.”

    Leading the government delegation to the negotiation meeting, the Chief of Staff to the governor, Gboyega Oyetola, said: “Government is working for the interest of workers and bailout loan is just once, hence the need for government to properly disburse it.

    “Osun is not the only state that has got its share of the bailout loan and most of the states have not even disbursed the loan.

    “So, there is nothing special about Osun taking its time before properly disbursing it.

    “What we have done was to align with workers who asked that the number of actual workers be ascertained through verification. That is what we have just concluded. We must consider what will happen and what to do after this disbursement.

    “We want to be sure that people we are paying are real workers who are still in service. We must also have the understanding that after the disbursement of the bailout loan, whatever remains from the federal allocation and IGR will be used to pay workers.”

    Oyetola described as false and unwarranted the earlier insinuations by opposition that the governor had been mobilising contractors back to work from the bailout loan.

  • Beyond salary and bailout in Osun

    SIR: Those who thought that the salary palaver in Osun and other states owing workers will disappear with the bailout funds should have a rethink because it will not. Workers and pensioners have been restless for the past one week, expecting to be paid the bailout received recently.

    The governor, however, has insisted that payment would be made only after the completion of the verification exercise. True, physical verification has ended but the result is still being collated and the report yet to be submitted, which should form the basis of the new wage bill.

    I agree with the governor that ghost workers should not receive the jumbo pay. From investigation, it has been found out that the beneficiaries of payroll fraud in cooperation with the opposition PDP have been blackmailing the governor to heat up Osun and incite workers against the governor.

    Secondly, it was the workers themselves who asked for the verification exercise after disputing the N3.6 billion wage bill the government claims it pays every month, it was never the governor’s idea.

    A lot of misinformation has been going on and many innocent workers have been deceived. The N34.9billion bailout received from Abuja represents three values. The first is for salaries for February to June 2015, the second is for pensions covering the same period while the third is for the completion of specific projects, ongoing or new. These funds are not transferable. So it is not true that all the N34.9 billion is for paying salaries and pensions arrears.

    The question which has engaged the governor and for which he has proposed half salary for senior staff is what happens after June? Given the dwindling oil receipt and N2.3 billion allocation from Abuja for July, what will be the state of Osun’s finances after the deductions for the bailout loan kicks in? It simply means that Osun’s allocation will be less than N1billion. So where do we go from here? Should we eat everything now and go hungry later or spread what we have to last us longer?

    While we still debate this, this is the moment of clarity for the governor and I daresay the workers too. The present wage bill of N3.6b is unsustainable; something must give.

    The governor must reduce the wages and pensions bill in the state to a maximum of N1.8 billion. The current workforce of 35,000 is too large and unsustainable. There must be a shift in the anti-development thinking that makes people to say that Osun is a civil service state, or the civil service is the only industry in Osun. This type of thinking will lead to nowhere. The civil service is an instrument of service delivery and not an end in itself. On no account must the government spend more than 40 per cent of the state’s resources running government. This takes courage.

    If it were in the private sector, the workforce would have been right sized as back as 2013 when allocation fell from N4.6 billion to N2.6 billion and nobody would be accusing the governor of owing workers eight months salary.

    The governor keeps giving assurances that he will not lay off workers. This amounts to living in denial. The bottom line is that he must live within his means. Therefore, he must be prepared to right-size and cut down on wages, especially of the top civil servants who gulp most of the wages or continue to pile up debts and crisis. May God give him the courage to do what is needed.

     

    • Mike Ogundele,

    Osogbo, Osun State

     

  • Osun, after the salary demon

    After a stream of cheery developmental news, the Osun opposition, with both hands, grabbed the demon of unpaid salaries — and hard, it nailed the Osun government.

    It thoroughly demonised Governor Rauf Aregbesola and his ambitious social and physical infrastructure programmes, donning the Ogbeni in an unflattering garb — a grand hypocrite in the progressive space, that should be condemned by all!

    Which lover of the masses, they ask in triumph, cheeks bathed in subversive tears, would sit pretty and watch his people go hungry, months on end, without salaries?

    It was all emotive blackmail, of course.  On the salary issue, the governor was not unfazed any more than he created the failure, though his finances were rather tight, with virtually every kobo over-leveraged, on ambitious — over-ambitious, many insist — capital projects, such that any shock, no matter how slight, was catastrophic.

    The real culprit was, however, former President Goodluck Jonathan — his recklessness with the national till. This point Ripples made in “Osun’s politics of the belly” (July 7), when it argued that since the Jonathan Presidency caused the problem, the Muhammadu Buhari Presidency should fix it, instead of the media roasting of victim governors, which solved no problems.  The president did just that.

    But the blackmail grandly resonated.  Those unconvinced by its logic were easily swept by its pathos; with not a few succumbing fast to plaintive kith-and-kin, going hungry and clearly angry, for not earning salary, for no less than six months.

    Well, all is fair in war — and the Osun government, in the clouds most times, plummeted back to earth!

    Now, with a Federal Government-secured loan to clear the salary backlog, is the demonization set to end?  Not a chance!

    For one, play on emotions is the exclusive preserve of those who cannot build clinical arguments; or the mischievous, who have nary a case.

    For another, the Osun opposition is not about dismantling its egbirin ote — what the Yoruba would call a complex web of intrigues — for in Aregbesola’s failure lies their own salvation!  When, after all, comes from the gods, another potent blackmail weapon, ala unpaid salaries, to torture a clear and present nemesis?

    So, enter a fresh controversy: the reported verification, in the build-up to clearing the salary arrears.

    The Osun opposition insists it is yet another example of the government’s coldness to the plight of the Osun workers — for why is the verification bobbing up “now”, on the virtual eve of settling what was owed?  Some especially creative minds even posit, swearing by all they hold dear, that the government had “fixed” the salary money to earn some “quick interest”, while workers continued starving!

    To be sure, the government has not exactly done itself much favour by the verification’s timing, with its high blackmail value: its opponents’ penchant for eternal spinning; and a jaded workers’ near-zero resistance to emotional manipulation, masquerading as hot sympathy.

    Still, the government insists that since Osun would continue re-paying the loan far into the future, it was an excellent time to vet the salary bill, lest the money ends in some ghost pockets.  That makes a lot of sense, though not a few would be too angry to see reason with it.

    It could also well be that a few ghosts and their ambassadors are the most trenchant in the protest racket — for the more raucous the racket, the more the confusion; and the more the confusion, the better chances the ghosts continue to get paid!

    Whatever is happening, the Ogbeni owes the Osun people clear explanations and full disclosure.  At the end, the government would do what it must do to protect public money and its own integrity.

    So, with the opposition always buzzing with mischief, of the most fantastic hue, it may be morning yet on Osun’s day of eternal intrigue!

    Still, the Osun government must be gratified it continues to point the way, for the rest of the country, to the welfare state; despite its lean resources.  Two policy news appear to reinforce this point.

    Two weeks ago, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo announced the Federal Government was set to implement the All Progressives Congress (APC) campaign promise of a schools feeding programme, which, apart from boosting school attendance, would also boost investment in agriculture, catering and allied lines.

    On September 9 in Osogbo, as the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) kicked off its nationwide distribution of plastic chairs to schools, a Federal Government official confirmed Osun’s leadership in this schools welfare programme.

    “The home-grown school feeding programme, the O’Meal,” said UBEC’s Dr. Yakubu Gambo, “is one programme that has endeared the governor to us because he is the only governor doing it despite the capital intensive nature of the programme.”

    Governor Aregbesola, present at the occasion, weighed in: “We are building state-of-the-art 100 elementary schools, 50 middle schools and 20 high schools.  This is a big project by any standard,” he gushed, “which has injected life into the construction industry; and has provided jobs for artisans and professionals.”

    Prince Felix Awofisayo, the Osun SUBEB chief, was not left out of the developmental whoop: “Let me reiterate that the provision of functional education for the citizenry,” he declared, “as the administration is anchored on the implementation of a cohesive and an all-encompassing six-point integral plan.”

    So much developmental news in a day — a far cry from rumbling tummies, plotting adversaries and scapegoating media, just as it was at the beginning, before the salary demon!

    It is the final triumph, then?  Hardly!

    ‘Governor Aregbesola needs a cabinet now to finish as strongly as he started, before the salary catastrophe.  If he delays, he risks facing a crisis — an internal crisis — much more lethal than the hell-raising Osun opposition can ever muster’

    And the battle next time would not be solely from the Osun opposition, even if its bad-tempered buzz would always vibrate; but more dangerously from inside Aregbesola’s own camp, which may well, not unfairly, declare itself starved of legitimate pork.

    Thank God, the salary odyssey is coming to an end.  The Ogbeni should draw a closure as swiftly as he can, and bring smiles back to the cheeks of Osun workers.  He should also seek funds to complete his grand capital projects, among them crucial roads.  It is nice developmental news, from Osun, is hitting the wires again, after the horror tales of the past months.

    But the come-back would not be complete without the governor constituting a cabinet. Nearing the end of the first year in a four-year second term, it is time to bring in as many bright and committed minds as possible — for it is a challenging juncture, demanding a brilliant and committed collective.  It could make the difference between success and failure.

    Governor Aregbesola needs a cabinet now to finish as strongly as he started, before the interregnum of the salary catastrophe.  If he delays, he risks facing a crisis — an internal crisis — much more lethal than the hell-raising Osun opposition can ever muster.

  • Osun to pay salaries with bailout cash

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola and President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Ayuba Wabba have  said the government will use the N34.98 billion bailout loan to pay outstanding workers’ salaries.

    Wabba spoke to reporters in Osogbo after a meeting with the governor on the crisis brewing between the workers and the government.

    Wabba said: “We agreed that the bailout will be deployed to pay outstanding salaries and pensions.

    “It was agreed that the salaries will be paid in the next few days.”

    A statement by the governor’s media director, Semiu Okanlawon, said: “We are using the opportunity to assure workers that all arrears will be paid from the bailout funds .

    “This is why the government has ensured that the verification is concluded and the actual figure of workers is determined.

    “It is therefore important for workers to ensure effective conclusion of this process to ensure that they reap the fruits of their labour.

    “We must agree that civil service reforms are absolutely critical at this stage.

    “There is a need for the engagement of all critical segments of leadership of government and labour for the necessary actions that will make the workforce effective and efficient.

    “If our state, and by all means, the Southwest, will become financially and materially viable, a wholesome review of what works and what does not must be carried out and implemented.”

    Students of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife,  protested in Osogbo, asking  the Federal Government to reduce school fees and for the state to pay workers.

    Led by the Student Union President Omotayo Akande, the students said despite the increased fees, facilities were in a deplorable condition.

     

  • Bailout funds will be used for its purpose – Aregbesola

    Bailout funds will be used for its purpose – Aregbesola

    The Government of the State of Osun on Monday assured the people of the state that the N34.988billion bailout funds received from the Federal Government will be used for the very purpose for which it was received.

    A statement by the Director bureau of communication, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, explained that while the first batch of payment this week will be effected through the allocations received for the month of July..

    The clarification, according to the Bureau of Communication and Strategy in the Office of the Governor, became necessary given the various insinuations and manipulations of the minds of the people giving the impressions that the funds will be diverted to other purposes.

    “We are using the opportunity to assure the entire workers in the state that all arrears of salary and pensions will be paid from the bailout funds as the reason for which it was received. And this is why the government has ensured that the verification exercise is concluded and the actual figure of workers is determined for the purpose of payment,” the Bureau stated

    Explaining further, the Bureau said that bailing out by the Federal Government will not be a continuous thing in the life of Nigeria, adding that the current bailout scheme was necessitated by the economic doldrums the ousted PDP-led Federal Government plunged the country into.

    The statement said the government must protect fully the interests of its real workers who toil day and night to ensure the growth and development of the state.

    “It is therefore pertinent for workers themselves to ensure effective conclusion of this process in order to ensure they reap the fruits of their labour and prevent the criminal and dubious activities of those who reap where they do not sow.

    “Therefore, we must agree that civil service reforms are absolutely critical at this stage in the life of our dear state. There is a need for the engagement of all critical segments of leadership of government and labour for the necessary actions that will make the service effective, efficient and economic.

    “If our state, and by all means, the entire South-West region will become financially and materially viable, a wholesome review of what works and what does not  must be carried out and implemented with considerable alacrity and efficiency.”

    The statement added that the Governor reemphasised his commitment to sustaining the many social programmes his government operate, stating that compassion with the distressed and poor members of society is the true definition of successful leadership.