Tag: OSUN

  • Osun begins payment of salary arrears

    Osun begins payment of salary arrears

    •Workers dissatisfied with one month pay    •Pay cut for political office holders

    The Osun State government has begun the payment of eight-month salary arrears to civil servants and pensioners.

    Media aide to Governor Rauf Aregbesola Semiu Okanlawon confirmed this to reporters in Osogbo, the state capital.

    He said the government  paid the balance of November salary to workers on Grade Level 15 and above as well as full salary for December to all workers.

    The government announced a 50 per cent cut in salaries and allowances of  political office holders.

    “Since the inception of this government, we have treated the resources under our control with utmost respect and disbursed them diligently for the benefit of our people.

    “Our mandate had always been to use our God-given wealth to bridge the gap between the downtrodden and the government.

    “It is very unfortunate that we find ourselves unable to pay our workers for several months when, in the past, we stood for paying on or before 25th of each month. We thank the ever gracious and understanding workers of our state for their patience as we go through this most trying time.

    “However, we are glad to announce that we have commenced the process of paying for the balance of November and full December salary arrears for all workers across the state and the process should be concluded by Friday.

    “We are able to do this because our partners and creditors have faith in us and we have proven to be responsible and trustworthy.

    “We hereby announce a 50 per cent cut in the salaries and allowances of political office holders and appointees.

    “This is one of the many steps we are taking to ensure our sustenance.

    “We are also calling on the people to join us and do their part in carrying the weight of change.

    “Austerity stares us in the face. We must embrace it. We are going to intensify our efforts at prudence and frugality. We will practise self-denial in every way possible.

    “As we proceed on this journey of self-discovery, we hope to put more and more of our people to work by attracting productive investments to our state.”

    The workers yesterday expressed dissatisfaction with the payment, which many of them described as a disappointment.

    They  vowed to continue their industrial action, which has entered the fourth week.

    The workers said they won’t return to work until they get at least five months of the eight months they are owed.

    Speaking with reporters in Osogbo after a meeting with government officials, the state Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Jacob Adekomi, maintained that the workers would not yield to government’s plea, unless their demands are met.

    According to him,  the strike was due to government’s inability to meet their demand for at least five months’ salaries.

    Adekomi, accompanied by  other state labour leaders, said it was disheartening that the government insisted on paying only one month (December 2014), stating that most of the workers had incurred debts.

    He said the government intended to balance the 30 per cent of salary owed civil servants on Grade Level 15 and above for November, plus one month net salary to all workers across board for December.

    Adekomi, who appreciated the governor’s efforts also appealed to workers to remain calm and steadfast, insisting that the NLC would continue negotiation with the government, until workers get their full salaries.

    ‘Austerity stares us in the face. We must embrace it. We are going to intensify our efforts at prudence and frugality. We will practise self-denial in every way possible’

     

  • Osun; metaphor for unpaid salaries

    About two months ago, a female retiree of the Osun State public service called to complain about unpaid workers’ salaries, and wanted this writer to wade in, as an advocate of the masses. After another caller came up with the same issue, it became imperative to find out what was going on in Osun State. Osun State truly owes about six months’ salary backlog, and the workers have become restive as a result.

    Osun State Governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, attributes the unpaid salaries to Osun State’s dwindling revenue. For instance, he revealed, revenue from all sources in 2012, including the Federation Account; internally generated revenue; and other accruals, like Value Added Tax from the Federal Government, yielded N28.4 billion, whereas total wage bill only was N31.6 billion, leaving a deficit of N3.2 billion. The same scenario was repeated in 2013, with a deficit of N10.4 billion.

    It turned out also that dwindling oil revenue has made it difficult for the Federal Government, and 24 (some say 28)of Nigeria’s 36 states, to pay staff salaries. The initial cause of the palaver was the increase of minimum wage to N18,000, unilaterally entered into by the President Goodluck Jonathan administration with the labour unions. It became a kerfuffle when the price of crude oil plummeted, and reduced the revenue that accrued to the nation.

    The Nigerian Governors’ Forum, led by former Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, alleged that another cause of the problem was the Federal Government’s squandering of funds due to the states from the Excess Crude Account. But former Minister of Finance, and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, countered that the money was actually paid to states. She asked governors who are in doubt to ask their commissioners for finance for the whereabouts of their allocation.

    Things have gotten so bad, as the traditional source of money got compromised, that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation is unable to meet $2 billion cash call obligations to its joint-venture international oil corporations partners. Indeed an IOC source alleges that the Federal Government totally mismanaged available crude oil revenue, and misappropriated money meant to execute projects and activities that were not included in budgets approved by the National Assembly.

    The All Progressives Congress Progressive Governors’ Forum, led by Imo State Governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, recently called on President Muhammadu Buhari to say that, “As it stands today, most states of the federation have not been able to pay (outstanding) salaries,” and expected that Buhari “will do everything humanly possible to bring about a bailout.”

    Some argue that some Nigerian governments embarked on ambitious projects. The governments, they argued, had thought that the higher revenue that accompanied increased demand for crude oil by China and other countries would continue forever. Most states, they added, became complacent, and failed to explore alternative sources for revenue.

    But you see, government is about providing services to the people—and paying some cadres of the citizenry to perform it. And there are some services that the people didn’t ask for, but must be provided nonetheless: You don’t ask for the military or police forces to protect you, before government provides them anyway.

    The same goes for social services, like hospitals, schools, and traffic control that will have adverse effect on society if not discharged. You will have a hard time faulting an Osun State Government that fulfills its electoral promisesby feeding about 254,000 pupils daily, and providing jobs for about 3,000 cooks, and giving farming and agribusiness a shot in the arm, through the ‘O’ MEALS Elementary School Feeding and Health Programme.  Neither can you really fight a plan to refurbish the old Osogbo Aerodrome, to provide a hub to freight agricultural cargo from Osun and adjoining states. The airport comes with a repairs hanger where military, private operators and commercial airlines can repair their aircrafts. The network of roads around the airport also makes for easy fight connections for passengers and farming cargoes.

    But the sudden drop of oil revenue scuppered the whole thing, bringing unpaid wages in its wake. Because the problem of unpaid wages of government workers is a universal phenomenon in Nigeria, many suggest down-sizing of staff. That fails to recognize that employment of workers is also a legitimate social service expected of every government.

    That explains why the salaries of civil servants are usually lower than those of private sector employees; and that the guarantee of tenure, gratuity and pension, are their compensations for accepting lower wages. It’s the same reason that it takes a longer time and more rigorous procedure to fire civil servants.

    This then brings up the argument that is making the rounds; namely, that states governments must be allowed to independently negotiate minimum wages with the labour unions. If the Federal Government will not pay the salary bills of states, it should not negotiate wages on their behalf. Allowing each state the autonomy to negotiate its minimum wage with labour goes by the name, ‘fiscal federalism.’

    But really the Federal Government is too big, to the detriment of states and (especially) local governments. The real interface between the state and the citizens is more at the local government level. Shouldn’t the revenue allocation formula be restructured to the advantage of local government councils?

    Indeed, the day for the argument for fiscal federalism is here. It is imperative for the Nigerian state to recognize that those who provide the resources must be first partakers in its yield. That must explain why the NigerDelta, whose soil provides the oil and gas that has provided the major source of revenue for the country, complainabout being schemed out of the returns from the petroleum resources.

    “Conscious of the fact that (the Niger Delta region) remains the most valuable physical resource for (national) development,” a recent summit of the Ijaw nation notes that “Ijaw… communities suffer the deleterious effects of oil and gas exploration and exploitation,” and regrets that the Nigerian state is unable “to address the concomitant negative impacts on the health, economy, culture, and environment of the Ijaw people.”

    The Ijaw have therefore expressed a desire for self-determination, having noted that the treaty of 1914, between the Ijaw and the British colonial powers, lapsed in 2014. They consequently empowered the summit ‘to initiate the process of renegotiating the basis of (Ijaw) coexistence with other ethnic nationalities (in Nigeria).”

    Fair-minded Nigerian patriots must not ignore this heart cry of the Ijaw—or other nationalities for that matter. All people of goodwill must strive to achieve a more honest interpretation, and implementation, of the protocols of democratic and federal governance in Nigeria.

    But more to the point: State governments that owe salaries must certainly demonstrate the will to pay. They could restructure payment schedules (the way bankers do), and then seek to re-negotiate more realistic minimum wage regime with labour. This way, accrued wage bills are settled, and a future without financial booby-traps charted.

    And yes, it is not enough to simply blame the governments for unpaid salaries, and leave it at that. The Federal Government may have to immediately initiate a rescue plan to pay the salary arrears, to stem the human sufferings, before asking the state governments to go and sin no more.

    ‘State governments that owe salaries must certainly demonstrate the will to pay. They could restructure payment schedules (the way bankers do), and then seek to re-negotiate more realistic minimum wage regime with labour. This way, accrued wage bills are settled, and a future without financial booby-traps charted’

     

  • Osun APC advises judge to resign

    Osun APC advises judge to resign

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State has advised Justice Olamide Folahanmi Oloyede to resign from the  High Court, instead of “ganging up with the opposition to destroy the government of which she is an integral part”.

    The party was reacting to a petition forwarded to the House of Assembly by Justice Oloyede, demanding the impeachment of Governor Rauf Aregbesola and his deputy, Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori, for unpaid salaries and pensions.

    In a statement by its Director of Publicity, Research and Strategy, Kunle Oyatomi, the party described the petition as “a gross abuse of the privileges of her office for the judge to use the platform of the state’s judiciary to mount open and destructive challenge against her boss”.

    The party said: “The ethics of her status in this government prohibits such frontal challenge. If she is determined to bring down the Aregbesola government as her petition so clearly indicates, it will be dishonorable of her to remain in government. She is, therefore, advised to resign immediately so that she will be free to pursue her delight outside the platform of government.

    “Whereas? the judge, as a free citizen, has rights to express herself on matters affecting the country and her environment but as a judge of the state High Court, she is ethically and morally restrained from making pronouncements that would be prejudicial to the administration of justice.

    “The judge’s petition was significantly flawed because it is a bogus rehearsal of all the baseless allegations made by the PDP against the Aregbesola administration.”

  • Osun indigenes celebrate Bashiru Kuti

    THERE is a ton of reasons for fashion guru, Bashiru Kuti, to be in celebration mode. He is the proud owner of Bkk Ultimo, one of Nigeria’s leading fashion outlets with head office in Ibadan, Oyo State. The outlet also boasts branches across the country as well as in the Nigerian community in London.

    Popularly called Bashy, he did not attain success and fortune by mere luck. His rise to the top is attributable to years of tireless enterprise and thirst for excellence. Never resting on his oars, he forged ahead until his signature label became a household name in Nigeria.

    A few weeks ago, the popular wardrobe consultant added to his list of accomplishments as he was honoured in far away London for his contribution to fashion business in Nigeria. To celebrate the feat, some Osun State indigenes gathered some of his clients, friends and family members at his head office in Ibadan, Oyo State, to celebrate their own.

  • Still on Osun and Ben Bruce

    SIR: I am surprised how people think in this country. When foreign nations give aids to Nigeria, does it mean they do not have poor people in their society. So what is wrong with Ben Bruce donating his allowance to Osun workers?

    Definitely seven months salary arrears is scandalous. Governor Rauf Aregbesola should tell us exactly what led to this because it goes beyond oil price fall.  I cannot be convinced that seven months federal allocation put together cannot pay at least one month workers salary. It is perhaps this burden that informs Ben Bruce’s metaphor.

    We should, in our comment, address the financial mismanagement that is the bane of Osun State and all other states in similar circumstances. Not whether the donation is to Osun or Bayelsa.

    It’s Ben Bruce choice where he spends his money. It’s also the prerogative of Osun workers to either accept or reject the offer. Economics of hunger does not care where the succour comes.

    Let’s rather place the problem in proper perspective which is the madness that characterises the management of state economies by governors. I have no interest in which party does what but whether what is done is right or wrong.

     

    • Etokowo Owoh

    Uyo, Akwa Ibom State.

  • ‘Aregbesola repositioning Osun’

    Former Chairman of Ife Central Local Government Area of Osun State Adetunji Obawole has said adoption of effective strategy and formulation of enduring policies has assisted the Osun State government to turn around its economic fortune.

    Obawole said Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s administrative style has placed the state on the global map.

    He added that the Aregbesola administration had repositioned education through the adoption of school reclassification and construction of mega schools, among others.

    The former lawmaker maintained that the government had equally opened the state for economic activities through road construction and urban renewal to attract investors.

    The former council chairman said the victory of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the just concluded election was a strong indication that Nigerians were yearning for positive change.

  • ‘Osun ’ll rise again’

    ‘Osun ’ll rise again’

    Osun State House of Assembly member from Obokun Constituency Hon. Olatunbosun Oyintiloye has expressed optimism that the House would add value to governance in the state.

    He spoke in his Constituency Office, Ibokun, during a courtsey visit by some traditional rulers in Obokun Local Government. He said the state would witness more development.

    Oyintiloye noted that, with the calibre of lawmakers, with different experiences, exposure and professional backgrounds, the House would be proactive, vibrant and advance the course of good governance in the state.

    The lawmaker also said with the quality and experience of the elected leadership of the house, there would be mutual understanding and peaceful coexistence.

    He told the royal fathers  that the atmosphere of love that permeated the House at the inauguration was a good omen for the growth of democracy.

    He expressed optimism hat the House would pursue its legislative duties, checks and balances and oversight functions without compromising its independence as a separate arm of government.

    “The past House of Assembly, especially the immediate one, has shown very good examples by passing laws that would be beneficial to the people and assist the government to deliver.”

    “I am optimistic that diverse and rich professional background of different members of the state Assembly will contribute positively in the discharge of our legislative duties.’

    “The Assembly being a theatre of democracy is designed to make law for the development of the nation, state and local government as the case may be, and I am convinced that Osun Assembly will not be different.

    “The tradition of non-intervention of executive arm of government  in the legislative business and its functions would also go a long way in assisting the state legislators to deliver their constitutional responsibilities”, he said.

    Oyintiloye charged the people of his constituency to always provide necessary guidance as the occasion may demand.

  • Osun’ll return to golden era, says Aregbesola

    Osun’ll return to golden era, says Aregbesola

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has said the state will return to the golden era.

    He said his administration was working to diversify the economy to make it self-suuficient.

    A statement from the Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Semiu Okanlawon, said: “From the outset, the Aregbesola administration had set out to ensure that it diversified the economy in such a way that proceeds from  economic activities and taxes would drive the economy and not reliance on federal allocations.

    “The attempt to wean the state off Federal Allocation was behind the haste with which the Aregbesola administration embarked on key economic programmes.”

    The statement added:  “The government’s approach to agriculture, industrialisation , tourism and massive infrastructure provision was driven by the clear possibility that the sole reliance on the Federal Government for survival would one day throw the country into an economic quagmire of immense proportion.

    Okanlawon said: “The dream has not gone awry and it is a clear vision that Osun must be on its feet, self-reliant and be a reference point in Nigeria.

    “The race to ensure development during Aregbesola’s first term informed the fear of what is happening now.

    “Aregbesola wanted a self-reliant Osun. That Osun, almost two decades after its creation, could not boast of tax-paying companies speaks volume about the magnitude of the work that awaited the Aregbesola administration.

    “But the governor did not shy away from this task. During his first term, his government caused investors to bring up companies, such as the Omoluabi Garment Factory, Osogbo and Adulawo/RLG Technology Company in Ilesa.

    “Just last month, a leading telecommunications firm, Airtel, came to partner with the Adulawo/RLG company.

    “These are aside the various agro-allied companies, which have benefited from the administration’s growth schemes.

    “The government also begun aggressive drive for the development of the solid mineral sector with the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding with an Australian mining firm, Andalusian Mining Industry.

    “It was in the same vein that the idea of an airport for aircraft maintenance was conceived.”

    “To accept that our state must continue to survive on the meagre inflow through what goes to the civil servants alone is to accept that we would continue to depend on external forces for our survival.

    “We must work hard to give our people many choices. If you want to work in the civil service, it must be the choice that our people make on their own volition and not that there are no other choices, regardless of their education, qualifications and expertise.”

    The statement cited the instance of Lagos which today can pay its workers timely and still continue its development works.

    “People must not forget that Lagos, in 1999 when former Governor Bola Tinubu took over, was generating a paltry sum.

    “It was the ingenious interventions and immediate provisions of infrastructure that lured investors in to create various opportunities for the people and made tax administration much easier for what is now today’s Lagos. This feat can be repeated in Osun and other parts of Nigeria.”

    The statement added the governor has come clean on the state‘s finances  to ensure that nothing is hidden and to assure the people that despite the precarious situation, he is determined to restore the state to the era where his government paid salaries on the 25th of every month.

    “Before June 30, workers would be paid their salaries, Okanlawon said.

  • For Osun to overcome

    I do not subscribe to the notion that Nigeria is a great and rich country. I hiss at the mention of these two words by anyone, no matter how highly placed and/or intelligent, which makes me to immediately lose interest in the person’s speech, no matter its veracity. Nigeria is neither great nor rich. What can best describe her station is that she has the potential to be great and rich. And potential is just that – potential. Like a person, a nation can bring her potential into existence within the “shelf-life” of that potential. Or she may never. A country that is far behind in all indices of societal development cannot be considered great. But of course, Nigeria is a ‘great’ country for that someone who simply evacuated billions of naira of his country’s pensioners into his private account and still walks around with soldiers and policemen as bodyguards, with a National Honour to boot. It is also no doubt the ‘greatest’ country on earth for that chief of state who’s richer than all his state’s indigenes combined, having commandeered their common patrimony by virtue of his position. And when the nation’s judiciary finally summoned enough courage to ‘prosecute’ him, he was fined less than one tenth of one percent of his loot and told to steal no more. Nigeria cannot be a rich country when her entire annual budget is what a university expends annually on Research and Development (R&D) in a country in Europe or a company’s operating budget in North America. What has this to do with Osun State?

    The state, like most states in the federation, has always found it difficult to embark on any meaningful growth and development since their creation because the centre insists that they must be spoon-fed. So, they keep struggling to meet their basic financial obligations such as paying their workers’ salaries and pensions. Some of them are, for all practical purposes, insolvent that were they to be companies they would have gone belly up a long time.

    When the governor of Osun State, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola lucidly laid bare all the financial facts of his state at the inauguration of the sixth assembly, it showed courage in leadership where others would have been scared stiff. Governor Aregbesola said, inter alia, that the “problem began in 2012 when our expenditure increased as a result of the spike in minimum wage…Then, our total emoluments rose to N2.7 billion from the N1.4 billion I met in November 2010. By December of that year, it hit N3.5 billion. At the same period, our statutory allocation…increased marginally from N2.1 billion in 2010 to N2.5 billion in December 2012. By July of 2013, our total emoluments hit N4 billion while our statutory allocation was N2.1 billion. By then we had extended the increase to other workers.”

    The governor went on to say that “the summary of five years reveal that in the two months of 2010, we received a net allocation of N4.2 billion and paid a total emoluments of N3.6 billion. This left us with a net gain of N573 million from our statutory allocation. In 2011 also, we got N29.9 billion net statutory allocation and spent N25.8 billion on emoluments with a net gain of N4 billion. However, in 2012, we got N28.4 billion and expended N31.6 billion on emoluments. This left us, for the first time, with a deficit of N3.2 billion. The following year, 2013, our statutory allocation had dropped to N26.4 billion while our emoluments rose to N36.9 billion. This gave us a whopping N10.4 billion deficit. In 2014, our statutory allocation fell further to N19.3 billion and by which time we were already defaulting on some of our obligations on emoluments, which had also dropped to N22.4 billion, but still left us with a deficit of N3 billion. In summary, between November 2010 and December 2014, we got a total statutory allocation of N108.3 billion and our expenditure on emoluments was N120.4 billion. It left us with a total deficit of N12 billion…Even when we add our internally generated revenue, we were still only able to muster N204 billion and still short by N2 billion. It simply means that all our earning from all sources between 2010 and 2014 could not carry our recurrent expenditure (emphasis mine).”

    One need not be a financial wizard to know that this state is in deep financial trouble. So, what’s to be done? Methinks the governor would have used that old school anthem of his, titled “Moment of Decision” written by J. Russel Lowell to reel out his plans of action because it’s now decision time – hard one at that. Knowing that their state is heavy laden and its financial future bleak, I had expected that the current civil service strike would have been immediately called off in sympathy for a governor who had not only promptly paid salaries, but gave them a 13th month bonus in the past, even with the limited resources at his disposal. Aside from our monumental corruption, some of the questions to ask ourselves are why is it that our financial health is always precarious as a nation? Do we really understand capitalism and its principles for it to work well for us? Why are we in delusion of creating wealth when we’re not? Are we operating a capitalist system with socialist mindset, or vice versa? Granted, these questions may be pointless by now, but what the states cannot wish away, Osun inclusive, is that they must embark on some hard and tough choices henceforth.  And here are some suggestions for Governor Aregbesola.

    He must reduce the size of government. The size must be so compact to fit in a briefcase. Thus, some ministries, parastatals and agencies must be scrapped. For example, why should a state whose country’s constitution guarantees religious freedom have Pilgrims Welfare Board? Why should the state pay for people to go on holy pilgrimages? What’s the meaning of Ministry of Women Affairs? Why should there exist a Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs when Local Governments are constitutionally autonomous? Why the Ministry of Sports? Why not recalibrate, say, the Ministry of Information to provide life and well-being-enhancement, wealth-creating information and knowhow to the citizenry?

    Why not convert the vast expanse of land that houses the state secretariat into a middle class community in cohabitation with essential ministries? About three or four buildings of four floors each, with one ministry per floor, clustered around the governor’s office, would do just fine. Most importantly, a state’s workforce that brings in less than N30 million in Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) a month should not be paid N100 million as salaries, let alone N1 billion per month. The state must encourage most of its workers to take early retirement by giving them some lump sums (buy-out) for retiring early while their pensions are in abeyance for a few years. After this, Governor Aregbesola must make several forays into Lagos for some of its companies and line them up along the rail corridor of Osogbo. You first have to get out of the box before you can think out of it otherwise you’re still in a straightjacket, which is where the entire country seems to be. Deliberate policies and actions must be activated if Osun State shall overcome. The time is now.

    •Odere is a media practitioner. He can be reached at femiodere@gmail.com.    

  • Osun JUSUN suspends strike

    Osun JUSUN suspends strike

    The Osun State branch of the Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) has suspended its five-month industrial action.

    This followed the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding on Friday by the Head of Service, Sunday Olayinka Owoeye, on behalf of the government and the State JUSUN Chairman, Comrade O. Oseni, the body called on its members to report to work today.

    According to the MoU, the practice of requiring the judiciary to process approvals through the executive arm of government would stop when there is complete financial autonomy for the judiciary.

    It was also agreed that necessary fund currently covering the overhead cost and Consolidated  Revenue Fund Charges (CRFC) will be released immediately and that no officer  of the union would be victimised.