Tag: OSUN

  • Aregbesola and Osun workers

    SIR: The observations by Tunji Omofoye in the Sunday edition of The Guardian on the 22nd of March overlooks, perhaps because of the constraint of space, certain critical issues relating to the fiscal climate in the state of Osun. Like every other head of a federating unit in Nigeria, Governor Rauf Aregbesola is operating with one arm tied behind his back. This is because of the debilitating effect of our anti-federalist fiscal operating system that cannot be over stated. This is why the issue of restoring fiscal federalism is so crucial not just in this election but for the sake of restoring balance in our economy.

    Everyone is of course aware of the collapse of the country‘s main source of revenue. This alone highlights the fiscal imbalance. However pre dating the downturn, Aregbesola had been pro- active and admirably so.

    In spite of the constraints, he was the first to offer the national minimum wage of N18, 001. This is worth stressing for the very concept and applicability of a national minimum wage in a federal system is contentious.

    Nevertheless, even though he inherited a bloated civil service with over 40000 personnel Aregbesola has resolutely refused to‘ right- size. ‘

    On the contrary, salaries were consistently paid before the end of the month. He valiantly and without prodding paid 13th month salary consecutively since 2010, reflecting the instinct of a committed progressive.

    It has to be stated here that a salary bill of N3.6 billion a month is not an easy proposition at the best of times, not to talk of now when allocation from the Federation Account dropped from N4.6 billion to a little over N1 billion, a shortfall of more than 75 per cent. Up and against it from day one, Aregbesola has pushed up Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) up from N300 million a month to N1billion. This has required ingenuity in a tight fiscal climate in which massive investment in the physical and social infrastructure has also had to be made in order to re-balance the economy as well as to enhance the future outlook of the state.

    As a committed social democrat what Aregbesola resolutely refuses to contemplate let alone carry out is lay- off workers. For this reason, it is on record that all categories of workers have expressed solidarity with the governor. They do not have a doctorate in political economy but they are astute enough as to know the cause and effect.

    As we speak, a committee made up of government officials and labour leaders in the state are working their socks off to come up with means of shoring up revenue in the state, in a way that will not hurt the poor. The talk of discord between the government and labour unions is therefore laughable. There is no such discord. Every party understands the situation and is willing to work hard and come up with solution.

    This is why, from day one, the emphasis has been on cost rationalisation by slimming down on the machinery of government through the elimination of duplication, waste, inefficiencies and corruption.

    As is to be expected, truth is the first casualty. What is being owed is three months’ salaries and not five months. And sorting it out is what disturbs Aregbesola‘s sleep. Across the board, a new edifying alternative perspective has been implemented in the state of Osun, which has repositioned the state and made life more tolerable for all.

    This is why future historians will divide the analysis of the state into two segments; pre and post Aregbesola and  the difference is clear. A temporary hiccup clearly beyond the control of a state government, which is the result of dysfunctional system, cannot be used as a battering ram against Aregbesola. The people are simply not ready to be fooled and bought over with fairy tales and propaganda.

     

    • Kanmi Ademiluyi,

    Lagos

  • Ex-Governor Isiaka Adeleke unites Osun West district

    Ex-Governor Isiaka Adeleke unites Osun West district

    The first civilian governor of Osun State, Senator Isiaka Adeleke, is a phenomenon. A rallying point for various classes of politicians in Osun State. He offers his wide shoulders for all and sundry to lean on. He has remained with his people through the thick and thin and identified with their yearnings and aspirations, offering solutions to their problems.

    Senator Isiaka Adeleke, is a God-given philanthropist to humanity. His kind gestures cut across tribe, creed, religion and sex. He is for all, no wonder all are for him in Osun West District.

    As we march gradually to the March 28, 2015 general election, in which Asiwaju Isiaka Adeleke is contesting for the Osun West Senatorial District ticket under the banner of All Progressive Congress, it is pertinent to state, that the amiable politician, has not left any stone unturned in his bid to coast home to a sweet victory. Since December 2014, when he won the ticket to contest, Senator Isiaka Adeleke has thrown himself seriously into the contest, traversing the length and breadth of Osun West District.

    As early as 7am, Asiwaju Isiaka Adeleke was always on his feet for the daily campaigns, that has seen him on door-to-door, neighbor to neighbor campaigns to Ajagunlase, Ikire-ile; Iwo-Oke, Iwo township, Telemu, Ogbagba, Kuta, Ile-Ogbo, Ife-Odan, Ejigbo, Ikoyi, Orile- Owu, Apomu, Ikire township, Awo, Iragberi, Ara, Okinni, Aro, Ido-Osun, Offatedo, Dada Estate and various wards in Ede North and Ede South Local Government Areas. The reception has been overwhelming, even when Adeleke arrived some of these communities at late in the night. The enthusiastic supporters and well-wishers were always patiently waiting to hear him out. The charismatic and lovable Isiaka Adeleke takes his own destiny in his own hands.

    What is going on for “Serubawon.” What are his magic wands? This could be premised on his various seen and unseen positive contributions to individuals and communities, since he was elected the first executive governor of Osun State in 1992 at the young age of 35. Such were the nostaligic recollections of a large number of people in Osun West District of Otunba Isiaka Adeleke to their well being. They are true testimonies, coming from these electorate, twenty-two years after Adeleke left office as a governor.

    One good turn deserves another stance is now at play. Isiaka Adeleke is now reaping bountifully from his past philanthropic gestures, most of which, he has even forgotten. It is a payback day for Senator Adeleke by Osun West Senatorial District people, who have resolved to give him the highest number of votes at the senatorial election, as a demonstration of their appreciation of him.

    This is one of Senator Isiaka Adeleke moments of glory in his political career. The campaign tours of the colorful politician, that Adeleke is, reminds one of his great exploits between 1990 and 1992, when at the relatively young age of 35yrs, he ‘locked’ horns with the evergreen politicians in the old Oyo State and proved his mettle.

  • Osun traditional rulers dissociate selves from endorsing Jonathan

    Some traditional rulers in Osun State have dissociated themselves from the purported endorsement of President Goodluck Jonathan as the preferred candidate for the March 28th presidential election.

    Meeting at the Akinrun Palace on Tuesday, the traditional rulers described endorsement of Jonathan by some traditional ruler at the Palace of Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade, as embarrassing to the traditional institution.

    Briefing newsmen shortly after their meeting, their spokesperson, the Akinrun of Ikirun, Oba Abdulrauf Olayiwola Olawale, criticized the alleged share of dollar among the traditional rulers that attended the visit of the President Jonathan at Ooni’s palace.

    The monarch urged the people of the state to vote according to their conscience and not based on monetary gratification.

    In attendance at the meeting were the Timi of Ede, Oba Munirudeen Adesola Lawal, Akinrun of Ikirun, Oba Olayiwola Olawale Adedeji, Olokuku of Okuku, Oba Abioye Oyebode Oluronke II, Aragbiji of Iragbiji, Oba Abdulrasheed Ayotunde Olabomi, Olunisa of Inisa, Oba Joseph Oladunjoye Fasikun II, Elende of Eko-Ende, Oba Rauf Adebayo Olaniyan, Oloyan of Oyan, Oba Kelani Adekeye Oyedare, Onirun of Oke-Irun, Oba Isaac Adetoyi Adetunlurese, Elerin of Erin-Osun, Oba Yusuf Omoloye Oyagbodun among others.

    Speaking further, the Akirun faulted use of beaded walking sticks by some traditional rulers to pray for Jonathan after adopting him their sole candidate.

    According to him, beaded walking sticks are not part of spiritual instruments to be used to pray for anyone in Yorubaland.

    He said: “It is unfortunate that the episode of the endorsement has become talk of the town. Many are even alleging that huge amount of hard currency was doled out to the traditional rulers. They believe that all traditional rulers in the state were involved in this.

    “It has gotten to a stage that some of our subjects are demanding their own share of the presidential largese which we knew nothing about. It is quite embarrassing. And this is the more reason we are coming out to tell the whole world that not all of endorsed President Goodluck Jonathan.

    “As traditional rulers we are not expected to be involved in partisan politics. But we can support government good policies and programmes that can promote development in our various domains. Our main concern should be supporting good governance, no more no less. It is, therefore, our wish and prayer that whoever emerges as the winner will be the one that will bring life more abundant to our people.”

    The monarch appealed to politicians to play the game according to the rule and avoid any form of violence before, during and after the elections.

    He also appealed to the Independent National Electoral Commission and all law enforcement agencies to ensure a level playing ground for all candidates.

    He warned that law enforcement agents should not allow themselves to be used to engage in unlawful arrest and harassment that may lead to disenfranchising anybody from exercising his or her fundamental human right of participating in the election.

  • Osun and the unpaid salaries: Matters Arising

    Political leaders, historians and policy makers would not forget the years between 2007 and 2009 in a hurry. The global recession that spread across the world during this period resulted in a sharp drop in international trade, rising unemployment and slumping commodity prices. Many multi-national companies were unfortunately swept away by the depressive economic gale.

    Across the world, economic theorists warned sternly that recovery might not appear until 2011 and that the recession would be the worst since the Great Depression of the 1930s. One of such economists of this century, Paul Krugman, in his comment on the economic downturn described it as “seemingly the beginning of a second Great Depression.” Expectedly, governments and central banks in Europe and America responded with both fiscal and monetary policies to stimulate national economies and reduce financial system risks.

    In its findings on the cause of the meltdown, the report of the U.S. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, in January 2011 described the crisis as avoidable.  The Commission listed some of the causes to include among others: widespread failures in financial regulation; dramatic breakdowns in corporate governance, including too many financial firms acting recklessly and taking on too much risk; key policy makers ill prepared for the crisis, lacking a full understanding of the financial system they oversaw and systemic breaches in accountability and ethics at all levels.

    Nigeria and indeed African countries were, to some extent, so lucky the depression wind did not blow across the black continent. We escaped the economic downturn. This however, is not to say that African countries and in particular Nigeria, did not taste the sourness of the economic downturn.

    Everyone thought Nigeria would learn from the global crisis. Today, the economic reality pointed otherwise. The operators of the country’s politics, monetary and economic policies have told the nation that they are either incompetent to run the nation or are too greedy and self-centred to run people-oriented government.

    Today, the economic crisis has left many states paralysed due to what many tagged the Federal Government’s financial recklessness and twin factors of corruption and poor economic policies. Workers across the 36 states have been groaning under this economic hardship owing to backlog of unpaid salaries, arrears as well as pensions.

    The situation in Osun is however slightly different as workers have been paid up to November while in some states worker are owed up to six months salaries. Osun is a different kettle of fish in the sense that the Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, was foresighted enough to prepare for a situation that the whole country currently found itself. On the federation account – Osun is actually in the 34th position on the rung of allocation ladder – collecting between N2bn to N4bn. And the state has a monthly salary wage of N3.6 billion to fulfill.

    Despite this huge bill and low allocation, the state under Aregbesola had always paid it’s workers’ salary as and when due, mostly between 24th and 26th of every month. Besides, it was during his tenure that the monthly pension to retirees jumped from N150 million to over N650 million, which the pensioners also collected promptly monthly. Not only this, workers also enjoyed thirteenth month salaries, first, half of their basic and in subsequent year, full basic salary.

    This smooth and orderly arrangement began to suffer mid July 2013 when allocation from the Federal Government abruptly nosedived. Allocation coming to Osun significantly reduced from N4 billion plus to about N2.5 billion. Federal Government blamed this reduction first, on theft of crude oil to the tune of 400, 000 barrel per day; but later attributed the dwindling fortunes to decline in oil price at the international market.

    Before Federal Government came out with these reason, Aregbesola and his Edo State counterpart, Adams Oshiohmole, had raised the alarm over the continuous reduction in states’ monthly allocation by the Federal Government. It got to a stage that some states, Benue for example, contemplated slashing workers’ salary so as to be able to meet its monthly financial obligation to workers. This was vehemently rejected. It led to workers been owed up to eight month salaries.

    Amidst this reversal in the fortune of the states, Osun was able to meet its financial commitments to its workers. This was made possible by Aregbesola’s prudence and foresight. When he assumed leadership in Osun, oil price was as it’s all time high and so extra fund was dripping from excess crude account. Aregbesola did not fritter this excess fund. He opened Omoluabi Conservative Fund and kept saving the accruing excess crude fund.

    As if he knew that after a period of surplus economic hardship would follow. When eventually sources of the excess crude oil suddenly dried up, Aregbesola had something to fall back on. For the next six months – that is well into mid 2014 – when most of the states could no longer meet their monthly statutory obligation, Aregbesola was drawing from his Omoluabi Conservative fund to augment the now significantly reduced allocation to pay salary.

    Rather than abate, the economic crisis showed no sign of abatement, forcing many states to economic stagnation. Yet Osun trudged on until the reserved fund emptied. Why Osun’s case is manageable today was as a result of financial prudence of the Aregbesola administration. The present predicament in Osun is not peculiar to the state; other states are affected. In some states, the situation is even worse.

    Osun debt profile has nothing to do with the prevalent economic conditions. The situation, brought about by Federal Government’s uncontrollable financial misappropriation unleashed this hardship on all states, both PDP and APC controlled. Like any other state in the federation, Osun went to the capital market for bond. The state did not however bite more that it could chew. Its debt profile is within its economic capacity. In terms of solvency, Osun is solid. For the avoidance of doubt and to expose the wanton lies of opposition, it is germane to refer to what the Director General of the Debt Management Office (DMO) in the Presidency, Dr. Abraham Nwankwo, said last year shortly before the August 9 governorship election.

    As usual, the opposition party had gone to town on its campaign of calumny that the state was indebted to the tune of N350 billion. But the DMO, shortly after, revealed that the state is one of the best states in the federation with public debt management. He also  noted that his office recognised Osun as the first to take the Sukuk, the Islamic bond. The state later won an award for this in Dubai, the United Arab Emirate. Nwankwo said at that forum: “We want to make sure that all segments of the society is captured in the bond market (Sukuk) because there are some groups of people or individuals who do not want to participate in ordinary bond because of interest. “Our office, DMO, and others are working hard to introduce Sukuk in Nigeria. We are delighted that Osun took the initiative and helped in introducing it in Nigeria. So, by that, Osun is one of the best states in public debt management.”

    The workers in Osun know that the governor is deeply concerned about their welfare. In fact, he is one of, if not the best, worker- friendly governor around. It thus stands to reason that in this adverse time, the workers would be standing firmly behind the governor so that they can jointly swim across the present murky economic water.

    •Owolabi, a journalist is a final year Law student at LASU, Ojoo.

  • No plan to sack workers in Osun – APC

    No plan to sack workers in Osun – APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in the State of Osun has debunked the rumour that Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola is planning a massive retrenchment of senior civil servants on grade level 12 and above, including other workers above the age of 50 from the state’s employment after the general elections.

    In a statement from the party’s Directorate of Publicity Research and Strategy, the APC described the rumour as, “the usual silly spin of falsehood characteristic of PDP’s evil genius for manufacturing and propagating wicked lies especially in the State of Osun.”

    According to the APC, “at no time did Aregbesola contemplate to retrench any staff of any grade or age, and no such thing will be allowed to happen any time soon or in the future.

    “From day one, the policy of “gainful employment” of the APC governor, Rauf Aregbesola, had been, continues to remain and will be the intensified mantra of the party in the months and years ahead.

    “The only monstrous obstacle to this policy,” the APC contended, “is the evil construct of the PDP-led federal government in starving Osun State of its legitimate statutory funding.

    “Not many people knew, until Governor Fashola of Lagos State revealed recently, that to further starve APC states in particular of funding assistance, the PDP Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala ordered the banks not to help fund state government projects.

    “This kind of frustrating impediment is what the PDP is using to force states of the opposition to look for ways to overcome deliberate strangulation, through forced retirement of workers.

    “But the APC government is more innovative and constructive than the PDP had imagined.

    “Rather than contemplate retrenchment as the PDP was scheming, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola is planning the creation of more jobs for the people; and one of the ways, indeed the most effective way to achieve this for Nigerians is to defeat the PDP on March 28 and April 11 Presidential and general election,” the APC said.

    “The evil that the PDP has become, through its promoting of massive corruption in the system, has brought Nigeria to its knees,” the APC argued, adding that, “Unless Nigerians as a people remove this obstacle to their progress and well-being, their suffering will deteriorate.”

    The APC therefore, alerted the people of Osun not to fall for the lies of the PDP because their purpose is to mislead, confuse and confound the masses to get them to vote for this same party that has turned Nigeria into the hell of a place that it is today.

  • Tension in Ilase, Ibokun over PDP attack on APC

    There was tension in Ilase and Ibokun in Obokun Local Government Area of Osun State as the peoples suspected to be members of the Peoples Democratic Party attacked the campaign train of the All Progressives Congress led by Governor Rauf Aregbesola to the communities.

    ‎It was said that the hoodlums attacked the governor and the APC members, who were in the communities to campaign for their party and the contestants for various available positions in the March and April general elections.
    ‎‎‎
    An eye witness account revealed that Aregbesola and his entourage had gone to pay homage to the traditional ruler of the town, the Onilase of Ilase-Ijesa, when the crisis started.

    Several APC members sustained various degrees of injury following the attack.

    It was gathered that posters of contestants, APC flags and the podium on which the governor was to address the gathering were also destroyed.

    However, the PDP said it was not true that his members attacked the APC supporters

    In a telephone interview, the chairman of the PDP in the state, Alhaji Gani Ola-Oluwa, said the APC have always been attacking the PDP members, wondering why the Aregbesola and the APC are linking the PDP with the Ilase and Ibokun weekend attacks.

    Ola-Oluwa urged the people of the state to disregard claim that the PDP members attacked the APC supporters, saying the APC is only seeking peoples’s sympathy.

    But according to a statement by the governor through his media aide, Semiu Okanlawon, an APC female member’s ear was slashed with matchet.

    Aregbesola condemned the attack which he described as barbaric.

    The statement said that the hoodlums s‎hot into the air sporadically to scare the waiting APC crowd before freely destroying the flags, posters and the campaign podium.

    “In the melee, people had to scamper to safety as the PDP thugs had a field day unleashing mayhem on innocent people. When the governor returned to the campaign ground, he was shocked with what he saw, describing it as callous and condemnable.
    He, therefore, called on security agencies to investigate what he describes as unprovoked attack and called on PDP “to desist from the ignoble act.

    “We, as a party, are responsible and peace-loving. We are loved by the people. It is those who do not have electoral value that will attack the same people they ought to patronise for votes,” the governor said. We are popular and we are on ground. This people resort to violence because they know that they don’t have the support of the people.

    “We, however, remain undaunted. We will not the cowed by anybody in the state. In the last four years, my government has restored peace to the state. We call on security agencies to be proactive and deal with anyone whose sole agenda is to cause violence in the state.”

    The governor called on APC members to remain calm and law-abiding, saying that they should refrain from returning violence for violence.

    Also, ‎the All Progressives Congress in the state has warned the PDP that it will not profit from impunity in its resort to violence in the run-up to the March 28th and April 11th Presidential and General elections, because, “there will be consequences locally and internationally.”

    Also, reacting to the violence last weekend in Ilase and Ibokun, the party in a statement by its spokesperson, Kunle Oyatomi, said that “the murderous nature of PDP violence in several APC states of the federation is clear evidence of desperation borne out of the frustration that in spite of everything the PDP has done to douse people’s support for the APC, its popularity continues to rise.

    According to the APC:  “The more violent the PDP gets anywhere in the country – especially in the state of Osun, the more unpopular it becomes, and the more of a nuisance the party makes itself. The PDP in Osun has acquired a notoriety for violence, believing that it enjoys impunity through the protective shield of Federal Might.”

  • Salary: Osun blames delay on low allocation

    The Osun State government has blamed delays in the payment of workers’ salary on the reduction in the federal allocation of the state.

    But it denied that workers were owed five months, contrary to the claim by some protesting workers in Osogbo, the state capital, yesterday.

    The protesters claimed their last salaries were paid last in November.

    By 8am, the aggrieved workers had converged on the state secretariat of the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN) at Fakunle.

    Led by the state ASCSN Chairman, Akinyemi Olatunji, the protesters said they had been facing hardship since last year.

    Chief of Staff to the Governor Gboyega Oyetola condemned the protest, saying: “They don’t need to do what they are doing because Governor Rauf Aregbesola has signed the remaining salary arrears owed workers.”

    Oyetola debunked the claim that the government owed five months’ salaries.

    “As at now, we have paid up to January and on or before the end of this week, the outstanding salaries would definitely be paid without any delay.

    “So, we don’t just sit doing nothing because we know their plight.”

    In a statement, the Director of the Bureau of Communications in the Governor’s Office, Semiu Okanlawon, said: “While we recognise the right of the workers to seek the payment of that which is legitimately theirs, we wish to repeat that the unfortunate owing of salaries cannot be divorced from the crushing revenue crisis that has hit Nigeria.

    “What is required at this stage is for all to understand the genesis of this saga, which will be helpful rather than being viewed as a deliberate act by government.

    “A government that ensured prompt payment of salaries on or before 26 of every month since inception; a government that introduced 13th month salary and a government that had commenced augmentation of salaries with its savings cannot suddenly wake up to deny workers their legitimate earnings.

    “We are aware that President Goodluck Jonathan made some statements during his visit to Osun at the weekend where he was reported to have asked the people to demand their salaries, saying his government pays states when due and that some states have borrowed money beyond their capacities.

    “The question Mr. President must be asked is: how do loans obtained by states for obvious development purposes and to bring better life to the people translate to revenue deductions across Nigeria?

    “It is on record that the Director-General of the Debt Management Office came to Osun last year and declared publicly that the state’s debts are within its capacity.

    “Can Mr. President justifiably claim that Osun’s unpaid salaries are not part of the hard economic times that his Minister of Finance, Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, warned us against.

    “As a responsible and responsive government, we can only appeal to our workers in the state and those connected to them for understanding.”

     

  • ‘Fake video’: Osun APC urges Omisore to accept reality

    ‘Fake video’: Osun APC urges Omisore to accept reality

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State has told the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun State, Senator Iyiola Omisore, to accept the reality of the Justice Elizabeth Ikpejime’s tribunal verdict on the election.

    The party condemned a “concocted video clip” circulated last week in Abuja by Omisore’s agents and the PDP to suggest that the APC rigged the August 9 governorship election.

    The APC described as “delusional”, Omisore’s optimism that the video will make any difference to the worthlessness of his case at the Court of Appeal.

    In a statement by its spokesperson, Kunle Oyatomi, the party said: “Omisore’s delusional ambition to become governor is seriously affecting his ability to face the reality that he lost the election.

    “The verdict by the people was and still stands, despite the terrorism of state security forces unleashed on the voters and the vile propaganda which the PDP had mounted since 2011 till date.”

    According to the party, the case Omisore argued for 180 days at the tribunal was meticulously dismantled in a landmark judgment that lasted over seven hours by the three-man panel, which struck it out as unworthy.

    The APC wondered what would have gone wrong with Omisore and the PDP with this so-called video clip evidence that they could have presented at the tribunal but failed to do so.

    “The reason that video was not presented to the tribunal, in the first instance, was because it was fake. If the PDP lawyers rested the worthless video because it could not fly at the tribunal, what banal reasoning would have informed the PDP spin doctors now making silly noises about it as a publicity material? Did this fellow (Omisore) seriously think that the Court of Appeal will accommodate this after-thought?

    The party said it had got wind of the production of the particular video since last November and had informed security forces accordingly.

    “That video is the product of PDP’s sordid imagination to accuse others of what it had been caught doing in Ekiti State. It was sheer baloney and a valueless attempt to mitigate the effect of the audio evidence of how politicians, government officials and some top uniformed men used the security apparatus of state to rig election for the PDP in Ekiti State. Only the PDP and some of its unreasonable supporters are entertained by such childishness,” the APC said.

  • Osun labour unions on collision course over strike

    The Trade Union Congress (TUC) and the Joint Negotiation Council (JNC) in Osun State are on a collision course with the Senior Civil Servants Association of Nigeria  (SCSAN) over a proposed warning strike.

    The SCSAN, through its chairman, Akinyemi Olatunji, gave the government a seven-day ultimatum to look into workers’ demands, including payment of salaries arrears or face industrial action.

    But the chairmen of the TUC and JNC, Francis Adetunji and Bayo Adejumo, warned workers against any “illegal strike”, saying anyone who fails to be at his duty post is “on his own”.

    The duo maintained that the SCSAN, as an affiliate of TUC, has no power to unilaterally ask workers to embark on an industrial action.

    They maintained that the government has regularly engaged and informed the leadership of the JNC, TUC and Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on issues bordering on welfare of workers.

    The duo said: “We are convinced about the sincerity of the government in the face of  dwindling and late payment of  federal allocation to the state.”

    The JNC and the TUC, at a joint briefing at the weekend in Osogbo, the state capital, said there are processes and procedure for going on strike and which only  authorised unions could apply.

    They insisted that SCSAN is an affiliate of the TUC and therefore could not  call for workers’ strike alone.

    The duo said the ultimatum given by the association was not in line with labour law.

    Saying the state government had explained factors responsible for its inability to pay salaries as at when due, they urged workers to be considerate in their demands.

    The labour leaders also noted that most of the issues raised by SCSAN had been resolved by the government.

    Olatunji has been going from ministry to ministry ,asking workers to join a seven-day warning strike, starting from today.

    He highlighted the workers’ demands, which include prompt payment of workers’ salaries, promotion and review of contributing pension scheme.

  • Osun verdict: vox populi

    SIR: The verdict of Osun state election petition tribunal of February 6, has further reaffirmed the authenticity of the result of August 9, 2014 gubernatorial election held in the state.     But more than anything else we must commend members of the tribunal for their doggedness even at the risk of their lives. Feeble judicial minds world have crumbled.

    Also, the electorate, many of who were condemned to the narrow cells of emotional jail, deserve accolade for being civil in the build-up to the election and maintaining peace during the election in the face of intimidating security personnel as if that state was at war with the rest of the country. It is an antithesis that such red eyed security apparatus could not be deployed to Sambisa forest for the release of our Chibok 219 from the gnome called Boko Haram. We are still waiting for our government to reunite the girls with their families.

    Our leaders should, however, learn from the French phrase Noblesse Oblige; because he who is going to bury his senior brother alive must not take his junior brother along as a witness.       Now that the tussle is over, the governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola should see himself as father of all by distributing dividends of democracy evenly among the people of the state. It is noteworthy that he is known to act pro bono publica. To the people of the state we say congratulations. Vox populi, vox dei.

     

    •Adelani Olawuyi

    Odooba-Ogbomoso