Tag: Oyo state

  • One dead, two injured as tricycle rams into waste disposal truck in Ibadan

    A lady, Adeniyi Balikis Olajumoke on Friday died when the commercial tricycle she was travelling in rammed into a stationary waste disposal truck at Leventis, along Sango-UI road, Ibadan, Oyo State.

    It was said that the deceased, suspected to be a student of Faculty of Science, University of Ibadan (UI) was returning from a bank where she had gone to pay her school fees.

    The accident which occurred at about 9:30 am when the tricycle with number plate RU 152 UP, ran into the waste disposal truck also left in its trail two others who are critically injured.

    According to an eye witness, Bamgbose Omobola the reckless speed of the tricycle operator was what led to the accident, adding that the lady died immediately the accident happened.

    “The lady was coming from GTB bank at Ajibade where she went to pay her school fees, the phone in her bag was recovered and this was what made it easy for us to get in touch with her parents.

    “The two other victims who had fractures in their head and leg had been taken to the hospital for treatment.”

    Read Also: UI student dead, two Injured as tricycle rams into truck in Ibadan

    Another eyewitness, Adelowotan Adelani said that the owner of the tricycle was christening his baby today(Friday), which was why he gave the tricycle to  the operator involved in the accident called ‘Baba Mercy’

    “The tricycle route was from Orita Merin to Sango, this accident would not have  occurred if the waste disposal truck was not packed on the road side.

    “We are appealing to the present and the incoming government in Oyo State to stop these trucks from evacuating refuse and packing on the road side. The government should bring back the waste bin we are using before, whereby waste basket has been put beside the road for the people to dump their refuse there.

    “Oyo State government should look for another way of evacuating refuse instead of using these truck and people should also stop dumping reduce on the road side again”.

    Contacted, Police Public Relations Officer of Oyo Command, Mr  Olugbenga Fadeyi, a Superintendent of Police(SP) confirmed the incident, adding that the deceased was an employee of a business organisation in the Sango area of Ibadan.

    He added that the remains of the deceased had been deposited at Adeoyo Hospital, Ring Road, Ibadan, while the injured victims, whose identity was yet to be confirmed had been taken to the nearest hospital for treatment.

  • Artist with Down Syndrome excites American envoy, others

    Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, will not forget so soon the day self-taught artist Teniola Olojo stormed the ancient city with his solo art exhibition, XtraChrom Expressions. The over 80 works were seen by dignitaries, including the Chargé d’ Affaires, United States’ Embassy, Abuja, Mr. David Young, who flew in from the Federal Capital to attend the event at the American Corner in Ibadan. EVELYN OSAGIE reports.

    Stroking out disability through art

    The day will  remain memorable. It was the day self-taught artist with Down Syndrome Teniola Olojo excited Ibadan, Oyo State capital,  with his art exhibition, XtraChrom Expressions,

    Teniola is limited in words, but uses pencils, pens and strokes to express himself.  His works can be interpreted in several ways, based on the imagination and discretion of the viewer. Since 2014 and with the support of his family as well as an organisation called Heart & Sold in the United Kingdom (UK), Teniola’s works have been exhibited alongside those of other artists globally.

    All roads led to the American Corner Ibadan, Initiative for Information, Arts and Culture Development in Nigeria (IACD Nigeria), where the Chargé d’affaires, United States Embassy, Abuja, Mr David Young, visited for Teniola’s second solo exhibition.

    What was initially meant to be a three-day exhibition, organised by his family, became part of a symposium to empower and create an inclusive society for people with disability by the American Corner, Ibadan and the IACD Nigeria.

    The event brought together people with various forms of disabilities in the state to discuss their prospects and challenges with regard to inclusion in the society.

    As guests moved from one work to the other, they were amazed by the artist’s ability to piece together different objects, using strokes. They journeyed into the mind of the artist as they moved from one work to the other.

    The painting of a typical African village and the Eifel Tower was particularly captivating, not to mention the diverse paintings of birds in the collection.

    Evidently, the young artist has risen beyond his limitation to showcase an impressive and inspirational collection of over 80 artworks.

    His impressive outing, despite his disability, became a reference point at the symposium with the theme: XtraChrom Expression: Empower/Integrating the Disabled into the Society.

    Participants, especially people with disabilities, used the forum to express their struggles and concerns. The session inspired many more not to give up on themselves.

    Amazed by what she saw and heard, Bose Falade, said: “I am so proud of Teni and his parent for supporting and standing by him. This event has inspired me to stretch beyond my limitations as a disabled Nigerian.”

    Teniola’s beginning

    Guests praised his family, especially his mother, Mrs Theodore Olojo, for her selfless efforts towards ensuring that she harnessed Teniola’s hidden talent. His elder siblings, Dr Ifedola  and Dr Akinola, have since become his managers.

    Mrs Olojo gave a heartwarming story on her son’s journey, living with Down Syndrome all his life. “Teniola’s story is not just an artistic narrative. It is a story of challenges, but also of triumphs. It is a story of obstacles but also of resilience,”she said.

    Recalling Teniola’s voyage into the arts, Mrs Olojo said: “From childhood, he has always displayed an artistic flair and, for those who know him very well, he loves music and dances a lot, perhaps a bit too much sometimes. His journey has really been a long search to discover how best to express his skills and today’s exhibition is another turning point in his journey.

    “His first exhibition was actually in March 2014, exactly five years ago. His works were exhibited alongside those of other artists who are living with Down Syndrome in different countries. His first exhibition was in London and was facilitated and supported by an organisation called Heart & Sold, which is managed by a woman called Suzie Moffat.

    “In October 2017, his seventh exhibition held in Manchester. In February 2018, we organised his eighth exhibition, but on this occasion, it was the first solo presentation of his works and it was in Ilorin, Kwara State. This is his ninth exhibition and second solo presentation of his artworks in Ibadan. By God’s grace, we hope to organise subsequent ones in Lagos and other cities in the country and beyond.”

    While urging parents and siblings of those living with disabilities to give their wards proper care, support and education, Teniola’s sister, Ifedola noted: “Teniola’s story seeks to offer hope and to reinforce faith in the abilities of individuals, who live daily with physical and mental challenges in our society. And we hope and pray that his story will inspire many more individuals, both locally and globally, with the motivation to put their God-given talents to use, especially to give the right support and care to people with disabilities.”

     

    A call for inclusive society

    Teniola’s efforts underscored the possibilities that could be achieved by people with disabilities, given the needed support, the Chargé d’affaires, observed, after a tour of the exhibition.

    Mr Young, who spoke on the topic, Empower/Integrating the Disabled into the Society,  drew perspectives from the status of people with disabilities in the US, encouraging a sustainable society where they are included in its structure, progress and development. He urged that the rights of such persons should be respected, observing that all humans “are  equal, irrespective of their disabilities”.

    While imploring participants to be change agents and drive the cause for people with disability in their communities, seeing them as equals, he said, is a proof that every individual has potential and is capable of fulfilling them. To him, Teniola’s  XtraChrom Expressions is a proof. “We are all created by God equal, with diverse gifts. With the right support, people can explore their talents as Teni is doing,”he said.

    Also in attendance were Oyo State Commissioner for Information and Culture, Toye Arulogun; Oyo State Coordinator, National Human Rights Commission, Mrs. Oyindamola Bamgbose; Director, American Center, US Consulate, Lagos, Mr Samuel Eyitayo; former Special Adviser on People with Disability to the Governor Abiola Ajimobi, Prince Paul Adelabu; Secretary-General, Joint National Association of People with Disability, Raheem Yusuff Olatunji; General Secretary Deaf Political Group Oyo State, Comrade Teslim Balogun, Teniola’s family and persons with disability, among others.

    Arulogun, who spoke on the status of people with disabilities in the state, identified cultural barriers as “the biggest obstacle against integrating the disabled into the Nigerian society”.

    Mrs Bamgbose reiterated the fundamental human rights of people with disabilities, calling for support for them.

    The American Corner Co-ordinator, Mrs Adefemi Bucknor-Arigbede, emphasised the importance of empowering people with disabilities by ensuring an inclusive society that will provide much needed opportunities for them.

     

  • Oyo to enact law regulating grazing

    Baring last minute change, Oyo state government will before the end of the outgoing tenure sign into law, a bill that will forestall the age-long clashes between herders and farmers in different parts of the state.

    Assuring that the law would be passed before April 30, the state government said its effort at ensuring peace between the duo of farmers and herders through a regular stakeholders meeting is yielding positive result.

    The government spoke through the Special Adviser to Governor Abiola Ajimobi on Community Relations, Mr Abidemi Siyanbade during a stakeholders meeting organised by the state Police Command at its Eleyele, Ibadan, headquarters as parts of the Command’s efforts at facilitating peaceful deliberations between farmers and herders in the state.

    Siyanbade said “The government has made a lot of progress in dousing the incessant conflict between the farmers and herders in this state.

    “And before the end of this month, grazing control bill to address the issues between farmers and herders will be passed by the house of assembly. We will also ensure that the peace committee meeting at the local government levels will be revived.”

    “The grazing control law will address how cattle can be brought into the state and how herders will register. We will no longer allow cows to  move into the state on the feet or roaming but through vehicles and truck.

    “Local herders are not the problem, but the major and the imminent problem is with immigrant herders. We are very sure that once this law is passed, all these issues arising from farm invasions, cattle rustling and attack on either farmers and herders will all be laid to rest.”

    The state Commissioner of Police Shina Olukolu in his welcome remark identified certain issues that had contributed to the crisis to include, mutual suspicion between farmers and herders, impatience, the roles of mischief makers among others.

    However, the State Chairman, All farmers Association of Nigeria, Mr Adeniji Moses lamented that the bill has been promised since 2016 and nothing has been done about it.

    He assured that the promised legislation had remained the only hope of a lasting solution on the issue of recurring crisis between the farmers and the herders.

    The state chairman, Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, Yakubu Bello commended the Oyo state police for organising stakeholders’ meeting, noting that the bane of the problem had been the impatience on the part of both parties anytime issues arises.

  • Oyo to enact law to end farmers/herdsmen clashes

    Baring any last minute change, Oyo state government will before the end of the outgoing tenure sign into law, a bill that will forestall the age long clashes between herders and farmers in different parts of the state.

    Assuring that the law would be passed before April 30, the state government said its effort at ensuring peace between the duo of farmers and herders through a regular stakeholders meeting is yielding positive result.

    The government spoke through the Special Adviser to Governor Abiola Ajimobi on Community Relations, Mr Abidemi Siyanbade during a stakeholders meeting organised by the state Police Command at its Eleyele, Ibadan, headquarters as parts of the Command’s efforts at facilitating peaceful deliberations between farmers and herders in the state.

    Siyanbade said “The government has made a lot of progress in dousing the incessant conflict between the farmers and herders in this state.

    “And before the end of this month, grazing control bill to address the issues between farmers and herders will be passed by the house of assembly.

    “We will also ensure that the peace committee meeting at the local government levels will be revived.

    “The grazing control law will address how cattle can be brought into the state and how herders will register. We will no longer allow cows to me moved into the state on the feet or roaming but through vehicles and truck.

    Read Also:  ‘How I escaped being used for rituals in Oyo’



    “Local herders are not the problem, but the major and the imminent problem is with immigrant herders. We are very sure that once this law is passed, all these issues arising from farm invasions, cattle rustling and attack on either farmers and herders will all be laid to rest.”

    The state Commissioner of Police Shina Olukolu in his welcome remark identified certain issues that had contributed to the crisis to include, mutual suspicion between farmers and herders, impatience, the roles of mischief makers among others.

    He condemned the use of minors as shepherds and warned that both the farmers and herders must not let the long standing relationship between them be sacrifice on the basis of their means of livelihood.

    Olukolu said, “The use of minors who have no ability to control the animals, gives room for the animals to unwittingly stray into farmers land to wreak havoc.

    “Sometimes, the minors deliberately allow the cattle stray into farm lands and at other times, it goes beyond their control but we need patience and understanding to have lasting peace.”

    However, the State Chairman, All farmers Association of Nigeria, Mr Adeniji Moses lamented that the bill has been promised since 2016 and nothing has been done about it.

    He assured that the promised legislation had remained the only hope of a lasting solution on the issue of recurring crisis between the farmers and the herders.

    The state chairman, Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, Yakubu Bello commended the Oyo state police for organising stakeholders’ meeting, noting that the bane of the problem had been the impatience on the part of both parties anytime issues arises.

    Also speaking, the state chairman, Police Community Relations Committee, Mr Peter Omofaye assured that effective community policing is the surest way to help both the farmers and herdsmen identify the bad eggs causing trouble in the affected parts of the state.

    He appealed to all the stakeholders at the meeting to work together with the police but making information available to nip issues in the bud before it turned out into crisis.

    The meeting was attended by farmers, herders, community leaders, religious leaders, council chairmen among others.

  • Vice chancellor’s admonition (I)

    The Vice-Chancellor (VC) of Ajayi Crowther University, Oyo, Oyo State, Professor Dapo Asaju last week wrote a letter which went viral. In the strongly-worded message to parents and guardians of the institution, the VC expressed his disaffection over what he described as overindulgence of the students by their parents and warned about raising the “next generation with the same corrupt and indisciplined ethos that has ruined Nigeria.”

    Prof Asaju said his action was informed by the “insubordination of some parents” in the affairs of the university. He said many parents whose children and wards are facing one disciplinary action or the other want to use their influence to stop trials, and that one parent “had even sued the University for suspending his 400-level son who sexually abused two female students in a classroom on the campus.”

    The VC’s letter was in reaction to protests among some parents who had complained that their children were being treated like “secondary school students.” He pointed out that students are no longer punctual in schools and faculties, and that rather than being chastised by their parents, they are further indulged.

    In a chat with a reporter to verify the authenticity of the letter, Prof Asaju said; “My brother, I am very sad over what our universities are becoming. If faith-based institutions can be experiencing all these immoral habits, how much more of public institutions.

    “Our parents think their children only do well when they flout rules and regulations simply because they claim they have paid fees. It is quite unfortunate, but when parents have failed in their responsibilities, where else do we run to? I am afraid of the future of this country if right-thinking men and women do not rise to salvage the situation. Our societal problems have been traced to the homes and until the homes are fixed, we will just be working in vain.”

    Principally, the letter was addressed to parents against the backdrop of what, in my opinion, is the crisis of parenting in the country. I will implore readers to get involved in this important conversation. I was completely taken aback when I first read the letter because it is quite unusual; something must have pushed the VC overboard. Taken aback because this is perhaps the first time I’ll be reading such a direct letter from a university VC in Nigeria. Forgive me; I attended a traditional university where I could hardly imagine my VC writing such a letter – which Prof Asaju himself confirmed in his introduction. The times have really changed indeed.

    Secondly, – and most importantly – I am concerned about what was not said in the letter – the negation of the entire notion of the university. I wonder if we are not gradually deviating from our understanding of what a university is or should be. Is the proliferation of private universities in the country negating what universities are and stand for? This is certainly worth interrogating and will form the nucleus of the second part.

    While still in the university several years ago, I overheard two elderly mothers discussing about parenting. Their discussion – which has been etched in my memory ever since – was triggered by an interaction they had with a young mother who had pleaded with them to babysit her child while she attends a paid conference on parenting. When the young mother left after explaining what a parenting conference was, the elderly mothers – who didn’t have formal education – started ruminating how they were able to successfully raise twenty one children without attending any conference.

    They wondered why anyone would pay in order to learn how to be a good mother or parent. The lessons I learnt eavesdropping on these mothers – alongside those learnt from my mother – prepared me in the journey of parenthood when I became a father. They resolved to sit the young mother down and give her free and timeless lessons in motherhood.

    I used to sit “at the feet” of a retired war time army general discussing various societal issues, especially the problems of Nigeria. In one of our discussions, a guest joined us and informed the general that his son – who was a commissioner in his home state – has been accused of embezzling public funds. Without blinking an eye lid, the general said; “That can never happen; I didn’t raise my sons to be thieves. Go and tell the governor to investigate him.” He continued with our discussion as if nothing had happened.

    About a month later, the general – who is now late – sent for me and handed me an open newspaper without uttering a word; there was also another newspaper on his lap. The news story I read was the outcome of a probe panel set up by the state government to investigate if the commissioner (the late general’s son), or his accomplices were complicit in embezzling public funds. When I was done reading the first story, he handed me the second newspaper.

    The news story – which was about the panel report – did not find the commissioner culpable in any act of embezzlement of public fund and he was allowed to continue serving the state in that capacity.  The second story – a feature story written by the same reporter – was quite detailed from an entirely different angle. The reporter focused on the family background of all those accused – that is the commissioner and his perceived accomplices. That of the commissioner was quite instructive.

    The reporter wrote about the general, his long years of impeccable service in the military with particular reference to his civil war records and how he treated his men. He also focused on the commissioner’s other brothers and how they are excelling in their chosen fields of endeavour. What he succeeded in doing was to draw a strong correlation between ones conduct and the family one was raised in. He did this without even interviewing the general; he only interviewed close associates of both the general and his son which further added impetus to his report.

    After I finished reading both stories, he delivered a strong sermon on fatherhood to me which has been helping me since I became a father myself. He told me he was confident in the sons and daughters he raised ensuring they lived, not only within their means, but to be content with whatever they have. He also informed me that he taught them not to focus on his earthly properties but strive to have theirs and train their own children along that line. I wasn’t surprised when he passed on that his house was put up for rent – all because his children were encouraged to strive for theirs or rent one until they have theirs.

    Slightly over three years ago, I was patiently on the queue at a supermarket alongside other customers waiting to pay for purchases when a young man in his twenties walked past all of us straight to the cashier to make payment. The gentleman in front politely asked him if he’s not aware of the other people in the queue. He simply waved and said “so?” The visibly angry man pushed him away and told him to join the queue. He was trying to cause a scene when we all insisted he join the queue. He didn’t but simply left the purchases on the cashier’s desk and walked away.

      I have witnessed several incidences of jumping the queue and other deep societal challenges like drugs, kidnappings, fraud etc to arrive at the conclusion that we may be facing a parenting crisis in the country. Many of our adults, young men and women behave as if they do not come from homes. The home is the bulwark of who we truly are. But unfortunately, what we know as home in the traditional setting is gradually melting away. In its place we are inadvertently raising a generation of citizens without any sense of responsibility whatsoever.

  • NDLEA arrests 81 for illicit drug peddling in Oyo

    The Oyo State Command of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA)  says it has  arrested 81 suspected drug traffickers and ensured the conviction of 20 in the state between January  and March 2019.

    The Commander of the agency in the state, Mr Ralph Igwenagu, said this on Wednesday in a statement  made available to newsmen by the Public Relations Officer, Mrs Mutiat Okuwobi.

    Igwenagu noted that the convicts were sentenced to different jail terms ranging from six months to five years.

    He also said that 600.561kg of cannabis sativa were seized from the suspects during the period under review.

    Igwenagu further  said that the command  limited the circulation of substances of abuse including Dazepam, Exol 5 and Tramadol among others in the first quarter of the year.

    Read Also: NDLEA nabs 35 suspected drug peddlers

    According to him, the anti-drug agency also gave drug intervention to 42 persons in the year under review, among whom 10 are still undergoing rehabilitation.

    The state command also uncovered a secret laboratory where the production of “skushi”, a derivative of potpourri of illicit and controlled drugs, was done illegally.

    “This led to the seizure of 290 litres of the illicit cocktail drink and its paraphernalia.

    “The command will not relent in frustrating the activities of drug peddlers in the state and the nation at large,” he added.

    He appealed to the public to always report any suspicious activities to the relevant authorities  in order to rid the state of illicit drug trafficking and its attendant crises.

    NAN

  • Ajimobi: Politics trumping legacy?

    The debt for the above title goes to my colleague, Republican Ripples’ Kunle Abimbola’s whose didactic piece on the odyssey of Abiola Ajimobi, the outgoing governor of Oyo State, stirred this piece.

    Never one to shy from rippling through difficult terrains including those where angels feared to tread, Abimbola’s article, ever point-blank and incisive, couldn’t unfortunately resist ther overture to that popular, yet simplistic narrative that although Abiola Ajimobi may have delivered stellar performance, his supposed conceit did him in!

    Now, I understand the point about Ajimobi being an unlikely candidate for a popularity contest – a terrible flaw supposedly for a politician of such a stature – if you ask me. Again, if you ask me, a steward of state asking a bunch of unruly, red-eyed undergraduates to respect ‘constituted authority’ isn’t exactly good company on a day the mob is not only primed to action but have long declared a fatwa on the establishment.

    You know the other stories – the most striking being the bruising encounter with the musical icon, Yinka Ayefele; the parallel but contemporaneously running sub-narratives of supposed mindless officialdom and the false moral equivalences routinely presented by those with axes to grind; and then the story of an alleged dabbling into the chieftaincy affairs of the ancient city of Ibadan etc. On the latter, I am willing to bet, given the man’s deep roots in tradition, that the entire story has not been told!

    Those are supposed to be Ajimobi’s cross for which he must bear to Golgotha. But unlike Golgotha which, in the eyes of Christendom, was mankind’s redeeming point, such has been the spirited attempt to treat these as unforgivable sins for which an electoral shellacking isn’t sufficient recompense but something as would require a legacy of excellent performance to be wiped off the books!

    That is a-historicity at the worst and poor judgment as best.

    In a clime where losing an election is akin to a death sentence, I understand why the pain of being banished to Siberia can be difficult to bear.

    It is certainly a familiar story. A man known to have done well loses and election which would ordinarily been a walkover. In my own state of Kogi for instance, we had a governor who performed excellently only to be suffer the pain of rejection few years later for the same sins that Ajimobi is accused of – of talking too much and for being rather brash.

    I am talking of the late Abubakar Audu – a man who wasn’t just an enigma but an acknowledged star performer. Apparently, the people of Kogi would rather have a tribe of incompetents take turns than have a man who made things happen call the shots! Today, the people of Kogi know better.

    With successive disasters occupying the Lugard House ever since, and the state barely leaving where the late Audu left it aeons ago, perhaps only death could have aborted the triumphant return of the cocky prince once rejected by the electors to the coveted throne in 2015! As they say, the rest is history.

    Back to Ajimobi – the man who defied all the odds to earn a second term (koseleri), losing election is supposed to big deal. In fact, losing to Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) Kola Balogun in the contest for the Oyo South senatorial seat by a mere difference of 13,502 is supposed to be terrible, irrecoverable injury – a re-enactment of the so-called myth of koseleri!

    Never mind that the man has since moved on: “I hereby accept the result as announced. Although there were a number of grievous infractions and established electoral malpractices, I have decided to let go in the interest of peace…” – a treatise on leadership –the finest grade – from a man known to shoot from the hip. Rather than let him be, some people, it would appear, are only too eager to suffer his legacy to terribe revisionism. That, in my view, should not be allowed to happen.

    Which takes us to the crux of this piece – the Ajimobi legacy. In a country where performance is reckoned in bridges and roads, the story across the board is that the man has peformed excellently well. Yes, away from the urban jungle and cesspit of filth and squalor that it was barely a decade ago, I can tesify that the capital city, Ibadan currently wears a modern face. For a city which owing to its military origins, is known to lack any element of planning, it’s hard to miss the deliberate order that have been imposed in the area of physical planning and urban aestethics under Ajimobi’s watch. The roads are wider and neater; the inner cities are on a steady path of renewal.

    For a city that never had a masterplan, I hear that one is finally in place; ditto a drainage masterplan to ensure the banishing of flooding in the ancient city permanently. From Oke-Ogun to Oyo and Ogbomoso, the testimony is virtually the same of how the administration of Ajimobi has done valiantly well to transform their rustic landscapes into modernity through massive infrastructure upgrades; how he has delivered on virtually al items of modern governance, perhaps surpassing previous administrations before him – all with the caveat that the man could have even done better if he had talked less.

    To yours truly, the man greatest achievement is to be found in how he succesfully terminated the reign of the warlords – the rival transport unions who see themselves are not only above the nation’s law but would routinely unleash violence and mayhem on innocent Nigerians even without provocation. The other part of the story is the matching of the security infrastructure with current and future needs to ensure that the state does not in fact relapse into the wild era preceding him.

    As he departs, it must be with the firm conviction of leaving the state far better than he met it. Clearly, he has certainly laid the foundation for those coming after him to build upon – something that his famed humanity, or earthiness cannot detract from.

    My friend Abimbola puts it beautifully: “Long after present politics recedes into memory, legacy (Ajimobi’s that is) will emerge from that mist to robustly proclaim his case”.

    I concur.

  • Oyo: I’ll probe last-minute contracts, Makinde insists

    Oyo State Governor-elect Seyi Makinde yesterday insisted that he would probe last-minute contracts,  being allegedly awarded by the outgoing administration of Governor Abiola Ajimobi.

    This came as he denied attacking Ajimobi after the election.

    In a statement issued yesterday by his spokesman, Prince Dotun Oyelade, Makinde said his recent comments on the fresh contracts being allegedly awarded by the state government was borne out of concern for the state’s financial health rather than an attack on the person of Ajimobi.

    The governor-elect said he accords Ajimobi due respect, not only as governor but as his senior.

    Read also: Ajimobi to Makinde: shun politics of bitterness

    “But governance being a serious business, Makinde cannot look on while direct instructions are given to local government councils to spend all monies in their care, including stabilisation accounts, which are traditionally reserved for emergencies and natural disasters, even when there are no cases of emergency anywhere in the state,” Makinde said.

    He reemphasised that he would reverse any fresh contract and also punish perpetrators.

    Ajimobi had accused Makinde of attacking him personally after winning the election instead of laying bare his administration’s blueprint for the people he intends to govern.

  • Photos: Makinde receives Certificate of Return in Oyo

    The governor-elect of Oyo state, Engr. Seyi Makinde has received the certificate of return from the Independent National Electoral Commission.

    He was given the Certificate of Return on Wednesday in Ibadan, the Oyo state capital.

    Oyo State Resident Electoral Commissioner,Barr.Mutiu Agboke;Wife of Deputy Governor Elect,Mrs.Bola Olaniyan her Husband Engr.Rauf Olaniyan;National Commissioner Prince Adedeji Soyebi;OyoState Governor Elect,Engr.Seyi Makinde and his Wfe Omini during the Presentation of Certificates of Return held at Premier hotel Ibadan
    Oyo State Resident Electoral Commissioner,Barr.Mutiu Agboke;Wife of Deputy Governor Elect,Mrs.Bola Olaniyan her Husband Engr.Rauf Olaniyan;National Commissioner Prince Adedeji Soyebi;OyoState Governor Elect,Engr.Seyi Makinde and his Wfe Omini during the Presentation of Certificates of Return held at Premier hotel Ibadan
    Oyo State Resident Electoral Commissioner,Barr.Mutiu Agboke;National Commissioner Prince Adedeji Soyebi;OyoState Governor Elect,Engr.Seyi Makinde and his Wfe Omini during the Presentation of Certificates of Return held at Premier hotel Ibadan

     

  • Ajimobi to Makinde: shun politics of bitterness

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has advised the incoming People’s Democratic Party (PDP) administration to focus on developmental issues instead of its renewed campaign of calumny against his person, family and administration.

    The governor, who spoke yesterday in a statement by his Special Adviser, Communication and Strategy, Mr. Bolaji Tunji, said the renewed campaign of calumny was aimed at rubbishing his eight-year selfless service.

    But, the governor-elect, Seyi Makinde, said it would be unnecessary and unhelpful to embark on a campaign of calumny against the out-going governor.

    Ajimobi said more than two weeks after the general elections have produced winners and losers, the opposition parties ought to start talking about their plans for the state and how to build on the foundation of development laid by his administration.

    The governor said he was appalled by the unprovoked media attacks by the opposition parties, especially sympathisers of the PDP and its governorship candidate, who were still practising politics of bitterness that Oyo State, under his tenure, has since left behind.

    The governor appealed to the traditional and online media practitioners to be circumspect in churning out unverified information being supplied to them by their unscrupulous sources, who were bent on spreading inflammatory rhetoric.

    He said the purveyors of falsehood have recruited some online medium to carry out some of their nefarious activities.

    Ajimobi said: “Now that elections have been won and lost, there should be an end to acrimonious and incendiary comments. Political discussion has moved from the pre-2011 era. Our focus is on politics of issues and development.

    “That is what we expect from them, not personal attacks and falsehood-laced statements indicating their unpreparedness for governance.

    REad also: Oyo govt, APC tackle group over vote of confidence in Ajimobi

    “I’m not unaware that during campaigns some politicians adopted the campaign of calumny as strategy believing it would give them undue advantage, but such does not last. What the electorate expects is to be educated on their blueprint for the development of the state.”

    However, the governor-elect, while replying Ajimobi, denied any campaign of calumny against the present administration, saying such would be unnecessary and unhelpful at this point in time.

    He said: “We deny campaign of calumny against Ajimobi. Such won’t be necessary and it is unhelpful.

    “Our major grouse is that awarding fresh contracts worth over N30 billion in one fell swoop and under mischievous circumstances will be a disservice to our state, if we do not cry out.

    “We do not need the outgoing governor to tell us to inform our people what we want to do for them because they already know during the course of the campaign.

    “What the people never knew was the extent to which the outgoing government will go to attempt to empty government coffers to leave frustrate the incoming administration.”