Tag: Rauf Aregbesola

  • Five injured in ‘attack’ on Osun APC members

    Five injured in ‘attack’ on Osun APC members

    •PDP: they assaulted us

    No fewer than five persons were critically injured yesterday in Iponda, Obokun Local Government Area of Osun State, in a clash between Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) supporters and All Progressives Congress (APC) members.

    It was gathered that the APC members were celebrating Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s re-election when they were attacked.

    Some APC members, who sustained deep machete cuts, were rushed to the hospital, where they are on admission.

    One of the victims, Deji Akanmu (Ward 4), was stabbed in the head.

    An Assistant Director in the Bureau of Communication and Strategy in the Office of the Governor, Mr. Bosun Oyintiloye, who is from the area, described the attack as barbaric.

    He said the incident was reported to the police division in Ibokun.

    However, the Media Director of Senator Iyiola Omisore’s Campaign Organisation, Prince Diran Odeyemi, said it was the APC members that attacked PDP supporters.

    Odeyemi said: “We are surprised that despite the APC’s victory in Saturday’s election, its members have continued to harass, maim and humiliate supporters of our party across the state. We urge Governor Aregbesola to call them to order before the situation gets out of hand.”

  • Osun:  The morning after

    Osun: The morning after

    All is quiet now in the aftermath of the governorship election in Osun State, bar the exuberant rejoicing in re-elected Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s circle, which stretches all the way from Osogbo to Bourdillon Road in Ikoyi, Lagos, the grieving in Aso Rock and in Wadata Plaza and the gnashing of teeth in the palaces of some wayward monarchs.

    Make no mistake about it:  The election was a contest between the All Progressives Congress (APC) and its candidate, Ogbeni Aregbesola, on the one hand, and President Goodluck Jonathan, and the entire apparatus of the Federal Government on the other, with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate, Iyiola Omisore, playing along as bit actors.

    With the Federal Juggernaut behind you – slush money, logistics, the police, the army, the secret service, clandestine armed services of no known provenance, and the desperate craving to “capture” more opposition territory – with these and much more behind you, who can stand in your way?

    Besides, the governorship election in Ekiti two months earlier had not only pointed up a winning formula that accorded sophomoric stunts a greater salience than solid achievement, it had also shown that the entire Southwest was politically ripe for the picking.

    But something went horribly wrong on the way to the orchard.

    The would-be harvesters suffered a comprehensive sandbagging.

    All the intimidating display of force and might, the warrantless arrest of officials and operatives of the governing party in the state, the bullying, the stoking of religious differences, the claim to possession of private facts that showed Omisore not only leading but coasting to victory —everything ended in a puff, “just like that,” to borrow a phasing from Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, the Afro-beat king.

    Such was the compass of the intimidation that Chief Isiaka “Serubawon” Adeleke, who once governed the state on the Caligula Principle —”You can hate us, so long as you fear us” — was driven by fear to flee his home in Ede and go into hiding as the Federal Juggernaut widened the reach of its ravenous dragnet.

    At Aso Rock and in the palaces of the wayward monarchs and in Wadata Plaza and in the ranks of Dr Jonathan’s private army of ghost “public affairs analysts” and “public affairs commentators”, who invariably live in Abuja, they must be wondering how what was supposed to be an easy take-over turned into a comprehensive rout of the would-be receivers.

    They conveniently forgot that Osun is not Ekiti.  Believing that the dividends of democracy begin and end in the stomach, they could not see beyond the stomachs of the electorate. Accordingly, they tailored their messages to appeal to that organ and its immediate satiation. They mis- apprehended an outlier, an aberration, for a trend.  They willfully set aside the public record and stuck with their private facts.

    And so, what was supposed to serve as a bridgehead for the capture of the Southwest in Dr Jonathan’s all-but-certain presidential run in 2015 ended up as the graveyard of that strategy. They will now have to go back to the drawing board on that one.  And, despite the gain in Ekiti, his faction of the National Governors Forum remains a minority; the most it can hope for is parity in membership with the group from which it was suborned to defect.

    The Osun verdict is on one level a personal triumph for the austere and driven Rauf Aregbesola.  Unlike some who stumbled into office in a fit of absent-mindedness or were dragooned into it, he entered office fully prepared, a man with a mission, armed with blueprints for transforming the      State of Osun.  From his first day in office, he has pursued his progressive agenda with a singularity of purpose that has alienated some around him who regard political office not as a summons to service but an invitation to eat, drink and be merry.

    The election outcome is also a victory for Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the National Leader of the victorious APC.  Following the party’s freak defeat in the Ekiti governorship race, some commentators had begun to script his political obituary.  They said he was waning as a political force in his Southwest redoubt, and was headed for the abyss.

    It is not the first or the second time such things are being said of him, and it won’t be the last. Those counting him must be prepared for a long wait. The man’s capacity for resurgence is simply astonishing.

    The election was in a way a proving ground for the Chairman of the APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, whom I got to know quite well when he served as a consultant to the Editorial Board of The Guardian, where I was chair of the board and editorial page editor.

    He acquitted himself magnificently, displaying the intelligence, the sharp, analytic mind, the capacity for sustained engagement, the eloquence, the resoluteness and the forthrightness that made him one of the youngest, if not the youngest person to be appointed permanent secretary in the Federal Civil Service.

    The decisiveness with which he moved the APC machinery to Osogbo to counter the designs of the Federal Might was vintage Oyegun.  He is not combative by nature, but he is not afraid of a fight. You can count on him to fight a good fight.

    I cannot recall the context now, but in one of the many conversations I had with General Olusegun Obasanjo during visits to his farm in Ota, I mentioned that Oyegun had marked his 55th birthday lately.  Obasanjo, who is as flinty with praise as he is with his money, spoke glowingly of Oyegun who served with him when he was head of state.

    He asked me to convey to Oyegun his desire to host a birthday luncheon for him, his family and friends. The luncheon did take place, several weeks later.

    That is a measure of the esteem in which Oyegun is held.

    The on-again, off-again candidate of the Labour Party, Fatai Akinbade, finished as an also-ran.  But he provided a comic relief that dispelled somewhat the high tension that marked the vote tallying. Losing on every turf and registering for the most part less than token presence, his spokesperson nevertheless called on the candidates of the APC and the PDP to withdraw if they felt threatened by Akinade’s profile.

    At this writing, Omisore has not conceded.  The man, who could win election to the Senate from prison where he was being held as a suspect in the prosecution of the murder of the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Chief Bola Ige, has now twice failed to win election from the outside. He lost his re-election bid to the Senate, and was crushed in his governorship quest.

    His political future is uncertain.  Dr. Jonathan may well compensate him with a ministerial appointment, an ambassadorial post, or some other sinecure.

    In whatever case, you will never see Omisore again riding an okada or devouring a cob of roast corn purchased from a street vendor.

     

     

     

  • Triumph of people’s will

    Triumph of people’s will

    Osun State Govenor Rauf Aregbesola has braced all odds to secure a second term in a critical election that has affirmed the relative commitment of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to the sanctity of the ballot box. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU writes on the lessons of the poll.

    For seven and half hours, there was suspense at the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) office on Gbogan-Osogbo Road, Osogbo, the Osun State capital. That was between 12 midnight on Saturday and 7.30 on Sunday, when the people anxiously waited for the announcement of the final result of the governorship election by the Chief Returning Officer, Prof. Bamitale Omole, the Vice Chancellor of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife.

    Hours before the Local Government Collation Officers (CO) returned to the INEC office from 30 local governments, there were jubilations in many parts of the state, particularly Osogbo, Ede, Iwo, Ejigbo, and Ilesa. Based on the reports of the All Progressives Congress (APC) agents, party chieftains were also in celebration mood. But, the celebration of the governor’s victory was suspended, following the delay by the university don.

    At 1.51 am, Omole, who was accompanied by the INEC National Commissioner, Ambassador Mohammadu Wali, the National Commissioners for Election Operations, Nuhu Yakubu, Osun State Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) Olusegun Agbaje and his Ondo State counterpart, Akin Orebiyi, begun to receive the results from the local governments. As the COs begun to submit the results one after the other, there was no panic and no eyebrow was raised by any of the political parties’ representatives. However, tension rose when it took Omole a long time to announce the winner.

    Party leaders from far and near bombarded the electoral agency with phone calls and text messages. Suddenly, the rumour of likely malpractice and distortion of the final result at the final collation spread like a wild fire. Many had kept vigil as they were glued to television sets monitoring the collation. Sources said that Aregbesola, who had returned to the Government House, Osogbo from Ilesa, where he had gone to cast his vote, was restless. At the APC Situation Room, a party chieftain shouted: “I suspect a foul play. It appears that they wanted to rig the election, even at this stage.” Nobody could assuage that shared fear.

    When the rumour spread to the final collation centre that midnight, many people were enveloped in anxiety. Reporters, security agents, party agents and others were discussing in hush tones. “Is it true that there is an order from above putting the announcement on hold,” a party chieftain asked some reporters. There was no answer. One of the chieftains of a smaller party alleged that a notable Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) gladiators from the Southeast had advised the Federal Government to deploy more troops to curtail any violent reaction, if the PDP candidate, Senator Iyiola Omisore, was declared winner. The allegation could not be substantiated. But, a misleading statement in the social media by a former minister that PDP chieftains and followers were also celebrating victory heightened the tension.

    The APC agent at the collation centre, Hon. Oladosu Rasak, was worried by the turn of events. He noted that the submission of results by 30 LGA COs could take time because of the distance between some local government headquarters and the state capital. But, he said the delay in final collation was suspicious. Asked to react to the allegation that the loser may be declared the winner, he said: “I have had that too, but how it can be possible is what I don’t know.” Another APC chieftain, Ajibola Famurewa, a member of the House of Representatives, said: “At this stage, it is too late to rig. We will wait for the pronouncement by the chief returning officer.” But, Information Commissioner Hon. Sunday Akere, was confident that the verdict will not be aborted. “We have voted and the people have decided. We know the result already. We are only here for validation and affirmation by the INEC,” he said.

    Around 7 a.m, reporters and party agents were running out of patience. “All we are saying, give us the result,” they chorused in protest. The RO was not indifferent to their protest. Urging them to exercise more patience, he said:  “I thank you for your patience. Give me two minutes to round up and announce the result.”

    The OAU Vice Chancellor was conscious of his historic duty. The work of a Returning Officer is sensitive. Apparently, he scholar was not unaware of the suspicion of the INEC by stakeholders. He wanted to make sure that the final collation was neatly done and right figures were released. The old teacher shunned the calculator and opted for manual calculation. Omole did not request for any assistance from mathematicians and statisticians from the OAU and the University of Ibadan who were Local Government COs. The manual calculation was done for almost three and half hours. During that suspense, anxiety and tension had brew. The announcement of Aregbesola as the winner by Omole doused the tension in seconds.

    Aregbesola’s vicroty became the PDP’s nightmare. The party had invested much in the exercise. Party chieftains, including the candidate, Omisore, the Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan, Minister of State for Defence, Senator Musiliu Obanikoro, and South West PDP Contact and Mobilisation Committee Chairman Buruji Kashamu, were full of bravado. Unable to reconcile expectation with reality, the PDP agent at the collation centre, Hon. Bolu Ajao, was downcast. When the Chief Returning Officer asked him to sign the result sheet, he refused. “We have notified the commission about the lapses in the election. We have issue with the integrity of the process. Our candidate is in the best position to take an appropriate action,” he told reporters.

    According to the result, the governor, who  won convincingly in 22 local governments, scored 394,684 votes, beating his main challenger, Omisore, who polled 292,747 and second runner-up, Fatai Akinbade, who got 8,898. Omisore won in eight councils. The analysis confirmed the two-party pattern in Osun State and underscored the weakness of smaller parties merely warming the INEC register. But, the outcome of the poll also has implications for 2015 general elections. If this pattern is sustained, the PDP may dislodge some APC legislators in the House of Assembly and the National Assembly in next year’s election.

    For Aregbesola, the road to victory was laced with thorns. Ahead of the poll, the PDP, basking in the euphoria of its victory in Ekiti State, boasted that the governor’s days in office were numbered. The campaigns were hot and chaotic in some areas. Lies and fabrications were reeled out on the podium by the opposition to discredit the government and get a upper hand. The idea of stomach infrastructure also came on the front burner, with the PDP chieftains urging prospective voters to ignore performance and embrace transient cash gifts and foodstuffs. The governor was portrayed as a reckless administrator who had plunged the state into debt. Many PDP chieftains also incited civil servants, motor cyclists, artisans and peasants against him, saying that he was their lives would be in jeopardy in his second term.

    Omisore also relied on the federal might. Under the pretext of maintaining order, soldiers were deployed to Osun. The PDP flag bearer copied the style of his Ekiti State counterpart, Ayodele Fayose, by going populist. He rode on okada to rallies and bought roasted corn and banana on the road, projecting himself as  the man to beat. Few days to the poll, former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola, a defector from the PDP to the PDP, put spanner into his calculation. Describing Omisore as incompetent, he warned the people against voting for an ex-Agodi Prison detainee.

    Aregbesola ran an issue-oriented campaign. His strength lied in his achievements, power of ideas and courage. In every local government, he pointed at development projects completed by his administration. He said he needed a second a term to consolidate his service delivery to 30 local governments.

    Many observers pointed out that the poll was largely free and fair. Throughout the state, only results from three polling booths were disputed. The Collation Officers cancelled them and notified the REC. Thus, many party leaders hailed the electoral commission for their commitment to the sanctity of the ballot box. However, selected party agents had an axe to grind with the INEC on poll day. They complained that they were not allowed to monitor voting by INEC officials and security agents, owing to their lack of identification tags. To douse the anxiety, Agbaje, directed that some officials to issue the tags to the affected agents.  The REC later explained to reporters that the non-issuance of tags to the agents was not deliberate. Agbaje said: “ I have received calls from party leaders on the complaint. Many party agents did not show up with their tags. They did not go to the polling booths with tags. We have directed that the specific electoral officer should return to the INEC Office to release the tags to them.”

    From 8 am to 4pm, movement was restricted across the state. Nature was kind to the State of Living Springs. The weather was benevolent. Voters stormed polling units for accreditation without fear of intimidation by thugs. Owing to the huge turnout, accreditation could not be completed at noon. However, prospective voters who came late were not allowed to join the queue by polling officers and security agents.  Ahead of the poll, sensitive and non-sensitive polling materials had been deployed to the local governments by INEC. Unlike the controversial 2007 poll, there were no complaints about shortage of voting materials, late coming by polling officers, absence of accreditation materials, lack of voters’ register and harassment and molestation of voters by security agents.  Also, there was no case of ballot snatching by thugs. Unlike the eve of the election, when APC leaders were harassed and arrested by policemen, there was respite on poll day. The only chieftain who was harassed was former Governor Isiaka Adeleke. But, when police invaded his polling unit at Ede, he escaped being arrested. Therefore, he could not vote. His aides were not lucky as they were arrested and taken to Osogbo.

    The pre-election experience of some APC chieftains created doubts about the possibility of a credible poll. Alarmed at the massive presence of soldiers, Aregbesola cried out that the PDP wanted to stage a civilian coup, adding that the state is under the siege of the gun. It was an understatement. No fewer than 50 chieftains and supporters were arrested and detained. Among them were the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Hon. Wale Afolabi, his Ministry of Agriculture counterpart, Wale Adedoyin, Mr. Tijani Oladosun and party supporters. Another chieftain, Hon. Bamisaye, a legislator from Ilesa, had to run into the bush to escape arrest.

    Bamisaye, who spoke with reporters on phone,  said that “hired policemen had chased APC members into the bush in Ijesa area”. He added: “I can’t reveal where I am now. I escaped into the bush. Many of our leaders are in the bush; wounded. We don’t know whether they are policemen or fake police.”

    Adedoyin, who was released around 11.30 am, said the arrest of party leaders was unfortunate. Narrating his ordeal, he said: “Around 9.15 pm, some people were banging my gate in my house at Ilesa.They said I should open the gate. I reported to the SSS. The SSS said that I should not open. After 15 minutes, one of them jumped the fence into my house. They said that, if I don’t open my door, they will blow up my house. They said they wanted to interrogate me at their office in Osogbo.”

    During the door-to door campaign by the APC, party followers were educated on how to handle the ballot papers, to avoid another “photocromic” experience.   Former APC Interim National Chairman Chief Bisi Akande objected to the decision by some INEC staff to stop  voters from folding the ballot papers after voting. He said they had the constitutional right to do so. Akande addded: “Voters are at liberty to fold the ballot box before dropping it. A voter can even put the ballot paper inside his pocket and refuse to drop it” Akande also berated the security agents for molesting APC supporter.

    Decrying the arrest, Aregbesola said that it was part of the flawed process that heralded the poll. “The problem is not with the people, but with the institutions charged with the conduct of the election. The crackdown on APC leaders was unwarranted. They were molested, brutalised and incarcerated. Osun is under the siege of the gun. What does the Federal Government want? Do they want to force their candidate on the people or they want the people to exercise their right to vote. They want to stage a civilian coup in Osun.”

     

     

  • A bridge too far

    A bridge too far

    For federal electoral bandits, Osun proved a bridge too far on August 9.

    And in the spirit of routed bandits, a mobile policeman in Ode-Omu, reportedly in the convoy of exiting Jelili Adesiyan, Police Affairs minister, allegedly shot at a crowd celebrating Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s victory, injuring one Idowu Mufutau, according to an August 11 report by The Nation.

    In combat metaphor, Osun must rank as Nigeria’s electoral equivalent of the 18 June 1815 Battle of Waterloo (then in Holland, but now in Belgium).  As the all-conquering Napoleon met his doom in Waterloo, federal election-fixers met decisive defeat in Osun.

    This write-up’s title is straight from World War II lore.  A Bridge Too Far, a 1977 film adapted from a 1974 book of the same title by Cornelius Ryan, captured the epic collapse of the audacious attempt, by the Allies, to halt World War II in 1944.

    That air-borne operation was to capture a couple of bridges, chief among them Arnhem, in German-occupied Holland; and therefore cut off German defences.  But Arnhem proved a bridge too far, leading to horrendous losses in the Allied camp.

    Closer home, it was at the Osogbo battle of 1840 that the Ibadan forces halted the Fulani jihadist push into Yorubaland.

    Some 174 years later, Osogbo was again at the centre of the defeat of another imperialist power push.  Ironically, at the epicentre of the August 9 Osogbo rout was a “Jihadist” — at least from poisoned and bigoted partisan view — who led his people to stand firm against electoral capture, by any means possible, by President Goodluck Jonathan and his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).  It is a classic example of glorious history repeating itself — but this time, not as farce!

    It is tribute to the in-your-face dissembling of the Jonathan Presidency that the president’s congratulatory message to Governor Aregbesola tried to put a spin to electoral robbery gone awry.

    After bland congratulations, came the real message: “The outcome of the election has also given a lie to the false, unfair and uncharitable allegations that measures put in place by the federal government for the Ekiti and Osun State elections were partisan and designed to achieve a favourable outcome for his party”.  Really?

     

    When Iyiola Omisore, the PDP candidate, walked his talk that hooded security operatives would be unleashed on his opponents, mum was it from Jonathan.  When a hooded soldier (captured on the front page in the August 7 issue of The Nation) helped to thwart organised Labour’s last endorsement rally for the governor, mum was it from Jonathan.

    When PDP partisan and Defence minister of state, Musiliu Obanikoro, invaded with his soldiers, with the body language of Mission-Crush-the-Opposition, mum was it from Jonathan.  That some of the soldiers still acted professionally made the point that the problem was not soldiers per se,but unscrupulous political masters, prompting them to muscle the vote.  At any rate, involving soldiers in elections is proven democratic suicide.

    When Jelili Adesiyan, Police Affairs minister, Obankoro’s tag-team partner and Omisore’s close ally put on his own show — hooded DSS men, pre-election shooting into the air to create panic, and even the election eve glorious capture of Lai Mohammed, APC spokesman and Sunday Dare,Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s spokesman, mum was it from Jonathan!

    Nor did the president find his voice after the hooded security operatives’ attack on former Governor Isiaka Adeleke, and wide-spread attacks to cripple other opposition leaders.  Yet, the president deceives himself he guaranteed a free, fair and credible vote!  He can tell that to the marines!

    Truth be told: Governor Aregbesola triumphed despite clear federal booby traps; and the not-so-veiled mandate for men in uniform, genuine or fake, to commit electoral crimes, and steal the Osun governorship.

    Besides, when will someone tell Nigerians hoods are now part of the Nigeria military’s accoutrement?  That is the abominable nadir Dr. Jonathan has sunk the presidency in his temporary care!

    Prof. Attahiru Jega’s INEC tried its best on election day.  Voting qua voting, it organised a decent poll.  But it must stop playing dumb to rigged pre-election processes.  As Ripples insisted after Ekiti, you can’t have a free election when a party to the process is unfairly harassed and detained.  As it was in Ekiti, so was it in Osun.

    The PDP desperation for power is well known — though that is no exclusive vice of the federal ruling party.  Neither hidden is President Jonathan’s almost unconscionable longing for 2015, despite demonstrable suspect competence.  But the real danger, for the country’s goodwill, is the mass falsehood, bigotry, hate and spite sown all round.

    Many Nigerians, particularly a South-South/South East column, rabidly cheer on Jonathan, even as he embarks on hideous constitutional abominations.  This is ominous.  Since independence, such uncritical babble often precedes Nigeria’s descent into the abyss.  Everyone must rise to save this president from himself.

    A normally reasoned reader, responding to “For Osun, for Democracy, for Nigeria” (last week on this page), declared himself convinced the Osun people were eager and ready to trade Governor Aregbesola for Mr. Omisore.  Ripples just responded: “Okay o, we shall see”.

    But how could rational humans trade solid emerald for broken Sprite bottles?  And any normal Yoruba person choose Omisore over Aregbesola — Omisore, with his terribly flawed persona?

    Another elderly citizen declared himself custodian of God’s judgement about to descend andwipe out the extant political order in the South West, starting with Ekiti; and ordained to continue in Osun.  That partisan wish is hardly a crime.  It is a democracy after all!

    Still, the old man is always driven by spite, bigotry and deep hatred for particular personalities that Ripples did not bother with a response.  But Ripples thought: God is no spiteful tin god, of the old man’s dream, that rewards beneficence with ingratitude.  That played out perfectly in Osun, negating all efforts to steal the vote.

    PDP’s Omisore ran an ultra-negative campaign: blackmail, threat, spite, dissembling and ill grace; not telling anyone what he would do, but swearing how much of the present benefits he would destroy.

    Governor Aregbesola, on the other hand, even while mobilising to face head on the federal vote-stealing Leviathan, pointed to what he had done and what he would do, if re-elected.  Incidentally, two programmes: free train rides to Osun during festivities and Walk for Life just dovetailed into the electioneering period.

    Alas!  No one could accuse the governor of electioneering stunts, since the two programmes had started from the inception of his government.  That was salute to belief and consistency.

    Still, with his renewed mandate, the Ogbeni must learn to eschew needless controversies that hand his enemies the ammo to demonise his person, his programmes and his government.  A renewed mandate is a call for more hard work.

     

     

  • Osun: The morning after

    Osun: The morning after

    In the sweetness of the resounding victory handed to their visionary, hardworking governor, Rauf Aregbesola last Saturday, it is so easy to forget that the victory did not come at a bargain price. To be sure, nothing in the outcome deviated from expectation. To anyone familiar with the real-politik in the state as against the hype, it would have taken an outright subversion – or if you like, an electoral coup – to achieve a different outcome.

    Guess it seems so easy now to celebrate the process said to have delivered the outcome. The truth however is that the real credit belongs to the iron will and determination of the people. Like the Rock of Gibraltar, they stood together in their defiance of tyranny; theirs was not going to be a conquered territory.

    Now, there will be enough time for the good people of Osun to relive the comic sides of the process: the spectacle of one gubernatorial wannabe on Okada clutching two cobs of corn; the farcical reductionism of the context to one of choice between real development and stomach infrastructure; the desperate but opportunistic play of the religious card by the PDP candidate, Iyiola Omisore.

    Yours truly was certain that these were going to be unlikely deciders of the contest. Is yours truly right? You be the judge!

    Victory at last? That is unmistakeable. The figures, as returned by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), says it all. In 24 out of 30 Local Governments, it was a clear, emphatic show of superiority by the incumbent. The number of votes returned in favour of the victor and their spread comes close to rout – a shellacking!

    The result of the election obviously goes beyond returning a verdict of victory for the incumbent. First, it is a major set-back for the unscrupulous wayfarers pretending to the high pedestal of political leadership in the South-west. Clearly, the people have spoken of the place of reward for honest and well meaning service. They have affirmed their rejection of strange corrosive values of instant gratification which the PDP insists on foisting on them. Theirs was a clear repudiation of PDP’s divisive politics, their cynical play on the sensibilities of the people for megalomaniacal ends. Above all, it was the opportunity for the people to demonstrate that no amount of brute force would suffice to cow them.

    No doubt, there has been a lot of talk about the cost of victory. Those worrying about the humongous cost of electoral management have good reasons to be. Under President Goodluck Jonathan, we have seen every successive cycle of election grow in leaps and bounds. By this, I do not mean mainly of naira and kobo, in men and materiel terms, but in the sheer number of agencies suborned to the process. Once we thought that the cost of the Edo governorship was barely passable; Anambra would turn out to be worse; and then Ekiti and now Osun – each cycle progressively mounting in their costs. But then, the per capita cost comes nowhere the cost of impunity, the abuses of the security agencies, the trampling on individual rights and freedoms. What about the trauma forced on the people only because they have the burden of an election to discharge? Do these matter, and to who?

    Obviously, in President Goodluck Jonathan’s book, neither the economics nor the socio-political factors matter; the end would suffice to justify the means. Has anyone considered the economics of the deployment of 55,000 boots in an election where less than one million voted in a nation with 20,000 men fighting in the increasingly one-sided war in the North-east? Madness or desperation – a sign of insecure presidency?

    Where would they get the numbers in 2015? Recruit more of the hooded enforcers as we saw in Osun? And where would that lead to if not Jonathan’s self-help republic? Isn’t that a curious route to democratic consolidation?

    Now to the good in the madness. Surely, the lesson from Osun must be the fact that no force on earth would suffice to stop the march of a people determined to be free. I honestly shudder to imagine what could have happened had the outcome of the election ran against the grain of the people’s expectation. Osun should be a sobering lesson in the limit of raw power.

    This one for Pa Ashadele

    As a general rule, I try to refrain from joining issues with readers of this column. I understand that the burden of writing a column carries the risk of being misunderstood. But to go as far as imputing base motives to nearly every idea published on this page is not just cheap but clearly opportunistic.

    Here is what Pa Lai Ashadele wrote in response to my column titled “Power Sector: Lest we forget” published last week.

    He writes: “It should not have been the caption for your article but OUT TO BLAME GOVT (sic)”.

    He went on: “where is the justification for your beration (sic) of the government if there was an increase in power generation from 1500MW then to 5000MW now?

    You mentioned vandalisation of the structures that would assist to increase the megawatts by hoodlums, the receding flow of water to power plants and non availability of coal, which depends on nature, but offered no solutions. Media men in the past blamed government at various times of meddling in the affairs that were preserves of the private sector and called for the privatisation of the power sector which the present government has brought to fruition and yet all it gets are unending blames by the same media in spite of their bereftness (sic) of ideas on the way out all premised on political bias. A positive attitude is all we need now for survival”.

    Clearly, this is not the first time yours truly would be adjudged guilty of political bias. I offer no defence. As for my piece on the power sector, I didn’t say anything extraordinary, at least nothing that the Man on the Street has not expressed in one form or the other. My understanding of the purpose of government is that it exists to solve the problems facing the people. In this case, it has failed. What is interesting is that Pa Ashadele does not believe that the nation deserves better than what presently obtains – after pouring more than $20 billion in the last decade.

    No wonder Pa Ashadele touts handing over the power entities to private sector as an achievement! Before now, I had thought that the privatisation was only a means to an end. Pa Ashadele believes it should equate abdication.

    Talk of the divide between an analogue and digital generation! No offence meant please!

     

     

  • Aregbesola leads

    Aregbesola leads

    •Osogbo erupts in jubilation

    Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State had his second term in office practically wrapped up last night with early results from 23 of the 30 local government areas of the state placing him ahead of the pack.

    Voters in Ilesa West, Ilesa East, Ejigbo, Ifelodun, Osogbo, Olorunda, Boripe, Ife North, Irewole, Odo Otin, Iwo, Egbedore, Atakumosa West, Atakumosa East, Oriade, Isokan, Ila, Irepodun, Orolu, Ede North, Ede South, Obokun and Ifedayo preferred the All Progressives Congress (APC) flag bearer to Otunba Iyiola Omisore of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) who trailed in the second position, and other contestants.

    Wild jubilations erupted in Osogbo and other parts of the state as the results trickled in.

    Omisore’s running mate Adejare Bello lost in his Ede North polling unit. His party (PDP) scored 30 votes as against the APC’s 130 votes. Also, the state chairman of PDP Alhaji Gani Olaoluwa lost in his Olrunda Local Government polling unit. His party scored 95 to APC’s 142 votes.

    Former Minister of State for Defence, Erelu Olusola Obada also lost her Ibodi, Atakumosa West Local Government polling unit where PDP scored three to APC’s 300.

    Residents took to the streets congratulating one another on the outcome of the voting after several weeks of tension generated by the massive deployment of security operatives to the state ahead of the poll, harassment of leaders and supporters of the APC and a war of words between the APC and PDP over rigging allegations.

    The APC said yesterday that as many as 250 of its supporters were arrested at different times before the election with a view to intimidating the electorate.

    Turn out by voters for the election was generally high across the state.

    Expectations in the camps of the two main parties were equally high.

    On hand to ensure that nothing went amiss were chieftains of the parties from different parts of the country.

    It was relatively peaceful despite a clampdown on APC members by security men.

    Operatives of the Department of State Security (DSS), Police, Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) were deployed on the streets.

    Election materials reached most parts of the capital early and accreditation of voters began by 8:am. Voters had little to complain about concerning accreditation although there were a few reports of hooliganism in parts of the state.

    In Ilobu for instance, suspected thugs stormed a polling booth shooting sporadically in the air and attempted to disrupt the process of accreditation.

    They were however repelled by men of the NSCDC.

    Obokun Ward 3 and Odo Otin recorded similar incidents and in both cases security men acted promptly.

    The Commandant of the NSCDC in Osun State, Felix Gbolade said of the election: “Election was fine; we were deploying our officials as the situation demanded. Where there were issues of security, our men were able to restore calm.”

    The State Director of State Security Services (SSS), Andrew Iorkyar told The Nation that some polling booths requested extra security in Osogbo.

    “The election has been peaceful, some polling units demanded for extra security because of the large turn- out of people and we have provided security,” he said.

    In Ward 4, unit 1, voting commenced later as the voters complained about the slow process of election. One voter told the Nation, “The electoral officers are very slow they seem not to know how to handle the electoral process.”

    In Units 2,4,18,19,20 also in the same Ward, voting began as scheduled as voters waited patiently in the sun to cast their votes. In many wards in Osogbo, voting continued till 4pm. In Unit 1 and 2, more than 100 voters waited around 4;30 pm to cast their ballots.

    As the results of the election began to trickle in, there was wild jubilation in Osogbo .

    A voter, Suraj Adewole said he was satisfied with the conduct of the election.

    “This election has been transparent, we are glad about the direction it is going, our party has won,” he said.

  • PDP wants to stage civilian coup in Osun, says Aregbesola

    PDP wants to stage civilian coup in Osun, says Aregbesola

    • Mixed reactions trail poll

    Mixed reactions yesterday trailed the governorship election in Osun State.

    While a cross section of party leaders hailed the electoral commission and security agencies for patriotism and commitment to the sanctity of the ballot box, others said that they could have performed better.

    Prominent politicians, including former Interim Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Governor Rauf Aregbesola, his deputy, Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori, said that the militarisation of the state and the arrest of chieftains of the ruling party provoked anxiety and fear.

    The governor, who highlighted some irregularities that marred the exercise, said that the PDP wanted to stage a civilian coup, adding that the state is under the siege of the gun.

    There was tension in many parts of the state following the harassment and arrest of many All Progressives Congress (APC) leaders and followers by the police. However, the tension subsided, shortly after the commencement of the accreditation of voters when the chieftains were released.

    Among the APC leaders arrested were the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Wale Afolabi, his Ministry of Agriculture counterpart, Wale Adedoyin, Mr. Tijani Oladosu and party supporters. Adedoyin said that no fewer than 50 supporters were hounded into detention by the police. Another chieftain, Bamisaye, a legislator from Ilesa, had to run into the bush to escape arrest.

    Also, APC, Labour Party and Social Democratic Party (SDP) chieftains protested to the electoral commission that party agents were not allowed to monitor voting by INEC officials and security agents, owing to the lack of identification tags in Ile-Ife area. To douse the anxiety, the Resident Electoral Commissioner, Olusegun Agbaje, directed that some officials issue the tags to the affected agents.

    The REC explained that the non-issuance of tags to the agents was not deliberate, adding that the complaint had been taken up. Agbaje said: “I have received calls from party leaders on the complaint. Many party agents did not show up with their tags. They did not go to the polling booths with tags. We have directed that the specific electoral officer should return to the INEC Office to release the tags to them.”

    From 8 am to 4pm, movement was restricted across the state. The weather was benevolent. Voters stormed polling units across the three senatorial districts and six zones for accreditation. Owing to the huge turn -out, accreditation could not be completed at noon. However, prospective voters who came late were not allowed to join the queue by polling officers and security agents.

    Ahead of the poll, sensitive and non-sensitive polling materials had been deployed to the local governments. Although there were reports of delay in some polling units, the anxiety triggered by the delay fizzled out when the polling officers arrived.

    There was massive presence of security men at polling centres. Police helicopters hovered around the state in surveillance.  Unlike previous polls, there were no complaints about shortage of voting materials, late coming by polling officers, absence of accreditation materials, lack of voters’ register and harassment and molestation of voters by security agents.  Also, there was no case of ballot snatching by thugs.

    Hailing the peaceful atmosphere in Iragbiji, where he voted, the Chief of Staff to Osun State Governor, Mr. Gboyega Oyetola, observed that people turned out en mass to perforce their civic right. “As at now, all is calm. The turn -out is huge,” he said, shortly after his accreditation.

    The deputy governor, Mrs. Grace Tomori-Laoye, who voted at Owo-Ope area of Osogbo, the state capital, said that, although she was impressed by the large-turn-out, the complaints by party chieftains that some members were arrested by the police without justification were worrisome.

    She said: “I did not sleep throughout the night. A lot of our members, APC members, were harassed, molested, and picked up by the police. In Oba-Oke, the monarch called me that the town was in turmoil. The youth leader was picked.

    “There were attempts to arrest Senator Adebayo Salami. In Ede, there were attempts to arrest Senator Isiaka Adeleke. Two commissioners were arrested. A party chieftain, Owonikoko, was also picked. I called the police. The police denied. Some people are threatening to disrupt voting. The policemen were tying an ankara and they said that they covered their faces”.

    Hon. Bamisaye said that “hired policemen had chased APC members into the bush in Ljesa area”. He added on phone: “I can’t reveal where I am now. I escaped into the bush. Many of our leaders are in the bush; wounded. We don’t know whether they are policemen or fake police”.

    Former Governor Adeleke, who protested assault on his residence, said: “I had relocated from my house to my mother’s house to vote. At 1 am on the eve of the poll, a van containing military men, SSS, police with AK 47 came to my house. I was taking my bath. They said I should open my gates. I said no. They started shooting. Five minutes later, they left. They covered their faces”.

    Adedoyin, who was released around 11.30 am, said the arrest of party leaders was unfortunate. Narrating his ordeal, he said: “Around 9.15 pm, some people were banging my gate in my house at Ilesa.They said I should open the gate. I reported to the SSS. The SSS said that I should not open. After 15 minutes, one of them jumped the fence into my house. They said that, if I don’t open my door, they will blow up my house. They said they wanted to interrogate me at their office in Osogbo.”

    Akande, who voted at Ila, complained that the accreditation was flawed, blaming the INEC for inefficiency. He said, if care was not taken, the poll may be the worst in the history of the country.

    The elder statesmen also objected to the decision by some INEC staff to stop the voters from folding the ballot papers after voting, saying that they had the constitutional right to do so. He said: “Voters are at liberty to fold the ballot box before dropping it. A voter can even put the ballot paper inside his pocket and refuse to drop it”

    Akande also berated the security agents for molesting APC supporters, saying that it was part of the move to disperse the chieftains and divert their attention. He added: “An old man of over 80 years was seized at Ifedayo local government and dropped at Osogbo. We called his children to go and pick him up.”

    Lamenting his arrest, Afolabi said: “They took my car key from me and pushed me inside the police station. I am a lawyer and chief law officer of the state. I met the Agriculture commissioner there. They asked me to write a statement. SSS interrogated us. 50 members of our party are still in detention now. They said they released me on bail later. I didn’t have any incriminating material in my car. If this could happen to me, you could imagine what would have happened to other members of the party.”

    After he was accredited around 10.45 am, Governor Rauf Aregbesola, who was accompanied by his mother, wife, Sherifat and children, urged the people to remain calm and shun unruly behaviour. He chided the security agents for committing terror against the people.

    He said: “Nobody can abort the people’s will. What is important is to encourage our people to follow up the process, stand by the ballot until the votes are counted and results announced”.

    Aregbesola alleged that “some law enforcement officers have abused their duties”, adding that the state was not seized by violence because the peace-loving people of Osun State were determined to maintain peace and defend democracy.

    The governor added: “The behaviour of the some officers has made the process leading to the actual right to vote is flawed. The problem is not with the people, but with the institutions charged with the conduct of the election. INEC’s failure to provide accredited party agents adequate tags is bad. This has implications for election monitoring. There is no justification for denying party agents identity tags.

    “APC agents in Osigbo, Atakumosa, Ifedayo and other places could not monitor the process from the beginning to ascertain whether the process is good. Also, not all security agents maintained neutrality. The crackdown on APC leaders was unwarranted. They were, molested, brutalised and incarcerated.

    “The Attorney-General was manhandled and detained without any charge. The Agriculture commissioner was abducted and released at 11.30am. Segun Olanibi is in detention. Their crime is that they are chieftains of the APC. Osun is under the siege of the gun. What does the federal government want? Do they want to force their candidate on the people or they want the people to exercise their right to vote. They want to stage a civilian coup in Osun.”

  • Jubilation in Ibadan

    Jubilation in Ibadan

    There was sudden eruption of jubilation in the city of Ibadan and its environs late yesterday evening when calls came in indicating that the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola was leading in the Saturday governorship poll in Osun State.

    Anxious residents were busy making phone calls as they monitor results.

    Many were also seen in groups discussing the development, while others openly shouted the slogan “Aregbe nio, APC ti wo le “.

    As at the time of filing this report , the APC candidate was said to be leading in 20 out of the 30 local governments in the state.

    A resident, Mr. Abimbola Okeowo was full of praises as he jubilated in company of some loyalists of APC at Mokola area of the city.

    Also at Molete, Ring Road, Alakia, Agbowo, and Apata areas of the city the atmosphere was the same as politicians celebrate over the result.

    Many APC loyalists at different parts of the city, it was learnt  have started celebrating the outcome of the results in night clubs, beer parlours and private homes, even though it has not been officially announced.

    It was also gathered that many people, especially party members within city have started sending congratulatory messages to friends and well wishers as the results of the election filtered in.

  • How to safeguard ballot paper, by Aregbesola

    How to safeguard ballot paper, by Aregbesola

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola yesterday gave tips to prospective voters on how to safeguard their ballot during Saturday’s governorship election.

    Aregbesola, who is seeking reelection on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC), told the teeming supporters at the mega rally in Osogbo that the tips were necessary because “what they did in Ekiti State has been discovered”.

    He gave the tips as follows:

    ·Voters should ensure that the ink on their thumb is not excessive. If excessive, it should be allowed to dry a little before it is placed on the ballot paper. After thumb printing, allow the ballot paper to dry a little before dropping it into the ballot.

    ·Voters should write down the serial number on their ballot papers. Also, voters should, using their mobile phones, take pictures of their ballot papers before and after thumb printing on it. If a voter does not have a camera phone, he should seek the assistance of another person with a camera phone to snap the ballot paper.

    ·Before thumb printing ballot papers, voters should count three boxes above the APC logo and then fold along the line, pressing it thoroughly until the line forms a fold.

    ·Also, count three boxes below the APC logo and fold the ballot paper along the line until it forms a fold. Once this is done, the ballot paper would have folded perfectly and then the APC logo will be facing up, alone. Then thumb print on the APC logo and allow it to dry a little before dropping it into the ballot box. This will ensure that the ink does not smear the ballot paper or spill into another party’s logo.

  • Inside Aregbesola’s big dreams for public education

    Inside Aregbesola’s big dreams for public education

    When Governor Rauf Aregbesola began the implementation of the public school reclassification, doubts were raised about the intent of the new policy while the government insists the new grade system will improve education in the state. But two years after, how has the policy effected a change in the state? Seun Akioye investigates 

    It was 11: am and preparations were ongoing at the AUD Elementary school, Isale Osun in Osogbo for the mid-day meal.  Meal times at this school are always a special time not only for the immaculately dressed food vendors but for the students many of whom are from poor families. In Grade two classroom, the children beamed with smile as the vendors pass around a sizeable bowl of rice with vegetable, garnished with melon and chicken. A bottle of water was placed beside each student and two pieces of banana completed the meal.

    The class teacher, Mrs. Mariam Aderinola watched with glowing pride as the students performed this pleasurable duty of completing their meal. Everyday spent in that classroom for her was a reminder of what the school used to be and how in a spate of two years things have changed completely.

    “I used to teach in this school before the reclassification policy of the government, I was teaching this same class then known as Primary 2. Coming to school then was agony and we used to be fearful because the building had fallen apart and touts taken over the school,” she said, a small frown creeping to her brow.

    The teacher had a solid reason to be fearful, in 2011, AUD primary school-as it was known- was a specimen of rot and mismanagement. The buildings-those still standing- were dilapidated while the roof in many places had gone off. According to Aderinola, the whole premises was overgrown with weeds and immediately the children left the school, touts took over the compound. “They will mess up the whole compound with feaces and we would see left over marijuana and drugs. Different things were going on here, the touts were sleeping here and in the morning we would cover our noses while we teach because of the stench,” she said.

    New Policy, new challenges

    The state of AUD primary school was a reflection of the state of education in Osun’s public schools when the Aregbesola administration came into office says the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education, Oyelade Oyeniran. According to the state government, public education had been so badly managed that only pupils whose parents could not afford private schools were left in the public schools. Primary students especially were poorly dressed and malnourished while performance at both internal and external examination dipped to an all-time low.

    But in February 2011, the state government convened an extra-ordinary educational summit with the aim of finding a solution to the deep rooted problems. The summit paraded heavy weights in the educational sector like Professors’ Wole Soyinka, former vice-chancellor of University of Lagos, Ibidapo Obe and Peter Okebukola of the National Universities Commission (NUC).

    The recommendations were far reaching and one of the vital points is the reclassification of schools in the state which implementation began in 2012. But the government knew the change will generate controversy so there were series of meetings with the stakeholders. Materials explaining government’s position were produced and distributed in the state while the state ministry of education continued to engage with the public.

    Under the new school policy, the primary school system gave way to the Grade system with the former primary 1-4 with the age range of 6-9 years merging into what is now called Elementary school, in Grades 1-4. Primary 5 and 6 and Junior Secondary 1-3 merged together to become Middle school and now to be known as Grades 5-9 with the age range of 10-14, while the Senior Secondary students are grouped together in Grades 10-13 in what is now known as High School.

    In the new policy, the Elementary schools will have a maximum capacity of 900 pupils in a purpose built state-of –the art school. Other features will be provision of school uniform, books and balanced diet meals.  The schools were designed to be within the neighbourhood for easy access for all students.

    For the middle school, the maximum capacity will be between 900-1000 students with the provision of state-of-the art educational infrastructures and catchment to be between 2-3 kilometers while the High school will have a maximum capacity of 3000 students with hostel facilities. However, the curriculum did not change rather what changed were physical infrastructure and more conducive environment.

    But fierce opposition began against the policy immediately it was announced, while the government may have anticipated some resistance, it probably underestimated how organized the opposition will be. Questions were raised about the merging of students from different schools and backgrounds under one roof, the loss of identity especially for mission schools and the problems of how workable the new “complicated” model will be.

    The government gave reasons for wanting to change the way public education is being conducted in the state, probably forever. According to Oyeniran, the new grade system is the global trend and approach to modern education for effective teaching and learning. In adopting the grade system, pupils of the same age bracket are grouped together with fewer students in classes.

    The government also claimed that multiplicity of schools had decayed infrastructure over the years leading to poor funding, shortage of teachers and inefficiency. The new policy the government said will reverse the rot and make quality education available to all children without discrimination making public school comparable to the private schools.

    The promise of new infrastructure

    On October 2nd 2013, the state government rolled out the drums to celebrate the commissioning of the state of the art new school infrastructure, the Salvation Army Middle School, Alekuwodo, Osogbo. It was not the fanfare or the presence of top government functionaries that became the center point of the event but the arrival of Governor Aregbesola wearing a middle school uniform and beaming with smile as he commissioned the first mega school that would accommodate students of the middle school.

    There are lots of promises in the new education policy of the state government. In moving students from different schools together under the same roof, the government promised to build 170 mega schools throughout the state. While Elementary will have 100 schools, Middle will have 50 while 20 High schools will be built in the state. These mega buildings will have laboratories, libraries, clean toilet facilities and ICT centers. These new infrastructures will complement other schools that would be upgraded to acceptable standards in the state under the re-classification policy.

    The government also promised to feed all students in elementary school under what it called the O’Meal programme. About 3,000 food vendors have been contracted throughout the state and the students followed a regime of nutritional meals throughout the week in the state.

    Under the reclassification, all public schools in Osun state will be free while government will also supply books and uniforms to the students. But how much of these promise have been fulfilled and what has been the impact of the new education policy on students in the state?

    Inside Aregbesola’s Grade Schools

    Passing through the busy Alekuwodo road in Osogbo, the imposing Salvation Army Middle School is unmistakable. Built in a rectangle shape and painted in bright yellow colours, when viewed from the opposite direction without the benefit of the equally imposing signboard, one would believe the building is part of a new private university.

    Three members of the Osun Peace Corps movement mounted guard at the gate while students continued with their studies in the classrooms. No student loitered around and an examination of the entire classroom revealed that the students were all studiously engaged. There were no blackboards but white boards and instead of the chalk, markers were used to write on the boards. The students sat two in a seat and none of the classroom had more than 40 students.

    At the same time, Eunice Yaya, the Head teacher at AUD Elementary school was having her first classroom inspection in the morning. Like the middle school, AUD is  a recently commissioned mega school which catered for Grade 1-4 students of six primary schools. The students in Grade 2 on perceiving a visitor sprang to their feet in greetings, welcoming the visitor to Grade 2 and ending it with a prayer for God’s blessings on the visitor.

    “The difference is clear to what we used to have,” Yaya said as she exited the classroom.  “We have a very conducive atmosphere for learning and our children loves to come to school because there is free feeding,” she said.

    Yaya also said the reclassification of schools has improved the education standards. “Now we have teachers commensurate with the students unlike what we had before. This is a far better system than what we used to run.”

    The AUD Elementary school also boasts of some world class infrastructures. “There are 12 toilets and bathrooms, electricity and running water and we have toys for the children. We have a multipurpose hall that can sit 200 pupils at the same time and we educate our children on how to use the facilities because we are determined to preserve and maintain it,” Agbelekale Serifat, the facility manager said.

    Currently, 39 mega schools have been completed across the state and many are still under construction. At the CAC Araromi middle school, work was about 40 percent completed when The Nation visited. But the old school built in 1998 by Theophilous Bamigboye’s military administration had been refurbished with the leaking roof replaced and temporary chairs provided for the students. One teacher who spoke anonymously said: “As you can see, work is going on our new school but the government has given this one a face-lift. It is not what we want yet but we will get there.”

    Also at former Osogbo Grammar School, work is ongoing for the construction of a 3,000 capacity Model High school. While that was going on, the old building has been refurbished and given a face-lift.  But questions have been raised about the distance of the High Schools which has been mitigated by the purchase of 100 Omoluabi Scholar Buses, which according to a government official would be strictly for the students. The Nation can also verify that these buses are currently at the state Ministry of Finance.

    The impact of the new educational policy in the state has also been generating interesting permutations among the residents of the state. More than 90 percent of the people sampled independently by The Nation agreed that the policy has changed the landscape for education forever. “I have two children in school. I withdrew my son from a private school where I was paying N60, 000 to join a public school. Now the money is back in my pocket because he attends school free and the facilities are better than the private school. I have a small girl in private school as soon as she is old enough I will  take her to public school,” Toyin Barry-Ogwu, who works at Diamond Bank, said.

    Barry-Ogwu said the reclassification and reforms in the education sector has changed the face of education in the state. “In Osun state, no child is forced to go to school, the children are looking fine when you see them coming from school, everyone wants to be part of them now because they are well fed,” she said.

    Lolade Olanipekun whose daughter attends AUD Elementary School may have had a tiring day but the mention of the new school system brightened his face. “That is one reason I am happy. My daughter is in Grade 2, she talks everyday about how good the school is. She said they eat food everyday and they have this car that goes round to play with,” he said enthusiastically.

    On the education standard, he said she is showing more promise. “I am so happy that she is even writing, her handwriting is not too fine now but she is improving every day. She wants to go to school almost every day of the week, I have seen the school myself and it is very good environment,” Olanipekun said.

    Aderinola, Grade 2 teacher at AUD Elementary said a child came from one of the private schools and sat in her class. “She had a different uniform and she sat in the class. We inquired and found her school but she insisted she wanted to stay in our class. She must have been attracted by our facilities here and that is to show the improvements that have happened to this school, even the teachers are also looking very fine,” she said beaming with smile.

    One parent who declined to be named said: “You will not know what the governor has done if you don’t know how bad things used to be. I have a shop here and I used to see the students begging for money in the traffic or hawking when they should be in school, but can you see any child on the road today?,” he asked.

    The policy has also had a reverberating effect on private schools. According to investigations, many parents are withdrawing their children from private to the public schools while to counter the Opon Imo policy, the private schools are now selling a similar device to their high school students. The President of the National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) Osun state, Prince Wale Oyeniyi who is also the proprietor of Mustard Seed Schools Ode-Omu told The Nation  that while the new school policy is a welcome development; it should also incorporate students of the private schools. “I want to say the reform in schools is good but I must caution that the government must maintain the standard so that it won’t become a distortion in the end.  There has to be a balance too so the other sector of the state won’t suffer,” he said.

    Oyeniyi denied that private schools are losing their pupils. “I see no difference throughout the state, we have a symbolic relationship there is no problem. But I  should say government should also treat private school pupils the same. They are all citizens and we too are electorates and we vote, all the children are the same, so they should all enjoy the dividends of democracy,” he said.

    But the situation was slightly different in International Schools, Abere, Ede North Local Government. The principal, Babaremi Olusola acknowledged frankly the educational reforms had affected his business. “To be candid, this is affecting us, I have seen parents withdrawing their children to public schools because of the free education and uniform and food.”

    Olusola also had knocks for the government: “The way they are going about it, it’s like they don’t want us to exist, look at everything they are doing, and we should be partners in progress. We also employ people here and we are voters too. He also implore the government to grant private schools in the state tax reduction and give them what he called special grants to also upgrade their own facilities.

    “We want our mega high school”

    At 2: pm, members of the Christian students fellowship at St Daniel High School 3, Ode-Omu began a session of prayer session. They prayed for progress of the state and also for a new High School. Outside the old building where they met, three of their teacher sat huddled together.

    “We are not happy because our school is split into three when we should all be in the same compound. Our buildings are not to be compared with the other schools, we are waiting for the government to build us a mega high school because we really need it,” the teachers said.

    About 150 meters from the High School is an imposing new building that will house St. Michael Elementary School Ode-  Omu.  Inside the compound, workers put finishing touches to the painting. “We have 22 classrooms here; we have modern toilets, hall, playground and even a projector. But the best part is that it is dry construction, no brick was used, fire cannot affect it and if we need to move it away from here we just dismantle it and set it up somewhere else,” one of the workers said.

    Besides the new building is the old school refurbished by the state government, but compared to the imposing new building, it looked like materials made ready for the museum. The teachers of St. Daniel while praising the new building insist they deserved it more. “That should have been or school, we need it more but they gave it to the children.”

    At the sound of a signal, students of AUD rushed to the playground where several toys have been provided. They played on the see saw, the swing and other toys provided by the state government Elizabeth Ajala, the second Head Teacher stood by watching, “ We will maintain this standard, we are determined to, this is the only way we can show our appreciation,” she said with a smile.