Tag: Segun Oni

  • Ekiti PDP lawmaker joins APC

    Ekiti PDP lawmaker joins APC

    •Governor warns against rigging

    BARELY 24 hours after a former Governor of Ekiti State Chief Segun Oni dumped the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), a House of Assembly member, Mrs Bunmi Oriniowo yesterday defected to the APC.

    Mrs Oriniowo represents Ido/Osi 1 in Ido-Osi Local Government Area on the platform of PDP.

    Oni hails from the same local government

    Oni received Governor Kayode Fayemi at his Ifaki-Ekiti home on Monday where he spoke of  his readiness to partner the governor and ensure his victory in the June 21 election.

    The APC considers Ido/Osi Local Government Area key in the efforts to win the coming election as the council had always been a stronghold of the PDP.

    Mrs. Oriniowo, who announced her defection at a rally addressed by the governor in her hometown, Ifisin, said she decided to join the APC because the party represents progress, development and integrity.

    Fayemi warned against any attempt to rig the June 21 governorship poll, saying “anybody who attempts to steal the votes of Ekiti people will find himself to blame”.

    The campaign tour took the APC standard-bearer to Osi, Igbole, Ifisin, Aaye and Ifaki communities where he was received by enthusiastic crowd of supporters.

    With the defection of Mrs. Oriniowo, the ruling party now has 25 members in the Assembly. The PDP’s left with only one member in the 26-member legislature.

    She said: “In Ekiti State, new water is springing and we now have fresh fish inside the water. Our state is now witnessing development we have not seen before and we must identify with this train of development, peace, progress and development.

    “Governor Fayemi is a man of integrity, he is a performer and his wife is a wonderful woman who is doing so much for women in Ekiti. On June 21, I want you Ifisin indigenes and all our people in Ekiti to come out en masse and vote APC.

    “The same way you used to vote PDP in the past, I want you to vote APC now that I have joined the broom party. (Former Governor Segun) Oni and Fayemi are now one, so cast your votes for the broom party because that is the party for the people”.

    Mrs. Oriniowo was received into the APC by the Interim Chairman, Chief Olajide Awe, who said the party was a mass movement which is being joined by people who share the dream of development.

    At the admission were two APC woman members of the House of Assembly, Mrs. Ayo Fatunbi (Moba 1) and Mrs. Abeni Olayinka (Ado 2).

    Fayemi said when Mrs. Oriniowo was in the PDP, she shared the vision of the APC lawmakers in working for the development of the state.

    The APC candidate explained that he had earlier attested to Mrs. Oriniowo’s integrity and character during his budget interface with the people of Ifisin last November.

    The governor described Mrs. Oriniowo as a “reliable person and a woman of courage”.

    He urged the Ifisin community to cast their votes for the APC and stand by their votes on election day.

    Addressing the rally held in Osi, Fayemi said the game is up for “those on the wrong side of the divide who represent backwardness and retrogression”.

    Ace juju musician Sir Shina Peters added color to the Osi rally, thrilling the crowd with his brand of music.

    The governor declared that Ekiti people will not tolerate rigging of the June 21 poll, urging voters to be at alert.

    He explained that the roads and the town hall built in the community and beneficiaries of monthly stipends for old people and other empowerment initiatives should motivate indigenes to vote APC.

    Addressing the people of Ifaki, Fayemi said with the entry of former Governor Oni into the APC, the party is now assured of overwhelming victory.

    He promised to increase the number of beneficiaries of the monthly stipends to the old age while work has begun on Ifaki-Esure Road.

    The governor said his administration completed the Iworoko/Ifaki Road which was started by Oni, describing the roads built under his watch as solid and durable.

    Reacting to the demands of Ifaki people for the resuscitation of the AM radio station in the community, the governor promised to convert the station to an FM station to be equipped with modern equipment.

    He also said the Institute of Medical Technology of Ekiti State University located in the town would be expanded to create more jobs and boost the economic activities in the town.

    He urged Ifaki people to vote APC to benefit from an administration that cares for the masses.

    Campaigning for votes at Igbole, Fayemi declared that nobody can reverse the development that is happening in Ekiti, urging the people not to be intimidated by the opposition threat to unleash violence.

  • Working with Fayemi is building  a new future for Ekiti, says Oni

    Working with Fayemi is building a new future for Ekiti, says Oni

    Former Governor of Ekiti State, Chief Segun Oni, says his decision to join forces with the incumbent governor of the state and candidate of All Progressives Congress (APC) in the June 21 election,  Dr. Kayode Fayemi, is about erecting a new platform for the future of the state.

    The former governor, who welcomed Fayemi to his residence in Ifaki-Ekiti in company of his teeming supporters from the PDP, said the only important thing at this point in Ekiti is the future of the state and the need to build on the gains of the past three and a half years.

    He said: “We are erecting a new platform to view the future and for us, the future is the only important thing that we have to see and defer to. Yes, there are past, but I urge all of us to let the past remain in the past. All sentiments, all prejudice must remain in the past. All decisions, all hopes are going to be about the future.”

    Oni said all well-meaning stakeholders must realize that the June 21 election is greater than personal interests or ambition, but about who is in a better position to give Ekiti a future everyone can be proud.

    “We must ask ourselves who is in a better position to give Ekiti a better future, the kind of future that we want. This is why we are doing this. If you are an Ekiti person, ask yourself who is in a better position to bequeath your children a better future.

    “Tomorrow is greater than today and yesterday. Let us look at our future. I am not talking perfection. I know God is the only one who is perfect. We must not focus on personal interests. Let us think about the future of our children. Tomorrow has started today.”

    Oni said Dr. Fayemi had done well given the scarce resources available to the state, praying God to grant him victory in the governorship election.

    “The Almighty God will grant you honour beyond your projection. This venture will succeed. Your tenure will be a huge success,” the former governor prayed.

    Governor Fayemi who was accompanied by his deputy, Professor Dupe Adelabu, and his wife, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, described the defection of Oni as a lesson that leadership is about sacrifice and foresight.

    Describing Oni as a true leader, Fayemi said the former governor chose to stand on the side of the people, even though it was not materially beneficial to him.

    “What my ‘egbon’ has demonstrated today is that he is a true leader. The ruling party is still in government. He could make demands, but for him, he has demonstrated that he is a man of honour from the Land of Honour, and I know that God will always bless his ways. He has followed his conscience. He has followed his conviction. He has demonstrated that character is important to our value system. We have done everything to follow in those footsteps as Ekiti sons and daughters,” Fayemi said.

    Fayemi said the coming election may not necessarily be about performance as his performance is not in doubt, adding that the election is a decision between right and wrong, light and darkness.

    “His Excellency, Segun Oni has led the way. He has lit the candle. The rest of us who are his followers owe it a duty to start lighting the candle in all the 16 local governments in the state.”

    The governor urged APC members not to regard the hitherto PDP members who defected alongside Segun Oni as new members, but as equal members of a big family.

    “This family is not APC or the new PDP. This party is called Ekiti Progress,” said Fayemi.

    Some of those who joined Oni to receive Governor Fayemi at the former governor’s residence in Ifaki-Ekiti were a former Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Taiwo Olatunbosun, Former Commissioner Kayode Babade, former members of Ekiti House of Assembly, Lai Oke, Femi Adeleye, commissioners in the Oni administration, Abiodun Bamiteko, Mrs. Iyabo Babatunde, former Special Adviser,Policy and Strategy, Mr. Ben Oguntuase, Mrs. Motunde Dayo-Fajuyi, amongst others.

     

  • Fayemi: Ekiti ’ll vote for continuity

    Fayemi: Ekiti ’ll vote for continuity

    On June 21, the governorship election will hold in Ekiti State. Governor Kayode Fayemi and his challengers in the opposition parties will test their popularity. Since 1999, no governor has been elected twice in the ‘Fountain of Knowledge’. But, Fayemi believes that this myth will be destroyed on poll day because he has lived up to expectation and justified the confidence reposed in him by the people across the 16 local governments. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is pushing for power shift. But, Fayemi insists that Ekiti will vote for continuity, based on the achievements of his administration in the last three and half years. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU reports.

    In 2007, he did not aspire to rule Ekiti State. But, fate entrusted the heavy responsibility on his shoulders. Twenty people were competing for the governorship ticket on the platform of the defunct Action Congress (AC). The pro-democracy activist was persuaded to put his hat in the ring. Like the biblical David, the son of Jesse, John Kayode Folorunso Fayemi got the ticket, beating other aspirants, including Prince Dayo Adeyeye, Navy Capt. Caleb Olubolade, Otunba Ayo Arise and Dare Babarinsa, at the primaries. He also won the election, although the crown was initially delivered to the loser, Mr. Segun Oni of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    After the mandate was retrieved from the interloper, the “accidental governor” began the rescue mission in the far flung state. All the sectors were in their knees. Under his leadership, governance has not been a tea party. The successes recorded in education, health, agriculture, job creation, social security and women empowerment attest to Fayemi’s vision and sense of mission. The impact of the administration is felt in the 130 towns and villages. In October, he will complete his first term.

    In the last six months, there has been a gale of endorsement. Party members, the aged, who are beneficiaries of the novel security scheme, women groups, youths and traditional rulers have requested the governor to seek for a second term. Although the governor acknowledged these gestures, he delayed his response to avoid distraction from his official responsibilities. But, Fayemi has now picked up the gauntlet. The war scholar and pro-democracy crusader is now on the firing line.” I am running on the strength of my own conviction that I want to be governor in Ekiti State”, he told reporters in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital.

    Seven years ago, Fayemi’s campaign train rolled into the rustic Ekiti towns. He met a state in distress. Then, associates expressed concern over his safety. “The question among many of my friends in the academia and the civil society was: ‘do you have a death wish?’ ‘Why would I want to go and do this in a place as dangerous as Ekiti?’ That was the general feeling,” he recalled.

    Why is the governor now seeking a second term? His answer: “I have an unfinished task. The task is not complete. We have restored Ekiti back to its pride of place. But, restoration does not necessarily equate to transformation. Restoration brings Ekiti to a point of stability. I do not delude myself that we have achieved all that we set out to achieve”.Ekiti indigenes believe that Fayemi has made a difference. The state is reclaiming its glory as a land of honour and integrity. Unlike in the past, the hilly state is now peaceful and congenial to investment. Gone were the days of fear. The culture of political tolerance has also been restored. Basking in the euphoria of these achievements, the governor said that many Ekiti people are no more ashamed that they are from the state. “The fact that my word is my bond has enabled me to say that I promised this on October 16, 2010 when I delivered my inaugural address, and this is where we are now on that agenda. We have gone way beyond the 70 per cent mark, but it is still unfinished business because poverty has not been totally eradicated”, the governor added.

    Since Fayemi unfolded his legitimate ambition for a second term, there has been a revival of political activities. He has no opposition to his aspiration in the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). Outside the fold, it is a different ball game. For the governor, the asporation is more of a duty than an ambition. Some people have described second term in Ekiti as a myth. The same fear had been expressed in Kano and Ondo states before until Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau and Dr. Olusegun Mimiko changed the tide. Seven people have been on the driver’s seat in the state. Apart from the first governor, Adeniyi Adebayo, no other governor had the privilege of completing his first term. Even, Adebayo failed in his second term bid.

    Will the myth be destroyed on June 21, when voters exercise their franchise? Fayemi said that Ekiti will choose wisely. The governor also said that the people will prefer continuity. “This a state where the prominent parties have both had a go at it. The PDP had been in charge of this state for seven and half years. Place the two governments of the PDP and ours side by side and do a dispassionate analysis of what we both contributed to governance. Every asset that is standing on ground in this state, happened under the progressive wing. Whether you are talking of Ekiti House in Abuja, Ikogosi Water Springs that many people are visiting now, or the revived bricks factory among others, you will realise they all happened under the watch of the progressives.

    “That is in terms of physical infrastructure. If you talk in terms of human development, which involves social security, youth volunteer scheme, peace corps, we have also done much. In agriculture, the story is clear. If you talk of health care in terms of the state of hospitals, access to healthcare, health insurance, it is only under us that these things occurred.

    “If you talk of education, the statistics are very clear. You only need to go to the merged Ekiti State University and see a focused government that has an agenda for educational reform. If you don’t want to go as far as the university, check out what is happening at the secondary school level. The statistics are also clear. The evidence before us suggests that, if you don’t want to arrest development, then, continuity is very critical to growth, especially in an environment where every time government has been sidetracked or affected by the term of office, you also almost automatically have abandonment of key initiatives”.

    The high turnover of civilian administrators has taken its tolls on the poor state. Successive administrations have often abandoned the projects they inherited from previous governments. However, Fayemi has maintained a clean break from the past. “This is the only government in Ekiti State that did not abandon projects of previous governments. The projects that Governor Adebayo did that were abandoned, the residences of our House of Assembly members that Fayose never touched, are there. The Governor’s Office is a hotel built by Governor Adebayo and somebody came and said this is more befitting for me as an office, but we would have been making more money if it had remained in its original state that Governor Adebayo put it.

    “I came and said I was not going to abandon any project. People thought I was stupid. ‘How could you be doing the road to your enemy’s hometown?’ they asked. But, I said Governor Oni is not my enemy. I only challenged him because I was convinced that I won an election. The money that was being used to construct the road to Ifaki was not Governor Oni’s personal money.

    “It is Ekiti money, it is our commonwealth. So, why would I abandon it simply because it goes to Oni’s village? When I came, the road to Governor Fayose’s home town was the worst road in the state. I was the one who did it. Virtually all the roads leading to the supposed enemies’ home towns, I did them because I felt it was right the thing to do”.

    Fayemi allayed the fear that any project embarked upon by his government will be stalled. He said the urban renewal project in Ado Ekiti will be completed. Many indigenes have compalined about the slow pace of work at the site. “Work has not stopped. If you go to Ikole or Ikere, you will see that those local roads are being constructed. In Ado, we have had a peculiar challenge with the contractor handling the beautification and the contract has been revoked. And there is a process to that. We cannot get a new person to do it until we legally remove those who were in charge of the original contract, that is the reason for that. I know that the new contractors are about to start work on the beautification of Ado Ekiti,” he stressed.

    The governor also promised to intensify work on the community development projects across the state. “We have spent so far about N614 million on the various projects. The way we went about it was that we had a philosophy that the people are the best monitors and implementers of projects that are dear to their hearts”, he said.

    The projects underscore the essence of participatory democracy at the grassroots. Fayemi explained that they were dictated by community preference. After the various communities conducted their need assessment, the presidents and secretaries of the town unions will list the projects, their plains and costs. “We will then send people from our Ministry of Rural Development to assess and evaluate projects and we then give them money in phases. 50 per cent to start, then, 30 per cent and 20 per cent subsequently”, Fayemi said.

    The governor is happy that, in virtually all the communities where these projects were sited, 80 per cent completion has been achieved. In many towns, they have been completed on time and at minimal cost. Fayemi acknowledged that these communities have done much better than the government that awards contracts to people outside. “From the assessment I have done, it simply shows that people take ownership of what they implement and it is difficult to steal community money. If it is government, nobody is government. Government money is money for everybody and whoever can grab. I have an unfinished task at the Government House.

    That is the notion that has been engraved in people’s mind. But, for communities, you need to see the kind of accounting records that they keep. It is one of the most successful project initiatives we have come up with”, he added.

    In spite of these strides, there are challenges, constraints and impediments to effective performance. For example, the governor has been challenged for introducing the competitive test for teachers. Although it was designed to boost their efficiency, it was misinterpreted by the opposition, which alleged that its results would be used to either retain or sack them because he hates teachers. Fayemi denied the allegation, saying: “Anyone who asks you to improve cannot hate you. If somebody is interested in you becoming better and much more qualitative in what you do, then the person loves you. I think I must admit that there are times when good initiatives may be communicated in a way that it does not achieve the objective that you set out to achieve. I don’t think there is any teacher in this state that believes that I hate teachers”.

    “First, I am a product of a teacher and secondly, I am a teacher by training. Thirdly, free education is an obsession for me and at every opportunity. I also want to improve myself and I want people around me to also be improved. Fourthly, I am a product of public school education in this state, not in Lagos or Abuja. You can walk to my school in ten minutes from the Governor’s Office. So, I grew up here and I knew what solid public education was when I was growing up, and I really wanted to rekindle that when I became governor here. I can tell you that teachers in Ekiti have never had it so good,” he explained.

    Fayemi said that, if he hated teachers, his government would not have introduced the “core subject allowance” as an incentive for good teaching. “If you teach English, Mathematics or you teach basic science in Ekiti, on top of your normal salary, you get 20 per cent as an incentive. This is an addition to the general teachers’ peculiar allowance. In fact, other workers of government are complaining that teachers in Ekiti are too well treated to their own detriment. For the first time in the history of this state, primary school teachers are getting car loans. We gave car loans to secondary schools and civil servants in. the state. But the previous government did not even give loans to anybody, whether you are primary or secondary teachers. This is the government that has pioneered all these things” he said.

    Fayemi listed his achievements in education. These include the renovation and construction of 183 secondary schools and 856 primary schools, some of which had not been touched since the time of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo. Now that the schools are funded adequately, pupils are leaving private schools for public schools in Ekiti. “We received the good news from Abuja of having the best primary school in the country. The Stock Exchange did a competition just late last year and our College of Education Demonstration School in Ikere-Ekiti came first. The state university made the best result in the Law School this year. For the first time in 34years, Ekiti State University has all its courses accredited by National Universities Commission (NUC),” he added.

    The governor said that his higher education reforms have also yielded good dividends. He pointed out that the Ekiti State University, which was in the doldrums when he became the became the governor has been repositioned, following the merger of three glorified secondary schools masquerading as universities.

    Apart from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Fayemi is also battling opposition from an unusual quarter. In June, his compatriot, Hon. Opeyemi Bamidele of the House of Representatives, may be contesting against him on the platform of the Labour Party (LP). The crack on the wall was not envisaged. Many members of the political family believe that reconciliation is still possible between the two disciples of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    The governor has not made any adverse comments about the Iyin-Ekiti-born politician and former Lagos State Commissioner for Information and Strategy. He also denied the allegation that the federal legislator was edged out of the party. “Opeyemi is my friend. He will remain my friend for as long as I live. I consider him more than a friend. I consider him a brother and that is why he could do all of what he is doing without my batting an eyelid. But, I also said to you, in times past, that there is nothing wrong in having an ambition; it is legitimate. The only objection I had was the notion that he was hounded out of the party because there was no space for him to contest. I will give you specific examples and evidence that Opeyemi never approached the party that he wanted to run for any office, not at the ward level, not at the local government level and not at the state level. So, nobody could have denied him the right to run”, he clarified.

    Fayemi noted Opeyemo’s objection to the decision of some political leaders in the APC to endorse him for a second term. He said that nobody can legislate against endorsement because endorsement is neither an election or primaries. “Chief Obafemi Awolowo endorsed a gentleman named J.S Olawoyin as the candidate for the UPN in Kwara State. That primary held thrice. A university lecturer named C.O Adebayo defeated the giant of Kwara politics. Chief Awolowo had no choice than to accept the result, even though his own colleague and friend, whom he wanted, was the victim of that race. Nobody said Opeyemi could not run. Opeyemi, in his own estimation, looked at the terrain and felt that, if this man has been endorsed by some leaders of the party, if I run against him, it may be a futile effort. Why don’t I go to another party? And he is right in doing that. I don’t think that should make enemies of us,” he added.

    As the poll day draws near, fears are being expressed about the competence of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The umpire had bungled the Anambra State governorship poll. The candidates are now in court. Although the INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, has assured that there will be a transparent election in Ekiti, his assurance has not doused the fear. “The taste of the pudding is in the eating. The INEC is always good at demonstrating preparedness, but there is always a difference between demonstrating preparedness and implementing preparedness”, Fayemi said.

    In the governor’s view, Jega may be genuinely committed to a clean and credible process, judging by his antecedent. But, he quickly added that “when you do things the same way and you expect different results, it does not come across to me as genuine preparedness. I will like to be proved wrong that I have not seen that qualitative, objective, independent readiness. Maybe, I don’t know enough of what is in place.”

    Fayemi, who has been a victim of rigging in the past, said that Ekiti will insist on one man one vote, adding that the vote must also count. “I sit in my vantage position. I monitor what is going on and I also talk to those who are somewhat involved in the process and I do not get a sense that we have learnt lessons. But then, my reactions maybe extreme because I have been a victim as you know and I am not prepared to give the INEC a benefit of the doubt. My own mantra is to be over prepared for them”.

     

  • Don’t choose inexperienced candidate, Fayose warns PDP

    Don’t choose inexperienced candidate, Fayose warns PDP

    Former Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose has warned the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) against selecting an inexperienced candidate for the 21 June governorship election.

    Fayose spoke yesterday at his campaign office in Ado-Ekiti during a meeting with PDP chairmen from the 177 wards.

    Urging members to present him as the party’s flagbearer, he said: “PDP needs someone with experience like me to defeat Governor Kayode Fayemi.”

    Fayose hailed the restructuring initiated by the PDP National Chairman, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, saying it would improve the party.

    He said: “I am the first PDP governor in this state and there is no aspirant with better credentials than mine. I am seeking your cooperation to confront the All Progressives Congress (APC) like the Biblical King David, who unseated King Saul.

    “The PDP administrations, I mean mine and that of Mr. Segun Oni, never borrowed, but the APC administration has plunged the state into debt.”

    Fayose said he would not desert the party, if he is not picked as its standard bearer and urged members to work for the PDP’s success in the election.

    The ward chairmen pledged their support for Fayose.

  • Gospel according to Segun Oni

    SIR: The PDP’s preparations for victory celebration had been very elaborate prior to the Supreme Court judgment in the case of former governor Segun Oni against the Governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi. Part of the elaborate preparation must have been the thanksgiving service that was arranged to hold at the Methodist Church, Tabernacle of Praise, Ifaki, on the judgment day, which had to hold, all the same, to offer a humbled Oni an opportunity to preach a gospel of the acts of God, except that he cited no verses of the Bible.

    He said he accepted the judgment as an act of God even though it was such a despicable loss on his part as the Supreme Court out-rightly struck his case out and described it as “frivolous and an abuse of court process “

    He proceeded to educate those who might not be close or familiar enough with the almighty God that He sometimes imposes His wish regardless of the direction of our prayers.

    “At times when God wants to favour you, He will refuse to hear your prayers,” he said, amidst a farcical self-justification speech which he must have needed urgently to overcome his shock.

    He had virtually denied that he went to the Supreme Court to win his case, insisting that his main purpose was to make a point against unscrupulous judges and restore sanity to the judiciary.

    He claimed he did not file the case out of desperation even as his boasts and flaming confidence since he filed the case had made his motive appear much worse than being desperate.

    There was this fear which he created that he and his party, the PDP, would not mind endangering the rule of law and cause a set-back to the nation’s democratic project.

    Filing the case at the Supreme Court at all was, in itself, a disregard to the Constitution of Nigeria or an attempt at re-writing the constitution by sheer misuse of political power.

    Because Justice Isa Ayo Salami, the suspended President of the Court of Appeal, was Oni’s main target of action, President Goodluck Jonathan had stayed action on his re-instatement despite having been investigated and exonerated, as if the president needed the out-come of Oni’s suit which had appeared to have been filed with a nod from the President ab initio .

    With the Supreme Court judgment, the president or the PDP is now exonerated from a charge of interference in the case but, far beyond this, the wrong of the non-reinstatement of Justice Isa Ayo Salami should now be righted.

    In the same vein, Oni and his Ekiti PDP should not just be humble temporarily but permanently, so that the current peace in Ekiti State can be sustained, so that desperation, in its other various violent dimensions in the past, can also cease.

    • Jide Oguntoye

    Oye Ekiti

  • Get ready for probe, victorious Fayemi tells Oni

    Get ready for probe, victorious Fayemi tells Oni

    Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State made a triumphant return to Ado-Ekiti yesterday, 24 hours after the Supreme Court dismissed an attempt to truncate his rule.

    Fayemi, who came in from Abuja, where the ruling against Segun Oni was delivered on Friday, vowed to probe Oni’s tenure.

    He alleged ‘large-scale fraud’ by the Oni government “before the PDP was sent packing.”

    To be probed are contracts awarded by Oni during his three and a half years in office and other financial transactions.

    “Any house built with spittle shall crumble,” he told the mammoth crowd that went to welcome and rejoice with him.

    He added: “We are standing on the rock of truth and that is why we are not afraid when these jesters took their case to the Supreme Court.”

    His return was carnival-like.

    He rode in an open-roof of Mercedes Benz bus, waving to the people with a broom, the symbol of his party, ACN.

    His convoy stretched over almost one kilometre, causing a massive traffic jam in many parts of the state capital.

    In the crowd were party chieftains, students, artisans and market women who had gathered at the party’s secretariat at Ajilosun for several hours until the Governor’s arrival at 5.20pm.

    Governor Fayemi noted that the latest victory though long awaited, “is a collectively shared one among the entire residents of the state,” adding that the focus of his administration shall be to sustain the continuing development of the state through his administration’s eight point agenda.

    According to the governor, the judgment of the Supreme Court was “an affirmation of the supremacy of truth and facts over the twisted logic of a few who seek to pervert the course of justice for their narrow gains.”

    He thanked the people for their show of love and prayers.

    “Your presence here is a proof that you appreciate the progress that this administration has made so far. We also see your support as an encouragement to do more and we shall do more. We are for the development of Ekiti and all of you have seen with what we have used your resources for because we don’t believe in sharing the money belonging to our people.

    “With the conclusion of this case, they should be ready to account for how they stole our money, the contracts they used to siphon our money and all the micro-credit money they stole.

    “In law they had no case and we knew they would come back to Ekiti from the court with their tails within their legs. They even said Fayemi had run away from Ekiti but here I am.

    “On the day judgment was delivered, Oni had stayed in his house in Ifaki expecting to move to Government House. What a wishful thinking?

    “We thank God for validating our election and this will reinvigorate us to work harder because we have more work to do and I want to assure our people that the best is yet to come.”

  • Supreme Court verdict: Fayemi lauds judiciary

    Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi  has lauded the  judiciary for  its resolve to always uphold the tenet of truth and justice following the Supreme Court’s   dismissal of  the petition against him by ousted governor of Ekiti State, Mr Segun Oni

    Oni  had sought a review of the Court of Appeal ruling on Ekiti State governorship on October 15, 2010, but the Supreme Court in a unanimous judgment ruled that it had no jurisdiction on the matter.

    Fayemi  also thanked all Ekiti people  for their  support  for his administration and for believing  in the sanctity of truth.

    He said Friday’s victory has again confirmed that truth will always prevail no matter the situation and that Ekiti State will no longer  be governed through fraudulent means.

    Governor Fayemi who addressed journalists at the Ekiti State Governor’s Lodge in Abuja shortly after the  judgement of the Supreme Court, said there was no basis for the petition by Oni, adding that his claims were frivolous, baseless and a waste of time.

    Oni, Fayemi said had sought to use the frivolous case , which had spanned over two years, to distract him from actualising the developmental efforts going on in Ekiti State, and to give a false hope to his followers.

    He however said that in spite of the long drawn legal battle, he had refused to be distracted, stressing that this is evident in the  transformation going on in the state and the value that the administration has added to the lives of the average citizens.

    Fayemi said it was high time electoral offenders were punished under the law to serve as a deterrent to others and to clean up the electoral process.

     “Oni and his jesters merely sought to use this case to distract us, but we refused to be distracted. We have remained focused all through concentrating on the development of the state and this is evident in the lives of the people.

    “I think we should also put in place laws that will punish electoral offenders. I believe if Oni had been punished for rigging the 2007 governorship election in Ekiti State, he would not have had the effrontery to approach the court again seeking a backdoor to the governorship seat. It is sad that he rigged the 2007 election and was at the helms of affair of the state illegally for three and a  half years, while I, the winner of the election was in court until the case was eventually decided in my favour in 2010 at the Court of Appeal.

    “If the court having found Oni guilty of  fraudulently occupying the governorship seat of Ekiti State and  had gone ahead to punish him then, we would have been spared  this unnecessary case, which to me only shows how desperate some people can be, ” Fayemi stated

  • Ekiti: Supreme Court dismisses Oni’s suit

    The Supreme Court has struck out an appeal by former Ekiti State governor, Segun Oni against the election of Governor Kayode Fayemi.

    In a unanimous decision by a 7-man panel delivered in Abuja on Friday, the court said it lacks jurisdiction.

    Justice Sylvester Ngwuta read the lead judgement to which others agreed.