Tag: Southwest APC

  • Ajimobi, Olubadan, Buhari and Southwest APC

    Ajimobi, Olubadan, Buhari and Southwest APC

    In his meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari last Tuesday, Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State served what looked like a specially brewed Ibadan chieftaincy storm in a tea cup before the inscrutable Nigerian president. Speaking to reporters after the meeting, the governor said he mentioned the chieftaincy crisis to the president and hinted at the concomitant security implications of the tug of war going on in the city. He was, however, silent on what responses he got from his passive host. He did not also tell reporters that the president asked about the matter first nor fretted over any security lapses. It was clear to reporters that intimating the president of what was afoot in Ibadan was the governor’s initiative.

    Hear him: “I mentioned the issue of security to the President. Recall that Oyo State has been in the news because of the issue of Olubadan Chieftaincy Declaration. So, I came to let him know that the Olubadan is my father. He is a younger brother to my own father and we have had a very long relationship, which has been a father-son relationship. I assured him (Buhari) that come rain, come shine, I will never depose the Olubadan because he is my father; a son does not depose his father. Though he has done so many things that can constitute the basis for his removal, I will never remove him. We have to continue to show respect. I also made him to realise that that particular chieftaincy declaration is being politicised. Politicians have hijacked it. Out of 11 council members, two of them are dead now and we have only nine left. It is only one that is not supporting it; and that one is a politician. He wants to run after I leave office.”

    Gov Ajimobi did not tell reporters why he needed to bother the president with the chieftaincy trivia he created, nor seemed to even appreciate the illogic in the justifications he gave reporters. It is even clearer that his sense of history may be a little troubling while his appreciation of the role of the Southwest in national affairs at a time of great and turbulent political events may also be off-key. If his account of the interaction he had with the president is accurate, then it is safe to conclude that the president did not ask him about the Ibadan chieftaincy matter, and, more tellingly, did not comment on it after the unsolicited briefing. If that does not tell the governor something, then he is even more imperceptive than the Nigerian judges, among them two Supreme Court justices, who published drivelling exculpatory accounts unworthy of a magistrate after their residences were raided last October by the secret service.

    Many months ago, this column had fussed that most Southwest governors were third-rate, not only in their demonstrable lack of assiduity in projects conception and implementation, but also more disconcertingly in their lack of understanding of the forces and dynamics shaping and skewing the so-called Nigerian federation. Gov Ajimobi, from his actions and reactions to the Ibadan chieftaincy issue and his depiction of same to the president, is obviously one of the gubernatorial archetypes in reference in the Southwest. The governors are less inclined to the philosophical underpinnings that shaped the governments of their predecessors, and, as their abysmal reactions to the Kogi electoral conundrum of November 2015 shows, are even less strategic in their thinking than their contemporaries, particularly from some states in the North.

    Gov Ajimobi may be close to the Olubadan throne, he has, however, not shown any understanding of the city’s proud history and heritage. First, the chieftaincy crisis was avoidable. But in addition, had he a sense of the historical significance of the role the city played in Yoruba history, despite its modern weaknesses and troubles, and notwithstanding the consequences of the Yoruba wars of the 19th century, he would have done everything to strengthen the institution rather than threaten it, not to talk of needlessly dragging the reputation of its monarch before the president in a futile show of self-importance. Has the governor asked himself how many other governors have toed his line and then proceeded to Abuja to report the monarchs of their great cities?

    But Gov Ajimobi’s lack of historical consciousness and strategic thinking is replicated in nearly all parts of the Southwest where most of the governors swoon over the president. The region is in decline, and despite the best efforts of regionalists and the Development Agenda for Western Nigeria (DAWN), its competitive edge has become considerably blunted. Worse, the region is now also deeply divided. It is not a hidden fact that crisis is brewing below the surface in the ongoing and bitter struggle for the soul of the region. There are at least three contending groups battling for supremacy. Rather than synergise efforts or reinforce one another, they appear set to fight to the death to entrench their positions and enthrone their worldview. The battles will be sporadic for some time, as one phony skirmish dovetails into another, until next year when there will probably be a conflagration.

    The contest for supremacy in the Southwest will be nasty. In June the little-known Yoruba Leadership and Peace Initiative group met in Ibadan to forge a common perspective and agenda for the region. Their communiqué made sense, but there was nothing extraordinary in it. It met naturaly with cold stare. In September, the Yoruba Summit group held a much bigger and well-attended rally in the same city. Its communiqué made waves and steered the region in the direction of regionalism and restructuring. Though controversial, the summit has seemed to noteworthily capture the imaginations of the region. Then last week, signposting the divisions inherent in the region, the All Progressives Congress (APC) leaders met in Ibadan to disavow restructuring and promote devolution of power.

    Analysts contend that the Yoruba thrive despite their divisions and even in political opposition. They may be right. But no one has yet proved that this great dispositional flaw has not at bottom clearly undermined regional progress and retarded their sophistication more than they imagine. Moreover, the decisions of the APC leaders’ meeting indicate that there are two tendencies within the group that met in Ibadan on Thursday, with one section evidently and remorselessly pro-Buhari and oriented towards Abuja on the plausible ground that the party is after all in government; and the other a bit hesitant, quizzical and feeling trapped between a rock and a hard place. The APC leaders are, however, finding it increasingly difficult to justify their exuberant support for President Buhari because of his appalling prejudices, insularity, anti-democratic tendencies, evident lack of restraint, and fair-mindedness.

    In the battle against the less openly partisan Yoruba Summit, the Southwest APC leaders may be fighting the most difficult battle of their lives. They may occupy the most visible political positions in the region, but they have not proved circumspect in reading the signs of the times, placing President Buhari’s divisive and militaristic policies accurately in the right context, and aggregating the deep existential yearnings of the region. The Yoruba Summit might contain many discredited leaders, some of them lapdogs of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and zanies of the Goodluck Jonathan era, but they are increasingly wrong-footing the Southwest APC leaders, some of whom lack the wisdom and foresight to offer strategic leadership within the context of a highly polarised nation. It is indeed alarming that Gov Ajimobi could say this after Thursday’s meeting: “Besides, we should realise that we owe a lot to the President and Commander-in-Chief, Muhammadu Buhari, whose major preoccupation, since assumption of power, has been how to meet the basic needs of the ordinary citizen and make life comfortable for him.” Surely, there must be a limit to the self-abnegating politics of Southwest governors.

    There is trouble ahead for the Southwest, just as Igbo leaders’ incompetence in channelling the demands and aspirations of the restive, maligned, and angry Southeast showed a few weeks ago. It is tragic that even when they acquire the right cause, sections of the Yoruba leadership still demonstrate the requisite lack of character, courage, dispassion and judgement needed to make their people thrive in Nigeria. And when they embrace the wrong cause, it is depressing how they bad-temperedly prosecute their battles. Manifesting the characteristics of the curse of liberalism in a country where the North is still partly theocratic and feudalistic and thereby largely cohesive, and where the Southeast is culturally monolithic, aggressive, republican and sometimes schizoid, the regicides of the Southwest may finally be prepared to undo themselves, just as their values and virtues are being denuded by external influences. Their worldview does not admit of the excesses and narrow-mindedness being displayed by the president. That a significant section of their elite still finds it comfortable to embrace and support him is more a function of their foolish and indefensible internal schisms than their cracked ideological compass.

    If they are wise, the Southwest APC leaders will not insist on maintaining cohesion within their depleted and jaded ranks just because the ‘other people’, as ex-governor Bisi Akande inelegantly put it last Thursday, had taken a countervailing position on restructuring. The APC men have a responsibility to actively rediscover the character and principles that formed the leitmotif of the politics of the Yoruba during their historical ascendancy. It was not foolish to support President Buhari against Dr Jonathan in 2015, given what is now known of the economic damage superintended by the latter; but it is monstrous to rhapsodise the president’s politics despite the incontestable fact that everything he stands for and every underhand politics he plays with monarchical airs war against not only the character and worldview of the Southwest but also against the very essence, both spiritual and physical, of the Yoruba.

    If the great minds of the North are not shocked and embarrassed by the sectional politics and distorted appointments of the Buhari presidency, it must not be the duty of Yoruba leaders across quarrelsome divides to defend his divisiveness and lack of ideological conviction, not to talk of propping him up in the hope that on some fortuitous tomorrow a president whose taciturnity extends to difficulty in verbalising appreciation and whose ethnic impressions are balanced on the fulcrum of exceptionalism can somehow commit the self-immolation needed to return the favour to the Southwest after he has had his political fill. If the Southwest must grovel in a manner their history has not accustomed them to, let them at least do it before someone who exudes inspiring political and philosophical achievements.

  • Former Reps Whip Wale Oshun faults Southwest APC on power devolution

    Former Reps Whip Wale Oshun faults Southwest APC on power devolution

    A former House of Representatives Chief Whip, Olawale Oshun, yesterday picked holes in the recent decision of  selected leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) to back devolution of power to the states as  against wholesome restructuring of the system.

    Oshun, in a statement in Lagos, said the position taken at the Ibadan meeting which was chaired by Chief Adebisi Akande was at variance with the stand of APC followers at two meetings last month, the first at University of Ibadan and the other four days later in Akure.

    He said “the clarion call emanating from the two conferences of the Party in the zone was for a wholesome restructuring of the system and structure of our politics and governance.”

    He added: “that decision certainly transcends the call for mere devolution as it raises the fundamental need for a change in structure of government in order to make even the issue of devolution a sustainable process.”

    He said the Ibadan decision has now put the Yoruba at a crossroad.

    “How the leaders of our Party in our zone whose followers spoke in definitive language can back away from such a decision is totally unacceptable and even in the realm of spirit, not to talk of physical realm, the tail can never wag the dog. And they are the ones we expect would negotiate on our behalf!” he said.

    “It is necessary to clarify that a federation which Nigeria purports to be should comprise of a central government and federating units that are in parity and are mutually agreed as to which powers each should exercise.

    “It is therefore in a federation that you speak of restructuring which is that there is a demand for change in the way things are done.

    “When you speak strictly as was the Ibadan outcome you are asking the almighty central government in a unitary system to allow other levels of government exercise some powers and at its pleasure. The crisis in Nigeria today can only be resolved when all Nigerians have a say in which powers to allow one another.

    “For the avoidance of doubt restructuring entails much more than devolution and it includes the Constitutional reform that will enable the sustainability of the power sharing agreed to.

    “ For instance the Yoruba people at all conferences held to date, including those that led to the production of Yoruba Agenda, the Summit and the All Progressives Congress conferences on restructuring (respectively held in Ibadan and Akure,) agreed that there is need to return to regions as federating units, and that each federating unit would have its own Constitution that would guide how all its internal governance is enabled, particularly other levels of government lower than the federating unit level.

    “Nigerians would agree on what percentage of resources generated by federating units are paid as tax to the federal government and the Yoruba people have indicated that for a virile Central government, taxes paid to the Central government by the federating units should be not more than thirty five percent of all accruals.

    “Only Constitutional reform or restructuring can facilitate this, mere devolution of power cannot. And who is devolving the power by the way.

    “It should be a great tragedy if elected and appointed Yoruba office holders cannot and will not stand up for and in Yoruba interest, the same interest they espoused to catapult themselves into office. What then defined the NADECO struggle which claimed lives and liberty, if not the need for the restructuring of Nigeria?”

     

  • Southwest APC demands more powers for states

    Southwest APC demands more powers for states

    Leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Southwest yesterday dissociated themselves from the agitation for restructuring. They voted for devolution of power.

    The decision was taken at a meeting at the Oyo State Governor’s Office in Ibadan.

    Governors Akinwunmi Ambode(Lagos), Rauf Aregbesola (Osun), Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun), Rotimi Akeredolu (Ondo) and host Abiola Ajimobi attended the meeting.

    Also there were Southwest leaders in the National Assembly – House of Representatives Deputy Speaker Lasun Yussuff, Leader Femi Gbajabiamila and Senate Whip Sola Adeyeye.

    Ministers Adebayo Shittu (Communication); Kayode Fayemi (Mines and Steel Development); National Vice Chairman (Southwest) Chief Pius Akinyelure; former governors Aremo Segun Osoba, Otunba Adebayo Alao-Akala, Otunba Niyi Adebayo and Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola as well as former APC Interim National Chairman Chief Bisi Akande were there.

    Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Minister of Finance Mrs Kemi Adeosun and Works, Power and Housing Minister Babatunde Fashola were absent. They sent apologies.

    Akande told reporters after the meeting that the Southwest APC never agitated for restructuring but devolution of power.

    He urged reporters to direct questions on restructuring to its advocates who he described as the “other people”.

    Responding to a reporter’s request for proper definition of the concept of restructuring, Akande said: “Restructuring is not our language. Go and ask those who are advocating restructuring to define it. What we stand for is devolution of functions from the centre to the states and the local governments. Restructuring is the language of the other people. Go and ask them what they mean by restructuring. That is not in the APC manifesto or constitution.”

    Akande, a former Osun State governor, said yesterday’s meeting was a follow-up to the one held in January. He said the meeting reviewed activities of the governors and other elected officials in Southwest since then. The meeting expressed satisfaction with their performance. “We are on course,” Akande said.

    Expatiating on their position on power devolution, Akande said: :”The decision of this meeting is to advise the country to allow states that have land to do agriculture; to allow every state that rear children to do education; to allow states that are nearer to the people to do one of the jobs. It is one of the things we considered in this meeting and it is part of the advice we are going to give the Federal Government.”

    He added: “Today’s meeting is a follow-up to our meeting in January and to see if the efforts of our leaders are fruitful. And we are happy that we have had a successful meeting. We are on course as we decided last January. We are happy that our governors and ministers are performing satisfactorily. ”

    On Ekiti and Osun elections next year, Akande said the meeting reviewed the APC’s position and decided to work hard to ensure victory.

    “We tried to review our positions and we are poised to see as a party what we will be able to do to have Ekiti back to APC.”

    When asked if the Southwest APC would support President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019, Akande said:

    “Buhari has not told us he will contest in 2019. Anybody in the party is free to become the president of Nigeria. As soon as they indicate interest, we will set a process through which a candidate will be selected. If he is lucky to win the ticket, then the party will present him as our candidate.”

    Ajimobi, said states and leaders in the Southwest were determined to work together  to restore the glory of the region and return its vibrancy.

    “Our meeting today presents a veritable ground for us to reconnect with our political root and keep re-engaging ourselves as people whom nature has entrusted with the political leadership of the region at this material time.  Similarly,it is a reconnect to the ideals that are germane to the progress of our people and, by extension, to the growth and development of Nigeria.

    “If the truth must be told, we in the Southwest today need to rediscover ourselves and the common bond that ties us together as a people, and let it work for the development of our people in the region. We must be ready and prepared to sacrifice our self interest and ambitions for the common goals and speak with one voice at all times as we confront the developmental challenges facing the Southwest region and our people. It will definitely not be in our overall best interest to work at cross purposes.

    “Today, we must reaffirm that the greatness of our region in the past was not just because of our education or infrastructure alone, but primarily because we were known as selfless, forthright, accommodating and, above all, equitable and fair people. If, in the past years, politics had been allowed to take that away from us, we must commit ourselves to bringing back those values and resolve that never again are we going to allow mundane things to rob us of the progressive character and vibrancy for which we were renowned. It should never be about ‘me’ but always about ‘us’ a people.

    “Besides, we should realise that we owe a lot to the President and Commander-in-Chief, Muhammadu Buhari, whose major preoccupation, since assumption of power has been how to meet the basic needs of the ordinary citizen and make life comfortable for him.”

  • Southwest APC regret loss

    Southwest APC regret loss

    THE All Progressives Congress (APC), Southwest Zone has expressed shock at the demise of Senator Isiaka Adeleke.
    In a statement yesterday by Mr. Ayo Afolabi, the party said it received with shock and sorrow “the announcement of the death of one of our hard-working first executive governor of Osun State and ranking senator in the Upper Legislative Chamber, Senator Isiaka Adeleke representing Osun West”.
    The statement said: “Since he joined the party in 2014 before the state gubernatorial election, Senator Adeleke, who is the son of a progressive Senator Chief Raji Adeleke, worked tirelessly not only to deliver his constituency but ensured that his supporters voted for the APC candidates in both the governorship election of 2014 and the general election of 2015 when he returned to the Senate for the second time.
    “Senator Isiaka Adeleke’s sudden demise is a huge loss for the APC in Ede North and South local governments, the Osun West Senatorial Constituency, Osun State and Nigeria in general.”
    It added: “Adeleke was a passionate single-minded individual, who believed in politics for the development and emancipation of his people, particularly in Ede, a constituency he had never lost election since his foray into politics on his arrival from overseas studies when he contested and won election to become the first civilian Executive Governor of Osun State in 1992.”

  • ‘Southwest APC ‘ll  immortalise Adebayo

    ‘Southwest APC ‘ll immortalise Adebayo

    The Southwest All Progressives Congress ( APC) has described the former Military governor of Western States Major General Adeyinka Adebayo as a bridge builder who united the country during national crises. Speaking on behalf of the APC delegation led by Chief Pius Akinyelure, said the Yoruba and Nigeria as a whole had lost a great leader, whose shinning examples had become a model for peace building.
    He said the late General, was always willing to sacrifice personal comfort, adding that his effort towards the unity of Nigeria would remain in the annal of history. “Papa demonstrated that he was a true leader given what he showcased during his life time. He equally proved that he was a leader, when he was the administrator of the western states. He led a clean and understanding government.
    “General Adeyinka showed love especially for the entire Yoruba race and demonstrate that he was one of the leaders the Yoruba race could rely on when it came to saying the truth. The South APC is willing and ready to participate in the ongoing process to give the General a befitting burial. It is our hope that all the well wishers of the former governor will join hands to ensure that we celebrate him in death.
    “We have indicated our readiness to support the family and participate in the burial plans for the General. He deserved the best even in death. The family should let us know what they want from us, we are willing to obliged them,” Akinyelure said, adding that Adebayo’s death amounted to big loss for the Southwest and the country as a whole.
    ” We will miss his counseling, loving, fatherly advice, his death is a great loss to the Southwest, we would have wished he continues to live, so that we continue to gain from his wealth of wisdom. He was not a politician, he was father of all. He love for Nigeria cannot be quantified. We will continue to do what is necessary to immortalise him. The Southwest APC will give all the support to keep his legacy.”

  • Southwest APC insists on  true federalism

    Southwest APC insists on true federalism

    The Southwest Zone of the All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday called for the restructuring of the country. It said governance should be based on true federalism.

    The party leaders made the call at their conference held in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    They also called for free and compulsory education in primary and secondary schools in Southwest states and pledged to conduct a free and fair primary for aspirants to political offices in Ondo State.

    The conference was attended by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who was represented by Senator Babafemi Ojudu, special adviser (political) to President Muhammadu Buhari, Governors Rauf Aregbesola (Osun) and Abiola Ajimobi (Oyo). Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun was represented by his deputy Mrs Yetunde Onanuga.

    Ministers Adebayo Shittu (Communications) and Kayode Fayemi (Solid Minerals) also attended.

    APC National Chairman John Odigie-Oyegun was represented by Deputy Chairman (South) Chief Segun Oni, who led party leaders in the six states of the Southwest.

    In an eight-point communique, the party posited that “meaningful progress and socio-economic development of the Nigerian nation is unattainable without restructuring the extant, largely unitarian geo-political arrangement. “It is by such re-arrangement, leading to genuine and true political and fiscal federalism that the innate energies of the people of Nigeria can be released and new vistas of human development opened up.”

    Setting the tone for the discourse, Ajimobi, called on the party in the zone to engage political office holders regularly and make meaningful input in policy formulation and delivery.

    He said the party must organise leaders and members to talk together, think together and share ideas and thoughts on how to offer better governance to Nigerians.

    He said: “Let our party create avenues to have position papers on policies. President Buhari is one simple individual that is corruption-free. He has integrity. He is completely simple. It is clear he is the best for this time. But we must help him by conversing with him always through the instrument of the party presenting position papers. We must participate more in the APC-led government.”

    Aregbesola said without a restructuring of the country, only little can be gained by all stakeholders in the current arrangement.

    He lamented that most states are spending their resources to maintain the civil service whose population is scarcely more than 10 per cent of the total population. “That is why we must restructure Nigeria.” He said.

    As revenues plummets, Aregbesola said the situation offers opportunity for the Yoruba to revitalize the concept of working for whatever they earn.

    His words: “We must make earning for living a core concept. Let Southwest start and lead in reviving this concept. Work for what you earn.”

    Vice President Osinbajo said this administration did not fully appreciate the enormity of the corruption and decadence in governance until it took office last year.

    He said the pains of today was a result of “yesterday’s mismanagement of the commonwealth of our great country.”

    But he said President Buhari was aware of the pains of citizens. The Vice President assured Nigerians that a glorious dawn awaited them.

    Osinbajo pleaded with citizens to show understanding and be patient as the administration works to make the country better.

    “Change is not easy. But we are not relenting until we achieve a better life for all Nigerians. The change that we advocate will be irrevocable when we are finally done.” He said.

    Assuring that the desired change was already here, Osinbajo said some investors have shown interest in building refineries in Nigeria.

    He also pointed out that current improvement in power supply is a result of the efforts of the government, adding that the government was committed to the implementation of the health insurance scheme, diversification of the economy, infrastructural development and job creation.

    Chief Odigie-Oyegun told party men to educate their followers and members of the public that the ‘change’ mantra is not an event but a process which takes time to be fully achieved.

    He promised that recommendations of the meeting would be considered at the national secretariat of the party.

    In his welcome address, the National Vice Chairman (Southwest) Chief Pius Akinyelure, said the contribution of the Southwest Zone to the success of the APC at the national level was not in doubt.

    But as change agents, Akinyelure said the party leadership in the zone was not under illusion that greater efforts are not needed to put the nation back on track.

    He commended governors in the region for sustaining its economic relevance in Nigerian through their popular policies.

    Akinyelure also called on feuding governorship aspirants in Ondo State to come together and allow peace to reign. He assured them that the party would conduct a free and fair primary and urged aspirants to support anyone that emerges as the party’s candidate.

    In the communique , the party said in view of its huge contribution to the ideological and policy thrust of the APC as well as the enthronement of the party at the federal level, the Southwest Zone must become more engaged with, and engaging in, influencing the affairs of the party and government at the national level.

    It added: “The need for diversification of the economy has become mandatory for the successful enthronement of true political and fiscal federalism with each geo-political zone exploring its resources for maximum development.

    “The primary role of quality education in the progress and development of a people was acknowledged. However, it is most disturbing that the present Southwest Zone that used to commit as much as 30 per cent of its budget to education is no longer able to achieve such level of support. The conference agreed with the submission of the guest lecturer that primary and secondary education should be made compulsory and free in the Southwest zone.

    “In considering the importance of the upcoming governorship election in Ondo State on November 10, the conference made a passionate appeal for the unity of party members throughout the exercise towards the emergence of the party’s candidate. Specifically, the conference pledged the commitment of the leadership of APC Southwest zone to a free and fair process in picking the candidate of the party for the election. It also appealed to all aspirants to rally and give full support to the successful aspirant in order to face the November 10 election with the full force of the party as it is imperative to bring the government of Ondo State into the fold of the progressives.”

    Also at the conference were: former governor of Old Ondo State, Chief Bamidele Olumilua; former deputy governors and Chief Ayo Fasanmi.

    Others are chairmen of the party in Oyo (Chief Akin Oke); Ogun (Chief Rokeeb Adeniyi); Lagos (Chief Oladele Ajomale); Osun (Chief Gboyega Famodun) and Ekiti (Chief Jide Awe); National Legal Adviser Dr Muiz Banire;  Senator Ganiyu Solomon; Senator Olorunnimbe Mamora;  Chief Tajudeen Olusi, members of the House of Representatives, Houses of Assembly and political office holders.