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Osun begins Interview for shortlisted Teachers across the State | LENTEN: GOVERNOR ADELEKE FELICITATES CHRISTIANS | GOVERNOR ADELEKE CONDOLES AIDE, KAMIL ARANSI, OVER MOTHER’S PASSING | Osun LGs Governor Adeleke Briefs Traditional Rulers, Reaffirms that No Court Order Reinstates Yes/No Chairmen | GOVERNOR ADELEKE PRAYS FOR AND FELICITATES WITH DR DEJI ADELEKE AT 68 | Illegal Occupation of Council Secretariats: Osun Local Government Chairmen, NULGE Drag Yes/ No L.G Chairmen to Courts | Gov. Adeleke Eulogises Obasanjo at 88, Describes Him as Father of All. | Governor Adeleke Launches Stakeholders’ Consultation, Visits Chief Bisi Akande on Recent Developments | Governor Adeleke Launches Stakeholders’ Consultation, Visits Chief Bisi Akande on Recent Developments | GOVERNOR ADELEKE CONGRATULATES NEW NYSC DIRECTOR–GENERAL, BRIGADIER-GENERAL NAFIU OLAKUNLE. | GOVERNOR ADELEKE GREETS ALHAJA LATEEFAT GBAJABIAMILA AT 95 | GOVERNOR ADELEKE CONGRATULATES AIDE, TUNDE BADMUS, ON HIS BIRTHDAY | OSUN GOVT FAULTS MASTERMINDS’ POSITION ON THE LG CRISIS | Governor Adeleke Orders Investigation over Clashes at Egbedi Town | Ramadan: Governor Adeleke preaches Peace & Godliness | Governor Adeleke Sets Up Panel of Enquiry on Esa Oke – Ayegunle Chieftaincy Dispute | Governor Adeleke Receives Award of Excellence for Leadership in Circular Economy, Waste Management and Environmental Sustainability | GOVERNOR ADELEKE CELEBRATES COMMISSIONER JENYO ON BIRTHDAY | GOVERNOR ADELEKE CONDOLES FAMILY OF SLAIN PDP MEMBERS, ISMAILA IBRAHIM AND KASALI ADEBAYO | Governor Adeleke Sustains Osun Peace Despite Machinations of Anarchists – Spokesperson | Don’t Turn Osun into Wild Wild West, Governor Makinde Warns Osun APC
Yoruba in Diaspora Visit Aregbesola 1

Pictures of the Governor, State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola  and the North America Base of Egbe Omo Yoruba representatives, during the Delegation’s visit to the Governor in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on  Tuesday 07/07/2015.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (right) presenting the State Emblem to the President, North America Based of Egbe Omo Yoruba, Agba-Akin Bolu Omodele, during the Delegation's visit to the Governor in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on Tuesday 07/07/2015.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (right) presenting the
State Emblem to the President, North America Based of Egbe Omo Yoruba, Agba-Akin Bolu Omodele, during the Delegation’s visit to the Governor
in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on Tuesday
07/07/2015.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (3rd left); his Deputy, Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori (2nd left), Speaker, State of Osun House of Assembly, Hon. Najeem Salam (left), Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Moshood Adeoti (4th right), State Leader, All Progressives Congress, Senator Bayo Salami (3rd right), President, North America Based of Egbe Omo Yoruba, Agba-Akin Bolu Omodele (4th left), his wife, Mrs. Taiwo Omodele (right) and his General Secretary, Dr. Duro Akindutire (2nd right),  during the Delegation's visit to the Governor in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on Tuesday 07/07/2015.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (3rd left); his Deputy,
Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori (2nd left), Speaker, State of Osun House of
Assembly, Hon. Najeem Salam (left), Secretary to the State Government,
Alhaji Moshood Adeoti (4th right), State Leader, All Progressives
Congress, Senator Bayo Salami (3rd right), President, North America
Based of Egbe Omo Yoruba, Agba-Akin Bolu Omodele (4th left), his wife,
Mrs. Taiwo Omodele (right) and his General Secretary, Dr. Duro
Akindutire (2nd right), during the Delegation’s visit to the Governor in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on Tuesday 07/07/2015.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (middle); his Deputy, Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori (left) and President, North America Based of Egbe Omo Yoruba, Agba-Akin Bolu Omodele (right), during the Delegation's visit to the Governor in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on Tuesday 07/07/2015.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (middle); his Deputy,
Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori (left) and President, North America Based of
Egbe Omo Yoruba, Agba-Akin Bolu Omodele (right), during the
Delegation’s visit to the Governor in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on Tuesday 07/07/2015.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (3rd right); his Deputy, Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori (3rd left), Speaker, State of Osun House of Assembly, Hon. Najeem Salam (2nd left), Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Moshood Adeoti (right), President, North America Based of Egbe Omo Yoruba, Agba-Akin Bolu Omodele (2nd right), during the Delegation's visit to the Governor in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on  Tuesday 07/07/2015.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (3rd right); his
Deputy, Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori (3rd left), Speaker, State of Osun
House of Assembly, Hon. Najeem Salam (2nd left), Secretary to the
State Government, Alhaji Moshood Adeoti (right), President, North
America Based of Egbe Omo Yoruba, Agba-Akin Bolu Omodele (2nd right),
during the Delegation’s visit to the Governor in his Office, at Government Secretariat, Abere, Osogbo, on Tuesday 07/07/2015.

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Ajibola-Famurewa

Ajibola-FamurewaThe lawmaker representing Ijesa South Constituency in the Federal House of Representatives, Hon Ajibola Famurewa, has warned the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to desist from taking advantage of the delay in the payment of workers’ salaries to foment trouble in Osun State.
Famurewa said it was clear that the PDP could not be a credible and violent-free opposition, going by alleged day-to-day plan by the leaders of the party to destabilise the state, using non-payment of salaries as cover-up.
Reacting to the disruption of a peaceful rally organised by a pressure group, the Osun Progressive Left, to rally support against the call for the impeachment of Governor Rauf Aregbesola over the delay in payment of workers’ salaries in the state, Famurewa called on the leaders of the PDP in the state to “learn how to be a good opposition” that will put the government on its toes through constructive criticism and not violence.
“The PDP is going gaga and I must ask what they stand to gain by fomenting trouble in the state. It should be clear to them by now that the people of the state have rejected them and so have the court. So, they have nothing to hold on to in the state.
“I do not expect the PDP to organise a kangaroo rally against Aregbesola over the non-payment of salaries when the Federal Government has released funds for the bail-out and the workers and people of the state are still in support of Aregbesola”, he said.
LEADERSHIP

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Latter-day_Saints_Charities_Provides_Clean_Water_for_Muslim_Communities3

Latter-day_Saints_Charities_Provides_Clean_Water_for_Muslim_Communities3THE House of Assembly member representing Obokun State constituency in the state of Osun, Olatunbosun Oyintiloye, has said that community ownership, protection and maintenance of public facilities will promote and sustain development.
He spoke at the commissioning and handing over of a borehole, donated to Ibokun community by Egbe Omo Obokun of Ijesaland in Batimore/Washington, USA, saying, such gesture would automatically lead to bottom to top development, which is community driven.
According to him, to achieve this objective, the people must revert to the old African Cultural Mode of developing communities through collective effort to achieve more results.
He further stressed that the people must imbibe the culture of community spirit, community service and community development, adding, “we need to live out our cultural value of building and modernising our communities”.
“Through community spirit, service and development, people would be able to identify their needs and use collective communal efforts to achieve it and maintain those ones provided by government and or donated by individuals and NGO’s.
“While we extol the donors of this borehole, who decided not to stay in the comfort of overseas without giving back to the society, it is now evident that this is the way to go towards developing our communities, the haves must help the have not and the enthusiastic must lift the spirit of the depressed.
“We have to revert to our African cultural mode of developing our community whereby we use collective efforts, synergise our power and resources to get bigger result. This is one of the cultural virtues we have lost as a people.
“We are the ones that will create our society, because every environment is created by its people and we must use our talents and resources to translate our community to what we want it to be”, Oyintiloye emphasised.
The parliamentarian who further charged the people to take ownership of every public structure in their domain, either government-donated, community-delivered or individually  donated, saying this would propelled the people to imbibe maintenance culture.
According to him, without seeing it as their own and taking ownership of such public facility, the maintenance of such structure become difficult for the people.
Recalling that the present administration in the state, under Governor Rauf Aregbesola has also constructed hundreds of boreholes within the last few years, the lawmaker regretted that many them were not being maintained due to negligence of the beneficiary communities.
He charged community leaders to spearhead the renew attention for repair and maintenance of those public facilities through collective efforts such as appointment of local ad-hoc committee for their care
Receiving the borehole on behalf of the community, Oba’bokun of Ibokun, Oba Festus Awogboro appealed to well-meaning indigenes of the town to also complement government effort to develop the town.

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Aregbesola

AregbesolaThe Coalition of Oodua Self-Determination Group (COSEG) on Tuesday accused governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party in the August 9 election in Osun, Senator Iyiola Omisore of being behind the series of plots to destabilise the state.
The group said it is ironic that Omisore whose party, the PDP brought Nigeria to her economic woes after 16 years of misrule is now championing protests against the Governor of Osun,whom the group credited with outstanding successes in the state.
In its statement signed by the President, Ifedayo Ogunlana ad Secretary, Rasak Olokooba, COSEG warned Omisore, the PDP and other who might be involved in all the plans to set the state on fire to watch out for the long arms of the law.
“We as a Yoruba organisation cannot watch as some people who have been part of the systematic decimation of our race and economic woes of Nigeria again openly thwart the efforts to rebuild this country.
“What is happening in Osun is clear case of treason and the earlier the whole world sees this the better. The Governor of Osun was elected by the same people who rejected Omisore. What he failed to get through the ballot on August 9 2014 and through the tribunal, the Appeal Tribunal and the Supreme Court, he cannot think of having it through these illegitimate and criminal avenues. Enough is enough,” the group stated.
COSEG said it needed to inform the public of the treacherous pact between Omisore and a judge of the State of Osun High Court to instigate mayhem in the state.It added, “It is now clear that the whole salary issue has been seen as means the Aregbesola opponents think they can use to bring his government down. The entire allegations by the Judge is a grand design and it is all a repeat of the same baseless accusations that the PDP had bandied around since the Omisore’s misadventure to contest the election.
“It is instructive that just as Justice Faolahanmi Oloyede submitted her petition, the PDP had been very active to give bite to the petition. We are all not deceived by the grand design to destabilise the administration.
“We call on Osun people to continuously stand by their Governor who Omisore could not change during last election process of the law but trying hard to use instigated violence to achieve.”
The group also saluted the Osun workers for what it called the understanding shown by them adding that it was instructive that the NLC dissociated itself from the protests.
NEW MAIL

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EXCITED (1)

Pictures showing the enthusiastic residents of Osogbo, State of Osun Capital jubilating on sighting the convoy of Governor Rauf Aregbesola on his way to the office after a prolonged strike action by workers on Tuesday 07-07-2015

EXCITED (1) EXCITED (2) EXCITED (3) EXCITED (4)

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ROAD-INSPECTION-1-a

ROAD-INSPECTION-1-a
Osun State Government has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with insurance companies and brokers in the state on third party insurance for vehicle registration and renewal.
The agreement was designed to ensure that vehicle owners comply with relevant laws in respect of the insurance of their vehicles and curb rampant fake insurance certificates in the state.
The agreement was also to ensure that vehicle owners have confidence in dealing with insurance companies and to forster unique pattern of the operation of the insurance companies and brokers across the state.
Performing the signing of the agreement on behalf of the state government, the Acting Chairman of Osun State Internal Revenue Board, Mr. Dayo Oyebanji, said that the agreement e-insurance would ensure that vehicles owners do not patronize touts and unexisting insurance companies and brokers.
According to him, it will also assist in detecting easily stolen vehicles through insurance security code and widening the tentacle of revenue automation of the state.
While substantiating the rationale for the agreement, Oyebanji said it would create an ascertainable legal basis for the conduct of relationships between the parties that is, the Insurance Companies and the insured persons in the course of the establishment and the operation of e-insurance.
He said: “The essence of the ‘Third Party Insurance for Vehicle Registration and Renewal is to make vehicle owners to be confident in dealing with insurance companies and brokers in the state and confirm the validity of their third party insurance certificates through electronic means.
“It would also enable the various insurance companies and brokers to come together to have a unique pattern of operation that people of Osun would repose their confidence in and at the same time avail the people of Osun the opportunity to insure their vehicle assets.”
According to him, the affected insurance companies and brokers include Lasaco Assurance; Law Union and Rock Insurance Plc; Leadway Assurance Company; Zenith General Insurance; NEM Insurance Plc; Mutual Benefits Assurance; Niger Insurance; Staco Insurance; Cornerstone Insurance and Great Nigeria Insurance Plc.
Others are LAAM Insurance Brokers Limited; Royal Chamber Insurance Brokers; Kind Insurance Brokers; Subtle Insurance Brokers Limited; Patmodit Insurance Brokers Limited; Mofes Insurance Brokers limited and First Adequate Benefit Brokers Limited.
Speaking on behalf of the insurance companies and brokers, the representatives of the Lead Insurance Company Mr. Kayode Okeremi, said the e-insurance will assist in detecting any stolen vehicle through insurance security code and ensure that vehicle owners comply with relevant laws.
WORLD STAGE

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BUHARI-new1

BUHARI-new1Bank loans to be rescheduled
Deduction of allocations stops
CASH-STRAPPED states got a breather yesterday. President Muhammadu Buhari approved the release of N713.7billion  intervention funds for them to pay workers’ salaries.
The bailout is part of a three-pronged relief package that will end the workers’ plight.
In the package are N413.7billion   special intervention funds and the balance of about N250billion to N300billion, which is a soft loan to states.
Also, N413.7b( $2.1b) is sourced from the recent LNG proceeds and the remaining N300b is a Central Bank-packaged special intervention fund.
The Debt Management Office(DMO) is expected to assist states to restructure over N660billion commercial loans.
With the development, President Buhari has stopped deductions from monthly allocations to states at source.
Instead, the Federal Government will “use its influence to guarantee the elongation of the loans for the benefit of the states”.
The beneficiaries of the relief package include workers in Federal Ministries, Departments and Agencies(MDAs) who have remained unpaid for many months.
According to sources, the President took the decision to boost the purchasing power of Nigerians, especially average and low-income earners, and to reflate the economy.
The  sources said: “In his resolve to put an end to the lingering crisis of unpaid workers’ salaries in the country especially in many states, President Muhammadu Buhari has approved a comprehensive relief package designed to save the situation.
“Specifically,the President has okayed a three-pronged relief package that will end the workers’ plight.
These are:
•The sharing of about $2.1b (N413.7bn) in fresh allocation between the states and the Federal Government. The money is sourced from recent LNG proceeds to the federation account, and its release okayed by the President;
•A Central Bank-packaged special intervention fund that will offer financing to the states, ranging from between N250b to N300b. This would be a soft loan available to states to access for the purposes of paying backlog of salaries; and
•A debt relief programme proposed by the Debt Management Office (DMO), which will help states restructure their commercial loans currently put at over N660B, and extend the life span of such loans while reducing their debt-servicing expenditures.
The sources said the bailout will take immediate effect from this week to ensure stability in all the states of the Federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
The sources said: “While the over $2b, which is sourced from LNG proceeds to the federation account would be shared among the states, using the revenue allocation formula, the CBN will also make available the special intervention fund to states and then negotiate the terms with individual states.
“The packages that have now been approved by President Buhari is expected to go into effect this week as the President is said to have directed that release of the funds should be made as soon as possible to assuage the plight of thousands of Nigerian workers in the federal and state governments.”

The sources said with the rescheduling of states’s debts, their allocations will no longer be deducted at  source by commercial banks.
The sources added: “This third option, by extending the commercial loans of the states, would therefore make available more funds to the state governments which otherwise would have been removed at source by the banks.
“The Federal Government will use its influence to guarantee the elongation of the loans for the benefit of the states.”
Government sources explained at the weekend that this package, which was considered at the National Economic Council( NEC )last week,  had been designed specifically for workers.
“Furthermore, President Buhari has now reviewed and approved the package in his bid to intervene and alleviate the suffering of workers some of whom have not been paid for over ten months,” the sources said.
The bailout will be extended to workers in Federal Ministries, Departments and Agencies.
“There are also workers in the Federal Government’s employ whose salaries have been unpaid for months. This package is expected to address those cases also,” one of the sources added.
The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, confirmed that indeed a special package was on the way for workers.
He added that the president is deeply concerned about the plight of the workers who have been unpaid for many months.
During the inauguration of  NEC last week, President Buhari asked the Council, which is a constitutional advisory body to him, to, as a matter of priority consider how to “liquidate the unpaid salaries of workers across the country, a situation he observed has brought untold hardship to the workers.”
“At the NEC meeting, the relief measures were extensively discussed between the state governors and top officials of the Federal Government, including the CBN Governor, and the permanent secretaries from Ministries of Finance and Petroleum Resources. Other agencies that were actively involved in the process include the DMO and officials from the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation.”
Media reports last month indicated that about 12 of the 36 states of the federation owed their workers about N110b
They are: Rivers, Oyo, Ekiti, Kwara, Kogi, Ondo, Osun, Plateau, Benue and Bauchi states.
However, informed sources said the Finance Ministry and the CBN may have pegged the amount needed to settle all the outstanding public workers salaries at about N250billion.
It was, however, gathered that President Buhari advised governors at the NEC session to be prudent in managing state resources.
A governor said: “The President has done his best to assist us to take off properly. The ball is in our court to abide by his counsel to be prudent.
“Some of the measures we are looking at include appreciable reduction of security votes, stoppage of chartered flights and pegging the high cost of maintaining Government House to a low benchmark.
“With our experience in the last one month, we do not need a soothsayer to teach us to cut our coat according to our size.”

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Chief-Obafemi-Awolowo

Chief-Obafemi-AwolowoSomething I have been reading in the past few days has left me thinking, wondering and worrying. I refer to something in our Yoruba homeland, something that only few of us know anything about – something from the early history of our Yoruba nation, some construction so big that one account describes it as “the biggest historical monument in the world”.
I refer to the Eredo, the Ijebu-Ode city wall that is believed by archaeologists to have been constructed between the 10th and 12th centuries AD, or about one-thousand years ago.

 It is commonly called Eredo Sungbo, because Ijebu-Ode traditions say that it was constructed in the reign of an Ijebu-Ode queen named Sungbo. Some of the 15th and 16th century Portuguese explorers and traders along the Yoruba coast heard about the Eredo and mentioned it in their writings.

 In modern times, many historians have mentioned it in their books. But it was little known to the outside world until 1999 when a British archaeologist, Professor Patrick Darling of Bournmouth University, surveyed the site and published his findings. Since then, the Eredo has been attracting worldwide attention.

Built by the people of early Ijebu-Ode around their town with considerable farmland around it, the Eredo is about 100 miles in circumference, and encompasses an amount of land measuring about 25 miles from north to south and 22 miles from east to west. It is a typical Yoruba town wall consisting of a trench and an embankment made of the earth that was dug from the trench. In some parts of its length, the top of the embankment is as high as 70 feet from the bottom of the trench. The sides of the trench are made remarkably smooth, testifying to the high skills of the diggers.
As a great structure constructed in early human history, the Eredo is now being compared with the Great Pyramid of Egypt. As more and more gets known about it, it is likely to come close to the Great Pyramid as one of the wonders of the African past, and one of the greatest archeological structures in the world – and, by far, the greatest in Black Africa.

Professor Darling estimates that the builders of the Eredo shifted about 3.5 million cubic feet of earth while constructing it – about one-million cubic feet more than the earth and rock shifted by the builders of the Great Pyramid.

The Eredo was probably the greatest of the town walls of Yorubaland in history, but it was by no means the only great one. Most of the Yoruba towns had impressive walls. Ile-Ife early built a great town wall which was expanded again and again at different times later in history. Ila Orangun’s wall was very famous for centuries – and the town was called Ila Yara (Ila of the Great Wall) because of it.
An Olowo of Owo, Oba Osogboye, expanded the Owo town wall spectacularly in the 18th century and made it one of the most famous town walls in Yorubaland. Ilesa, Owu, Oyo-Ile, Ado-Ekiti, and many other Yoruba towns had great town walls.
So, following upon the above facts and other known facts of Yoruba history, I have serious thoughts and questions – and serious worry. Since slave labour was never a significant factor in Yoruba economy, where did we Yoruba in those distant times get the labour for a gigantic construction like the Eredo? We can only assume that it was citizens’ labour.
In that case, the volume of the citizens’ labour force employed must have been very large; the organization for mobilizing such a large labour force too must have been very sophisticated indeed.
Altogether, what we are looking at here is that, as far back as a thousand years ago, Yoruba civilization was already very advanced.
Unlike most other peoples of Black Africa, the Yoruba nation already lived in towns large and small, under a detailed and gorgeous monarchical system, with a well ordered economy, and with very sophisticated institutions and norms of community life, community security and privileges, and community duty and responsibility.
The communal spirit of cooperation and mutual giving made it possible for the average Yoruba peasant family to make large farms beyond its capability and to produce goods and wealth beyond its capability. It also made it possible for the average lineage to build the typical Yoruba lineage compound with living quarters for tens of families and with open courtyards for group life and leisure.
Generations of Yoruba people throughout history have generally upheld and exemplified these strengths of their nation. When Western education was brought to Africa by Christian missionaries in the second half of the 19th century, the Yoruba people of that generation were better ready than probably all other Black African nations to accept it and benefit from it.
The Yoruba towns and cities, with their rich economic life, orderly system of governance, and system of security and order, became like bases prepared in advance for the churches and schools. By the end of that century, the Yoruba nation already possessed a growing and influential literate elite, a system for writing the Yoruba language, institutions like newspapers, traditions of Western-type research and scholarship, and authors, books, and book publication.
A 50-year period (roughly 1900-1952) followed during which British imperialism more or less prevented the natural flowering of Yoruba cultural and traditional strength in governance, leadership and socio-economic growth.

But when the British allowed the modern literate elites of different parts of Nigeria to begin to manage their peoples’ affairs from 1952 on, the then generation of Yoruba leadership of the Western Region, led by Chief Obafemi Awolowo, immediately sprang forth with the innate strength of the Yoruba nation, and gave the Yoruba in the Western Region the most orderly and most productive indigenous government in all of Africa.
Considering all the above, here then is my worry.
The present generation of Yoruba elite – the post-Awolowo generation – does not seem to have much in common with – and does not seem to be descendants of – the earlier generations of the Yoruba people and leaders.
When one looks closely at political and community behaviour of today’s generation of Yoruba elite, they do not appear to bear much resemblance with those Yoruba ancestors who mobilized their people to build the ancient Yoruba towns and great town walls and the splendid royal institutions, and who built the lineage compounds and maintained the peculiar grade of order in them, or the Yoruba generation of leaders who seized on Western education to make their nation about the leading nation in Africa, or the generation of Yoruba leaders who, in the 1950s, made the name of the Yoruba nation ring again with excellence and glory in nearly all fields of development and progress.
Members of today’s generation of Yoruba leaders are forever bickering over petty (often personal) considerations, interacting with Nigeria’s partisan politics at immature and superficial levels only, and appear to be incapable of perceiving, understanding, and responding appropriately to the obvious directions of Nigeria’s life and future.
Whenever occasion has demanded that they unite to rally in defence of principles and interests important to their Yoruba nation, they have usually mumbled their petty differences and allowed their nation, and the masses of their people, to suffer at the hands of other peoples of Nigeria. Efforts made again and again to stitch together or to harmonize a Yoruba leadership structure always stumbles and scatters.
If a group of today’s Yoruba elite holds a meeting, it is more likely to be for plotting against another group of fellow Yoruba; it is very unlikely to be for considering, and finding remedies for, the wounds being inflicted on the Yoruba nation in Nigeria.

All in all, this generation of Yoruba elite is losing, not only the greatness, but even the basic strength, and even the very existence, of the Yoruba nation.
But there is hope. If today’s generation of Yoruba elite choose to continue to never rise to the defence of the Yoruba nation, some future generation will rise up and revive, and rebuild, the Yoruba nation. In saying that, I am taking strength from an email message which a Yoruba youth, an undergraduate student of one of our universities, wrote to me some time ago, after he had read a book on Yoruba history.
Among other things he wrote: “We are watching sadly as our parents are failing our nation. My own generation, my friends and I, will not do as our parents are doing now. We know that our Yoruba nation is a great and proud nation. If our parents let the greatness and pride die, we will bring it back to life again”.
The kinds of strong Yoruba men and women who, in their respective generations, built the Yoruba towns, town walls, sprawling family compounds, great monarchical systems, and adorable systems of governance, who mightily transformed their Yoruba nation through the agency of Western education, who established free education, built our pipe-borne water supply systems, and our impressive and durable roads, who gave us Africa’s first television station and who, on the whole, taught to dream and be 
proud, will show up again. Some of them are already among us – in our schools, universities and unemployment lines.

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Aregbesola Breaks Fast with Jaleoyemi Youths 3

Photos of excited residents of the State of Osun Capital, Osogbo showing solidarity for the Governor, State of Osun Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola on Tuesday July 7 2015.
Aregbesola Breaks Fast with Jaleoyemi Youths 3
DSC_5524 DSC_5526 DSC_5528 DSC_5531 DSC_5532 DSC_5533 DSC_5534 DSC_5535 DSC_5536 DSC_5537 DSC_5538 DSC_5539

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Local birth attendants and medical practitioners in Osun state have promised to collaborate with officials of federal government to end female genital mutilation in the state.
This was parts of resolution at the workshop organised by United Nations Population Fund, UNFPA, in collaboration with United Nations for Children and Education Fund , UNICEEF, and Action Health Incorporated ,AHI.
Local birth attendants and medical practitioners that attended the sensitization workshop, drawn from the three senatorial districts of the state, resolved to assist government in eradicating the menace of female genital mutilation.
In a communiqué issued at the end of the workshop and signed by Mr. Adiatu Salau and Dr. Lekan Awowola, the traditional birth attendants, promised not to engage in the act of female circumcision in the state after being informed of the inherent health implications.
Speaking at the workshop, the state coordinator of Inter-African Committee on Harmful Traditional Practices affecting the health of Women and Children, Mrs. Aduke Obelawo described female genital mutilation as violation of the right of a girl child and the main cause of maternal mortality.
NEWS NIGERIA

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