David Cameron’s vindication of Governor Aregbesola Had the throng of unthinking critics of the Aregbesola administration not been blinded to see anything good in its efforts to re-engineer the finances of the state, they ought to be sobered by the news coming in from the United Kingdom that the government of British Prime Minister David Cameron would soon become the first in the non-Islamic world to issue a Sukuk – the Sharia compliant bond to raise $324 million.
To start with, it isn’t exactly true to suggest that Islamic bonds are anything new to the predominantly Christian British society; British companies such as HSBC and Tesco are known to have issued Islamic bonds in the past. What is new is that Her Majesty’s government has finally found the wisdom in tapping into Middle Eastern investors’ huge cash reserves whose unique attraction is that it is interest-free and allows the investor a share of the profit from an underlying asset.
Now, the typically conservative Brits not only consider it a strategy to solidify London’s status as a global financial hub, allowing it to fighting off the EU’s encroachments, but one designed to open up the city to international players. The country’s Finance Minister George Osborne even did an opinion piece for the Financial Times to extol the potentials of the Islamic financing option.
Now, how is the British issuance of sukuk relevant to the state of Osun? The answer is – in several ways. First, it is more than ample vindication of the state governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola who has long insisted that while the sukuk may be Islamic in origin, it is like other financial instruments, not tied to any religion or creed. For a state yearning for development funds, his position was that the state could use the sukuk window to further its development agenda given the relatively higher cost of alternatives.
The development in the British Isles therefore answers directly to the asinine charge by elements of the opposition and their company of sympathisers that the use of the globally recognise financial instrument is a ploy to Islamise the state of Osun. Another way of saying that development capital would flow towards those who have the mind, will and discipline! Now, it seems doubtful that the critics would be silenced by the fact that Britain – a highly developed nation – is only now tapping into the financial instrument to address its own development needs. That obviously is a reflection of how light years behind the thinking of those who claim to have the answers to the challenges facing the state is.
Conversely, it is a measure of how far-sighted and daring the Aregbesola administration has been in its attempt to re-order the state’s finances – something that only a transparent administration, one that has nothing to hide can contemplate. That was why this newspaper celebrated it as something of a breakthrough when the news first broke; and this against the background of what we know to be the strict requirement to access the bond market.
Of course, the administration could have bandied the usual refrain of lack of funds as an excuse for doing nothing – which was what the immediate past PDP administration did. Rather, it has since shown that with rigour, courage and the determination, the possibilities available for development as many as they are infinite depending on whether or not the leader is willing to put his mind to work.
The lesson here is that a lot can be achieved to turn the tide of development in the State of Osun provide the right leadership is in charge. Today, no longer is the debate as to what the N60 billion debt programme expected to be deployed to finance education projects and other allied infrastructure can achieve. Hopefully, the embrace by Prime Minister Cameron of sukuk would settle the dust over the matter for the state to make progress.
OSUN DEFENDER EDITORIAL
Category: News
We’re not done yet – Abimbola Samuel
Prime Football Club has stated their readiness ahead of the new season as the technical crew at the weekend named its final 30-man squad ahead of the 2013/2014 Nigeria National League.
The chief coach of the Omoluabi Giants, Abimbola Samuel expressed confidence in a statement signed by the club’s spokesman, Tunde Shamsudeen.
The gaffer said the quality of players at the team’s disposal will help the club to secure one of the promotion tickets to the Globacom Premier League.
Abimbola, a former Flying Eagles assistant coach, said he and his assistants have no excuses of not getting the needed results desired. He stated further that the confidence shown to him and his assistants by the management, supporters and the good people of the State of Osun will not be regretted as the team has started getting its rhythm.
“We have the support of the chairman, the board members, the supporters and the good people of the state and I think this will be a season of happiness for Prime.”
However, the former Sunshine Stars merchant tactician, has hinted that much more work needs to be done with the 30-man squad he has listed. He said his squad isn’t done yet for the new season, that his crew is working on the unity of the team.
THE NATION
Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola addressing Omoluabi Boys/Girls Club and Omoluabi Youth Club, during the Official Launch of the Club. In commemoration of Aregbesola 3rd year Administration at the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) Orientation Camp Ede, State of Osun at the weekend
The state of Osun had disclosed that it is most willing to provide the enabling environment in infrastructure and security needed for thriving economic activities. The Governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, stated this at a formal commissioning of the Omoluabi Garment Factory at the state capital, Osogbo some months back which was documented in a must watch video. Click here to watch
Aregbesola said the establishment of the factory became necessary as part of the overall effort to transform the state. He noted that the garment factory is one testimony of his administration’s investment drive and commitment to attracting investors to the State, adding that the state has the market, human and material resources.
According to him, the decision to give the students a common uniform was made with the aim of giving them a common identity and purpose, as well as a sense of unity and pride, which had been lost in the decay that set in public schools in Osun State before his administration.
He said: “Through this alone, we have provided job opportunities for our market women who supplied the materials for the uniform and about 3,000 tailors, who sewed them. This factory will henceforth produce the school uniform here. It will employ our people here. It will buy its inputs from here. And the batik it will produce will be sewn by our tailors here. All of these, among other gains, will have numerous spin-offs that will rebound to the advantage of the people of the State of Osun. The uniform material will be sold and sewn at control prices so as to make it affordable for our people. You are not only assured of quality, you will get it at good prices.”
The governor further revealed that Omoluabi Garment is one of the factories that has been brought into existence through revitalisation of the education project. He charged the managers of the factory to be innovative and uncompromisingly committed to quality, saying “This might appear to be a small beginning, but what I am seeing is the onset of a giant clothing industry that will take the nation and West Africa by storm in the foreseeable future.”
In her remark, the Managing Director of Omoluabi Garment Factory, Folake Oyemade, said with the garment factory in place, there has been a drastic reduction in unemployment rate in the state. Oyemade, who is also the Managing Director of Sam and Sara, said by the end of the year, Omoluabi Garment Factory would have trained over 3,000 tailors.
Oyemade said: “Today’s ceremony is a demonstration of one of your campaign promises. You promised to make the State of Osun an industrial haven in which youths as leaders of tomorrow would be catered for in the area of skill acquisition, job creation, poverty alleviation and wealth creation. This is just the beginning of better things to come. Your second term is a foregone conclusion.”
To watch a video of the launch of the Omoluabi Garment Factory, click here
The Director, Osun State Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Mr Semiu Okanlawon, highlights the achievements of the Aregbesola Administration in the last three years.
By November 2010 when the administration of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola took over the baton, Osun was barely a year less than two decades. What the entire state could boast of in internally generated revenue (IGR) in almost twenty years was no more than N300 million every month at the very highest. Records indicate it fell short of that many times.
However, by November 2013, a period of three years, by merely blocking all the leakages, Osun now rakes in N1.6bn in IGR monthly without expanding the tax net and the prospects are high and encouraging. What this indicates in clear terms, is that in all of its 19 years of existence as a state before the advent of the Aregbesola administration, Osun could muster a paltry N300million in what its people could contribute for its survival and continued existence. Conversely, in three years, the state grew its IGR by 433 percent.
Glimpsed from the perspective of this phenomenal growth, Nigerians are wont to go back to such statistics from the National Bureau of Statistics in terms of development indices to reason why Osun shows the highest capacity for outstanding growth in the whole country at the moment despite the unenviable 34th place in the revenue allocation ladder and meagre opportunities to generate funds internally.
The National Bureau of Statistics announced to the world that Osun ranks highest in public school enrolment in the country in a national environment where public school enrolment figures make very loud statements of the rot in the country’s education sector.
Within the same period and owing to the same factors, the National Bureau of Statistics placed Osun in the league of states with the lowest unemployment rate with the lowest figure of 3.0 where even Kwara ranks 7.1, Lagos ranks 8.3 and Oyo 8.9.
Of course, the obviously low crime rate in the state did not elude the observation of Participants of the Course 22 of the National War College Abuja which spent some days in the state on an assessment tour within the last two months.
All these indications of success cannot be happenstance. If anything, they represent the direct outcomes of ingenious, coordinated and determined interventions in the affairs of a state that was brought to its knees in all spheres of life.
Declaring that “For me and for all of us, it is work, work and more work!” on the day of his inauguration at the state capital, Osogbo on November 26, 2010, Governor Aregbesola left no one in doubt on the direction his administration was to follow more so with the resolve to run an unusual government.
He seemed to have read Alfred North Whitehead well. Whitehead’s logic that “simple solutions seldom are,” and that “it takes a very unusual mind to undertake analysis of the obvious” readily provides the only template for any critical mind to analyse the problem-solving fervor of the governor.
The state with a population of about 3.8 million people had its difficulties spelt out in all the areas. The education sector presented a depressing outlook. Schools did not promise learning. Hospitals did not promise health. Roads did not promise safe journeys. Markets did not promise sales. Farms did not promise food. But even in the face of these, the people had resigned to fate; having been cowed into silence and trepidation by the combined evil forces of foisted poverty and festering violence.
But realising that “fear is the lack of faith in one’s ability to create powerful solutions,” as reasoned by T.F. Hodge in his From Within I Rise: Spiritual Triumph Over Death and Conscious Encounters with “The Divine Presence”, what have emerged in the last three years in Osun represent “powerful solutions” to break the shackles of poverty and set the people on a path to greatness.
The distinct admission, that the same old solutions cannot continue to be applied to the same old problems, have culminated in ground-breaking ideas that have only placed the state steps ahead of its peers.
The youth employment strategies employed by the government have proved to be not only ingenious but efficacious. Forty thousand youths engaged through the Youth Empowerment scheme and its allied forms are the reasons for such commendations by the World Bank, National War College Course 22 Participants, American embassy, the Sultan of Sokoto, Speaker Aminu Tambuwal, and a host of others who have seen that something unique is taking place in Osun beyond the ordinary.
In a country with mounting restiveness in all her regional parts, the Osun job creation specimen provides development experts fresh vistas of ideas to solve not only Nigeria’s but Africa’s bourgeoning unemployment predicament. That the World Bank adapted this model and presented it to the Federal Government culminating in the Youth Employment Social Support Operations, YESSO speaks volume about the Osun’s now established thinking out of the box.
Yes! The reforms in the education sector have brought about hoopla. But that is only to the very extent that humans must naturally resist change even when they are to transit from hell to paradise. This is coupled with the fact that the ever-opportunistic opposition camp, boxed to a corner and dazed by the chains of innovative projects, is poised to confuse the citizens with its dubious manipulative characterization.
Ranking Opon Imo, the Tablet of Knowledge among four best global learning tools by the United Nations-backed World Summit Award Global Congress strengthens the claim that from Osun has emerged “powerful solutions” to the problem facing quality education.
A combination of uninspiring learning environments, ill-motivated and unqualified teaching personnel, inadequately prepared curriculum and other problems had all conspired against quality learning.
If governance means responsibility to the people at all, the solutions proffered have addressed the roots of failure and ignited fresh passion for learning. The years to come are to confirm the ingenuity that lies in the solutions as examinations results are already indicating that the rot is disappearing.
The Senate Committee on Education, led by Senator Uche Chukwumerije, did not just recommend the Osun education model for the entire country for nothing. There is no argument about the fact that Nigeria has lost its grip on the education sector with the concomitant huge costs to progress, order and development.
A large illiterate population readily promotes poverty, diseases, stagnation and violence. The Senate’s assessment of the Osun model and subsequent recommendations for national acceptance and adoption as a way out of the present conundrum is a powerful endorsement of the creative governance in the state.
The creativity resonates in tourism to attract people to Osun; it resonates in agriculture to cause massive food production; in youths engagements to re-orientate youth and create the new total man who is useful to his society. In environmental cares, the government has demonstrated a rare foresight in the management of its affairs that a hitherto uninspiring environment now greens with order and coordination.
It is also on record that this foresight made the state to stay afloat when many states of the federation came under the mercy of massive floods; a national catastrophe that had forced the Federal Government to belatedly spend billions of Naira to limit loses of lives and properties. Just before the current administration took over, it was tragedy galore as flood swept humans and goods away even before the very eyes of those who had no solutions to society’s pressing problems.
The innovative nature of the solutions always provided is the very reason for the noise. But there has emerged a pattern. Virtually all innovative ideas that had ignited heated debate and hullaballoo have been embraced surprisingly by their initial vociferous critics.
What other states of the federation and the Federal Government have done with the youth engagement strategies, re-branding of the state, and others have merely shown that it is a matter of time for the education reforms models, projects financing strategies and others to be adopted as indispensable options for rapid growth.
Of course, some have accused the administration of obduracy; castigating it for sticking to its ideas of development even in the face of mounting criticisms.
But the driver behind the wheel, just like the American inventor and businessman of the 19th century, Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth, says, “I’m convinced that the best solutions are often the ones that are counterintuitive – that challenge conventional thinking – and end in breakthroughs.
“It is always easier to do things the same old way…why change? To fight this, keep your dissatisfaction index high and break with tradition. Don’t be too quick to accept the way things are being done. Question whether there’s a better way. Very often you will find that once you make this break from the usual way – and incidentally, this is probably the hardest thing to do—and start on a new track, your horizon of new thoughts immediately broadens. New ideas flow in like water. Always keep your interests broad – don’t let your mind be stunted by a limited view.”
THE NATION
The Special Adviser to Governor Rauf Aregbesola on Environment and Sanitation, Mr Bola Ilori, has solicited for more support for the current administration, just as he congratulated the people of the state on the third year anniversary of Aregbesola’s administration.
Describing November 27 as an historic day in the political history of the State of Osun, Ilori portrayed the three years administration of Aregbesola as a period of good governance, where government is responsive to the plight of the people.
Ilori, who spoke with OSUN DEFENDER in an interview on Thursday in Osogbo, said that the people of the state have not had it so good in recent time, when it comes to dividends of democracy, until Aregbesola took the mantle of leadership of the state.
He said: “Aregbesola is indeed a blessing to the State of Osun, going by what we are witnessing today. In just three years, infrastructural developments are massive, road constructions are going on in all nooks and crannies of the state.
“Efforts on cleaner environment have reduced hospital patronage for diseases-related cases by 50 per cent, face-lifting of our environment through urban renewal programme is on, farmers are getting soft loans and other inputs to carry on their businesses.
“No single case of flooding has been reported since the government started dredging of streams and rivers in the flood-prone areas when it came on board, schools are being constructed everywhere, enabling environment is being created for investors.
“Jobs are being created, modern markets are being built and a whole lot more like that. The governor has indeed done well and we can only continue to pray for him for more success.”
Ilori then called on the people of the state to give more support to the governor, saying that it is the only thing that can guarantee continuous enjoyment of the dividends of democracy.
“As 2014 approaches, which is the election year, we are urging our people to continue with their unflinching supports for Ogbeni, so that we will all continue to enjoy the ongoing dividends of democracy like never before,” he said.
OSUN DEFENDER
Globally, organizations, in both private and public sectors of the economy, draw budget to attain specific goals and objectives. However, while budgeting in the private sector is market driven and profit oriented, the contrary is the case in the public sector.
The public sector is not only resource constrained (as it is funded mostly by taxation) but is also service oriented. Hence government at various levels often ensure that budget is well prepared in advance in order to render service to the people especially under a democratic dispensation in which citizens expect so much from their leaders who they elected into office.
In the State of Osun, a forward looking and progressive brand, the art of budget making has been taken to greater heights. Under the leadership of Rauf Aregbesola, the regime has not only touched the lives of the people with the execution and implementation of its 6 points agenda, it has also turned the economy of the state around.
Without foisting a higher tax regime on the people, the states Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) has increased by 100 percent. According to Dr Wale Bolorunduro, Commissioner for Finance, Economic Planning and Budget, “The approach we adopted was to plug loopholes and stopped the losses incurred through manual collection and manual processing. The approach paid off with 100% jump in revenue earnings.”
Yet in spite of this laudable feat, the State is not resting on its oars. Perhaps in affirmation of Aregbesola’s vision as enunciated in this words: “The development of human capacity is the most important responsibility of any serious government; we are treading this course progressively” the State recently held a week long workshop on Budget Preparation for senior civil servants in the state. The workshop which held between October 28 and November 4, 2013 was co-ordinated by Landmark Exposures Limited, the management excellence advocacy firm.
The maiden workshop was a joint initiative of Ministry of Human Resources and Capacity Building and the Ministry of Finance, Economic Planning and Budget.
In her opening remarks, the Commissioner of Human Resources and Capacity Buildings, Mobolaji Akande admonished the participants thus: “Your role is important as officials in charge of budget preparation. Budgeting strategy should be geared towards the achievement of the 6 points agenda of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. Therefore this workshop is expected to expose participants to the global best practices in budget preparation, initiation an implementation. Moreover, this workshop is timely because it is coming up during the budget preparation season. All what you learnt here would help you in the preparation of the 2014 budget.”
Participants at the workshop were top and middle level executive staff with diverse background in charge of budget preparation in various ministries, parastatals, agencies and departments.
Presenting the opening paper, the faculty leader and chief executive officer of Landmatk Exposures Limited, Mr Akinwole Osewa, described the participants as the engine room of government. “As civil servants, you are the souls and heartbeats of any government”, Osewa said. According to the seasoned management consultant the success and failure of any government or regime could be gleaned from the impact of government’s budget on the lives of the governed stressing that “civil servants who are involved in the making of budget should ensure that budget prepared by them are strictly implemented by those involved in its execution.”
A global financial management trainer, forensic accountant and author, Dr Richard Mayungbe took the participants through the whole gamut of budget making and preparation at the workshop. Mayungbe said since budgeting starts and ends with human beings it is imperative that those involved in its preparation should not only be well trained but also motivated.
Mayungbe stressed that a well prepared, well implemented and executed budget must touch the lives of all the stakeholders.”
With both local and foreign instructive and thoughtful case studies, he took participants through issues and pivots in the budgeting process. Topics like, budget cycle and control, contents and structure of public sector budget, budgeting and responsibility accounting, driving IGR with ICT and other germane issues.
In his presentation titled “Emotional intelligence for effective budgeting and budget implementation” a renonwed motivational and entrepreneurship speaker, Dr. Lemmy Omoyinmi, focused on how emotions of executives in charge of budget preparation and implementation affects the lives of stakeholders the budget is meant for.
Adopting philosophical, psychological, medical and sociological models to dissect the problem of poor service delivery in the public sector, Omoyinmi said the only way to remedy the situation was to stop living historically but futuristically as futuristic thinking evokes positive energy needed for development and growth.
THISDAY
Governor of the state of Osun, Mr. Rauf Aregbesola, yesterday, declared that his administration will not tolerate any act of lawlessness from any group or individuals irrespective of their standing in the society.
Aregbesola made this disclosure during the graduation of 410 Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme, O’YES, cadets trained at the OSUN-ODU’A Farmer’s Academy at Ede.
Aregbesola, who described the attack on the Principal of Ejigbo School of Science as unacceptable, noted that no one is allowed by the constitution to take laws into one’s hands.
He stressed that henceforth the government will not treat such cases with kid gloves, saying that anyone caught with such uncivilised act will be made to face the law.
Speaking to the graduates, the governor said his administration’s involvement of youths in agricultural enterprises was another way his administration was tackling the menace of youth unemployment.
The graduation ceremony, he noted, was an opportunity to hoist aloft for all to see the “fruits of responsive and responsible governance that only the healthy tree of focused and visionary leadership can yield.”
CULLED FROM VANGUARD
Pictures from the Commissioning and Inspection of Sir Sapara Williams Law Library, in the Ministry of Justice, State Secretariat, Abere via Osogbo, State of Osun on Friday
On my part, I have always maintained that this requirement of Awolowo is very hard to come by for, as I see it, there are only three people who fulfilled this stoic requirement in a fell-swoop. They are Plato, Mahatma Ghandi and Awolowo himself. I do not know of any person who can be called an Awoist in this stoic sense. If we take this as Awoist in the strong sense, we can at least find an approximation to an Awoist in the weaker sense. This is precisely where Rauf Aregbesola comes in as a man whom the cap fits naturally. Of course, there may be others, but they are likely to be those whose heads had been carved to fit an ideal cap, which is not natural. I believe it is generally known that Aregbe is sexually continent, abstemious in food, abstaining from alcoholic beverage and tobacco, and may be said to vanquish, if not completely, the emotion of greed and fear. I, like many other admirers of Awo, cannot claim to have passed this stoic test to be called an Awoist in the true sense of the word.
That Aregbesola has passed this Awoist test with high grade is by no means a mean feat that puts him nearer to Plato, Mahatma Ghandi and Awolowo than many of us in this regard. I think I should disarm any criticism by making it clear that my assessment was based on empirical evidence that is open to everybody to verify. Congratulations, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, for it has been confirmed that you actually were sexually continent even before your marriage till today, and you neither smoke nor drink alcohol like the famous Gulder which many of us patronise. These certainly are notable areas where many of us who want to be called Awoists, including the present writer, have not made it, as “Baba Kekere” has done, most creditably.
Merely wearing a cap which looks like the one Awo used to wear, or his spectacles (both in imitation of his mentor, Mahatma Ghandi), does not make one an Awoist or a Ghandist. We are not even sure whether to also call it Ghandi or Nehru cap or both! By my reckoning, Awolowo had put away the cap called “Awo cap” after his death. Notice that he did not start wearing that cap as a leader of the Action Group or the Premier of Western Region. Along the way, he fell in love with Mahatma Ghandi’s style of dressing and found the cap easy to fix on his head without necessarily looking at the mirror. It was also part of Ghandi’s simplicity, like the spectacles. In my dream which led me to do his wish by serialising my last conversation with him in The Nation newspapers, and later published by Evans Brothers (Nigeria Publishers) Ltd in 2010, I saw Awolowo not wearing the Awo cap but a conventional, multicoloured Yoruba cap over an immaculate white agbada. Neither did he put on the simple Ghandi-like spectacles he used to wear when he was alive. Aregbe neither wears an Awo cap nor Awo spectacles which have nothing to do with the human nature. He simply embraced the spirit and doctrine of Awoism to the letter without the extraneous cap or spectacles.
On the issue of self discipline, Awolowo had this much to say. “Men of affairs and wisdom everywhere are unanimous in the view that only those who are masters of themselves become masters of others. Indeed Aristotle has said it, with the authority of one of the greatest and wisest men that ever lived. ‘Let him that would move the world first move himself’”. The fact of the case is that, for any person to be able to discipline others, he himself must first be self-disciplined. All the corruption going on in the country, especially at the national level, is a product of a violation of Awolowo’s idea of discipline. A leader is not likely to be at a vantage position to discipline his lieutenants on charges of corruption if he is corrupt himself. In this case, Awolowo has sold the idea of self-discipline to our leaders if they must not be afraid to discipline corrupt officials under them unless, of course, they are themselves corrupt, in which case corruption will continue to spread and flourish in the absence of self disciplined leaders. A report has it that, from his ascetic way of life, Aregbesola is difficult to convince when it comes to free spending or corrupt tendency. What he does not do you just can’t do it, and this has led to accountability and transparency in his government about which his lieutenants are happy because they are not greedy and so are ready to make some sacrifice for an Omoluwabi in an Omoluwabi state. Self-discipline is the magic by which Aregbe functions as executive governor of his state.
Awolowo has said about God and Religion: “The touchtone of what is good, be it thought, or word or action, is LOVE. We are to love our neighbours as ourselves. Anything therefore-any thought or word or action-which falls short of LOVE is evil, and holds within itself the germ of its own eventual and inevitable destruction.” Awolowo’s idea of “spiritual depth” involves the notion of God from whom love ultimately flows. Since he has argued that man is made in the image of God, so must our love satisfy that of the Biblical injunction, “Love your neighbour as thyself”, or the Golden rule, “Do unto others as you wish them do unto you”. It was therefore not a surprise that Awo was the first politician to establish a Muslim Pilgrims’ Welfare Board in Nigeria, although he was a Christian. Awo’s action was a good example of religious tolerance. Thus we see Aregbesola’s position on religion in the State of Osun as a follow-up to Awo’s stand on religious tolerance where Christians and Muslims would live together in peace and harmony under the religious injunction “Love thy neighbour as thyself”.
On education, Awolowo writes: “The cardinal aim of education is not, as is popularly but narrowly conceived, to teach a man to read and write, to acquire a profession, to master a vocation, or to be versed in the liberal arts. All these are only means to the end of education which is to help a man to live a full, happy and triumphant life.” Now, people have talked about Aregbesola’s revolution and re-organisation in Osun’s educational system. One of the most recent is the introduction of Opon imo and what, in the like of the American philosopher of education, John Dewey, we may call education “learning by doing” – all of which is to help people to acquire theoretical and practical knowledge in order to live fulfilled, happy and triumphant lives. I am aware that Aregbesola is contemplating a proclamation about technological revolution in Osun, in the manner of the wisdom and foresight of the Emperor of Japan in 1870 in a proclamation and oath taken by him which said that knowledge must be sought and acquired “from any source with all means at our disposal”, an oath that led to Japan’s technological revolution in the areas of automobile and electronic technologies now far ahead those of USA and Germany. Hence, Aregbe’s philosophy of education as learning by doing, and acquisition of high technologies by any means as well as by scientific intelligence are worthy of praise.
Awolowo was seen as a workaholic politician and statesman. This was demonstrated in one of his writings: “I have never regarded myself as having a monopoly of wisdom. The trouble is that when most people in public life and in the position of leadership and rulership are spending whole days and nights in clubs or in the company of men of shady character and women of easy virtue I, like a few others, am always at my post working hard at the country’s problems and trying to find solutions to them. ONLY THE DEEP CAN CALL TO THE DEEP”. Those close to Aregbesola know him well as a man not given to night clubs or found in the company of “women of easy virtues”, but always in his office, days and nights, trying to find solutions to the problems of his state. His appointees find it tough to cope with his work habit, stretching from morning to about 3 a.m the following day. One does not know where he got his energy from to serve his state ferociously as he does. The interesting thing is that he seems to be enjoying it all.
Surely, if there is any politician who may be seen as an Awo incarnate in his Philosophy, Ideology and art of Good Governance, it is Aregbesola whose First Lady is hardly visible. Grown and properly brought up in the politics of the Action Group in those days by a father who was one of the greatest disciples of Awo in Ikare in Akokoland, Aregbesola did not disappoint his father who must be very proud of him wherever he is now. Rather, he surpassed his father in love and passion for the immortal Awo who was a mentor to both father and son. He has even taken a step further by immortalising his mentor and that of his father by founding the Awolowo Centre for Philosophy, Ideology and Good Governance in his (Awo’s) image, and most certainly for posterity.
I cannot end this piece without mentioning the recent commendation on Aregbesola for “sterling performance” from a powerful source – the Sultan of Sokoto – who said, “Aregbesola has been performing commendably well in the past three years”. The Sultan who said he had visited Osun four times said he was elated by what he saw on ground, expressing his willingness to visit the state again. He told members of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum who paid him a courtesy visit in his palace, “My brother, Rauf Aregbesola, is here with all of you. I was in Osogbo, his state capital, sometime this year. I think I have visited his state four times and I am willing to visit again. There is no doubt he is doing wonderfully well” (The Nation, Sunday, Nov 17, 2013, p.9). I hope the spirit of Awolowo and Awoism, otherwise known as Democratic Socialism, may long endure in the State of Osun even after Aregbesola might have left the scene.
Congratulations, on the third year of your meritorious administration in the Omoluwabi State.
– Makinde, a Professor of Philosophy, is the DG/CEO, Awolowo Centre for Philosophy, Ideology and Good Governance, Osogbo
THE NATION