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Category: News

Osun To Hold Summit On Economy

Banking on the developmental strides in Osun State in the last four years, some Osun-based professionals will be coming together under the auspices of a non-governmental organisation, the People’s Welfare League, PWL, to hold an economic summit next week.

The summit, where stakeholders from different parts of the state and nationwide will share ideas on how to safeguard the achievements, is tagged ‘Orisun Aje 2014. It has as its theme: ‘Crux of Osun’s Developmental Masterplan: Analysing a Radical Economic Paradigm Shift’.
The summit will hold in Osogbo, the state capital, between April 29 and 30. PWL coordinator, Comrade Biodun Agboola, in a release, said the summit is expected to capture and expose to the whole world the new potentials and opportunities opening up in Osun State in the past 40 months of the Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola administration.
Agboola said: “Osun has been transformed from a backwater, agrarian state into one of Nigeria’s largest and most vibrant economies through a masterful plan that combines prudence, strategic focus and mass talent mobilisation.
NATIONAL MIRROR

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40% cut in Osun’s federal allocation unjustifiable – Aregbesola

40% cut in Osun’s federal allocation unjustifiable – Aregbesola
Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State has described as unjustifiable, a 40 per cent reduction in the federal allocation being received by the state since July 2013.

Aregbesola spoke in Lagos on Thursday during the launching of a book, ‘Yoruba Elites and Ethnic Politics in Nigeria: Obafemi Awolowo and Corporate Agency,’ written by an associate professor at the University of California-Davies, Wale Adebanwi.
The governor said the reduction had no basis as the nation’s oil revenue did not fall, adding that “If there is anything my state does not have now, it’s money. We are managing with 40 per cent reduction in our allocation from the Federal Government.
“It is not as if I even enjoy saying I depend on the federal allocation, but the truth is that there is no magic that I would have made to suddenly taken our state out of dependence on the federal allocation.
“It is important for us to know that there is no justification for that 40 per cent reduction in our allocation. The price of crude oil has remained almost the same at $108 per barrel, and the benchmark, according to them, is $75 per barrel.”
According to the governor, the state is now being forced to source for funds outside the federal allocation in order to meet its responsibilities of paying the entitlements of civil servants and retired workers.
He said that “So we are not close to the benchmark of $75 and yet since July of last year, there is a 40 per cent reduction in our allocation. What that translates to I will tell you.
“It means I have to get N5.4bn to augment salaries and pension from July to December; N5.4bn extra, outside allocation, to ensure that since civil servants who are still active and those who have retired are paid their entitlements. What I receive from federation account is not sufficient to pay salaries.”
The governor, who represented a former governor of Lagos State and National Leader of the APC at the event, Bola Tinubu, who was the chief presenter of the book, bought copies of the new book at N5m on behalf of the Osun State and another copies for N500,000 for himself and announced N2m for the launching of the book on behalf of Tinubu.
NEWMAIL

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Osun O’meal Director Tasks School Heads On Monitoring

o-meals

Mrs Olubunmi Ayoola, Director, Osun Elementary School Feeding and Health Programme, has stressed the need for active involvement of primary school head teachers  in the programme, tagged “O’meal’’.

Ayoola, who is also the state operations officer for the programme, made the call during a meeting with head teachers of public elementary schools in Ikirun and Ila zones.

She said the meeting was aimed at strengthening the programme and improving the services of the O’Meal food vendors.

The director advised all head teachers to be committed and be more involved in the daily monitoring of O’Meals activities in their schools.

She said the O’meal programme had impacted positively on Government’s action plan which includes banishment of poverty, hunger and unemployment, as well as promotion of healthy living and functional education.

Ayoola stressed the need for head teachers to cooperate and ensure effective monitoring of the programme to provide the data needed to evaluate it.

“Without proper monitoring, all the money spent on the programme will go down the drain,’’ she said.

She lauded the support provided by all head teachers present at the meeting and enjoined them to be alive to the monitoring responsibility for the government to realise its vision for the programme.

Some of the head teachers said they had been enlightened and encouraged to work selflessly for the benefit of the pupils.
“I used to think it was the government’s business to monitor the O’meal programme.

“ I now know that it is my responsibility as the head of the school to monitor the activities going on in my school,’’ said Mrs  Khadijat Alade, one the head teachers.

Another head teacher, Mr Kunle Babalola, said the meeting was an eye opener for the school heads.

“I really appreciate this meeting; it has enlightened us, and for safety reasons, head teachers should be concerned and monitor what their pupils eat.

“I appreciate the government for the efforts it is making to make learning enjoyable for both the teachers and the pupils,’’ he said.

(NAN)

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Obey – 1

Nigerian Juju Musician, Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey-Fabiyi presented a CD Album titled:- *Aregbesola: Agent of Change* to the Governor, State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola to Support his Re-Election Campaign in Ilesa, State of Osun on Thursday
Obey - 1 Obey - 2

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‘Osun will vote for continuity’

‘Osun will vote for continuity’

 In this interview with MUSA ODOSHIMOKHE, Osun State Commissioner for Special Duties and Regional Integration Hon. Ajibola Bashiru speaks on the achievement of Aregbesola Administration and the governors’ re-election bid.

Why is Governor Rauf Aregbesola seeking a second term?
The justification lies in several aspects. Government has changed the fortune of the state and there is the need for consolidation. Secondly, the people of the State of Osun deserve the best, in terms of leadership and good governance. Thirdly, looking at the facts of history, the government has performed and, with all sense of modesty, he has used his position to serve the people. He has been able to deliver on his promises, which require consolidation by having a second term. He has provided leadership for the people and, of course, the people want the continuity of the leadership. The sustainability of good governance for the welfare of the people is very important at this point.
The opposition do not believe in the picture you have painted. They believe the governor has come to divide the state along religious line…
As far as I am concerned, what the opposition believes is outright derailment from the real issues.I would empirically demonstrate what the government of Osun State wants to do. It has come up with programmes and policies that have justified the pragmatic action of the government. I will like to comment on the intervention in the area of education. Before this government took over, the performance of the students in the educational ranking was 34 per cent. As at today, because of the intervention in the area of education, it has fast tracked the position.
The school enrolment compiled by the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics indicates that Osun has the highest enrolment in this country. That is not unconnected with the intervention by the government. And what is that intervention? We have embarked on massive infrastructure development. New schools are either being completed or undergoing construction. They are schools that match training standard all over the world.
In terms of infrastructure, we are doing very well. It is only somebody who is a pathological liar that will say we have not made massive investment in that direction. We have the school feeding programme by which we feed the school children with nutritious meals. Aside the direct benefit of the nutritional quality, it has direct impact on their mental development. It also has some economic advantages. For instance, we have the food vendors with about 2000 of them recruited in the schools. That provides empowerment for the women. These women do not only serve as food vendors, they are equipped with modern facilities for them to be able to serve as community caterers.
So, aside from whatever they make from providing school services, they earn additional income, acting as community caterers. So, the school feeding programme offers the benefit of empowerment and economic development. Another aspect of that school feeding programme has to do with agriculture. It will impress you to know that the quality of products the schools children are taking have nutritional value. What we have done is to create a scheme by which we give day old chicken to poultry and even the supply of cows which are supplied for use. We created the enabling markets for agriculture which have help to advance the cause of making the state dependable and having food security. Let us also look at the school uniform programme, we have provided over 700,000 uniforms to students in our schools.
What are other areas of interventions?
Government has also started the Omoluabi Garment Factory. It is located in Osogbo. The factory employs over 2000 tailors that produce school uniforms, uniform for corporate entity and other departments. Through this, we have created an economy that is employing people to the scheme. That is another aspect of our intervention and it is affecting our people positively. Of course, the Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES) has provided youth employment. During its commissioning, government did not lie to anybody. It was clear in the advertorial that scheme will provide 10,000 jobs. It is to offer important services to the communities. We have been able to get 20,000 into the scheme. Out of the 20,000, at least, 15,000 of them have been engaged in one way or the other. Some of them were absorbed into the civil service, which we did with equity.
So, when I heard somebody says that the OYES scheme is not functioning, they are not fair in their comments. One of the things that the OYES scheme has done is to rekindle the spirit of entrepreneurship in our people. I want to say the first batch was taken to Germany for training and are now back. The second batch is going to leave by September for training in modern agriculture. So, what the scheme has done is to provide leadership training for the people. Fortunately, the world saw the wisdom in what we have done, even though the mischievous people said that we deceive the World Bank.
How could somebody even allege that a government of the state deceives the World Bank?The World Bank tagged the project as one of the best engagement and empowerment schemes that has ever been developed in this part of the world. So, in the area of education, what we have also done is to ensure that we have necessary facilities to train the students like the Opon Imo, which is celebrated worldwide. So, when I hear somebody say over eight billion was spent on Opon Imo, that is not true. Only N1.2 billion was spent and if we are to buy text books this will be costlier. That is we will need about N10 billion to provide text books for 150,000 students. So, aside the fact that Opon Imo is convenient, it is innovative. It also has cost savings effect of ensuring that materials are made available to everybody.
And when you talk about the so called segregation in our religious life, it is only in the imagination of mischief makers. This is a state that, for the first time, has provided a level playing ground for all religious organisations. We have traditionalist, there are Muslims and Christians in the state. I want to say we have predominantly Christian cabinet, even though the cabinet is not constituted on the religious ground, but those who have the competence to perform. Out of a cabinet of 30 people, not less than 24 are Christians. In the House of Assembly of 26, which will make law on every government policy, 15 out of them are Christians. Nonetheless, we still work in harmony. We still work for the best of the people. So, those people that are talking about religion are mischievous people.
What is your reaction to the emergency of Senator Iyiola Omisore as the Peoples Democratic Party governorship candidate?
One of the problems is the projection of questionable characters for our growing democracy. I believe that any political party that has the interest of the people at heart should not allow such a man to emerge as its flag bearer. The question you should ask is: what his pedigrees in terms of governance? This was a deputy governor who was impeached because of his misconduct. This is a man who was at the Senate for a period of eight years and did not deliver on anything. The road leading to his house was not even tarred. He could not use whatever influence he has at the federal level to tar the road. Even the road to his father’s house was not tarred. It means that the man is not even qualified to be a councilor and yet, he is gallivanting around that he will bring value to governance. As far as I am concerned, it is one of those dark spots in our democratic development for him to emerge in any political party, not to talk of the so-called ruling party in Nigeria.
The presidency is bent on hijacking the Southwest ,beginning with Ekiti and Osun states, and the Minister of State for Defence and Minister of Police Affairs have been coming to the Southwest regularly. What are your fears?
As you can see, these people that say they want to come and hijack the Southwest are either false students of history or they don’t mean well for Nigeria. If you go to the historical development of Nigeria, the First Republic collapsed because of the same agenda of hijacking power. How could they win? The only way that these characters can be able to get to power is to ride on the blood of the people of the Southwest and I know that will not be possible. In a free and fair contest, they cannot win. The facts are there. Senator Musiliu Obanikoro contested against Governor Babatunde Fashola in 2007. At that time, Fashola was still a dark horse in the political contest. But, he beat him with close to a million votes.
What is the level of confidence you have in the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)?
I will tell you that, from the records of INEC, one cannot say with confidence that it will conduct free, fair election. But, we need to be vigilant. We will ensure that we deploy the resources to compel them to conduct free and fair election.
How can you curtail thuggery, arson and violence during the electioneering?
I think we need to sensitise our people and we also possibly to caution those people that perpetuate this violence. If you want to serve the people, why must you maim them? Why must you distabilise them psychologically? But as I said, the PDP primaries in the state of Osun showed that some people are interested in causing trouble and thread on the blood of the people to get to power.
 
THE NATION

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“Aregbesola’s Government Is Incomparable – Says Ekerin Of Iwoland

The ancient town of Iwo stood still for several hours on Friday as members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Iwo gathered with one voice to endorse the governor, State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, for second term.
The playing ground of DC Elementary School, Araromi, venue for the programme, was filled to capacity, as members and followers of the party in their several thousands gathered to express their appreciation to the governor.
Speaking at the event, the Ekerin of Iwoland, Otunba Bayo Aremu, said that Aregbesola’s achievement in the last three and a half years is unprecedented and enough to earn him second term.
Iwoland Endorses Aregbesola for 2nd term
He said: “Aregbesola’s government is incomparable. No administration in the history of Osun has performed as much as he has done, as he has transformed not only Iwoland, but the whole of Osun.
“For Aregesola to pick the Secretary to the State Government, the Commissioner for Women and Children Affairs among others from our land shows that he is a man that loves our dear town so much and he should be supported to rule beyond 2014.
“I have been out of Iwo for many years, but I have decided to come back home having heard of the wonderful transformation that the state is witnessing under Ogbeni Aregbesola”, Aremu said.
Also speaking, the Secretary to the State government, Alhaji Moshood Adeoti, urged the people of Iwo and entire state to continue to support the government and the party, saying that, it is only the APC that can move the state and the country forward. Adeoti said: “Look at our roads, look at the new schools he is building, a lot of our jobless youths are now employed as a result of the OYES scheme put in place by our governor and he is feeding our elementary school pupils everyday.” He subsequently moved a motion for the adoption of Aregbesola for second term and was seconded by Alhaji Liadi Ganiyu with a loud applause from the teeming supporters of the party.
Osun APC primary election
In his response, Aregbesola expressed his appreciation, as Iwo was the second town after Modakeke to openly adopt him for a second term in office.
While promising his continued delivery of good governance to the people of Iwo and the entire state, the governor announced that the road from Papa boundary to Iwo will be constructed anytime from now.
Osun APC primary election
Aregbesola said: “We promised and we are fulfilling our promises because we are not like the people who ruled the state for seven and a half years before us without anything to show for it.
“At a time in this state, they were the occupants of the three tiers of government: the Federal, State and Local governments and they couldn’t do anything positive for the state. They should be ashamed. “We should all begin to tell ourselves that it is only the APC that can deliver good governance in the country; we should not leave the campaign to politicians alone”, he noted.
The state helmsman urged the people to ensure that they keep their voters’ card intact, so as to be able to exercise their right as voters.
OSUN DEFENDER

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•  Aregbesola and others during the Walk to Live
Osun’s Walk-to-Live provides therapy for health and politics. In no distant future, Osun will have the capacity for drawing tourists from all corners of the globe as its monthly health and physical exercise programme Walk-to-Live, now puts on the colour and trappings of a real tourist’s attraction. In deed, the recently held 15th edition of the event did not disappoint those who to witness it.
The Osun’s Walk-to-Live proved to be an excitement as even the elderly could not resist it. The spectacle of the 92 year old Madam Wulematu Alamu was an attraction to behold as she swung her frail torso in rhythmical gyration to the energising percussions of the mobile musical band.
It was Saturday April 5th, 2014. It looked like the first time the sleepy Edun-Abon town witnessed such a tumultuous crowd; a long winding procession snaking through it; waking the entire town up in a frenzy of activities that took away farmers from their farmsteads and traders from the shops. The towns along the route to Ipetumodu- Edun, Moro, Edun-Abon, Yakoyo-literally went alive in a celebrative mood that would be hard to forget.
“A o ri iru eleyi ri” (the crowd is strange to us) were the only words the old Madam Alamu could utter in Yoruba when this writer walked up to her to discover the source of her joy. She represented the mass of such old people and young ones who could not hide their excitement at the massive crowd that brought joy to their communities.
It was the 15th edition of the Osun Walk-to-Live physical exercise aimed at promoting one of the cardinal points of the Rauf Aregbesola administration –Healthy Living. On this edition however, a former Governor of Abia State, Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, had joined Governor Rauf Aregbesola, who had the entire members of his cabinet with him for the programme.
“I didn’t know I would be able to complete the walk”, said the former Governor of Abia state when it was his turn to speak at the ……High School, Ipetumodu, where the walk terminated while confessing it was the first time he was undertaking such a rigorous but healthy walk in his life.
“But Madam Deputy Governor (referring to Mrs. Grace Tililayo Laoye-Tomori, Aregbesola’s deputy), kept urging and pushing me on and when I saw the way she was not looking tired, I summoned the courage to complete the exercise with your governor. Here I am, completing the exercise.”
Governor Aregbesola led other top government functionaries from Osogbo, the state capital in a 20 minute drive to Edunabon which was the starting point. It was from this point that a horde of organisations ranging from social to political waited for the Governor’s convoy to arrive for the proper take off of the 7.9kilometre walk through the towns.
Madam Alamu’s excitement was understandable. The resplendence of the colours brought to town by the event could not be lost on anyone. Apart from the T-shirt purposely made available for the participants, it was a harvest of many colourful attires as provided by various groups ranging from Oranmiyan, the socio-political organization whose platform saw to the emergence of Aregbesola in the first place; De Young Mandate group in green, association of food vendors who provide the meal for the school children under the state’s massive O-MEALs scheme that feeds about 300,000 pupils every school day in the state. These women were in their professional attires along others who donned various t-shirts provided by various political appointees and political associates of the governor.
The participants walked, they danced as the governor reminded them of the need for constant physical exercise to produce citizens with sound minds in sound bodies.  But was this walk all for physical exercise?  Even if that was the aim of the event has taken a life of its own garnering massive support for Governor Aregbesola’s government in the minds of the populace.
“It makes the Governor to be simply popular among the people,” says the Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Moshood Adeoti. Anta Laniyan, popular Yoruba movie star, who joined almost 20 other actors and actresses in a short presentation at the event, said so many things are going for Aregbesola that would etch him in the consciousness of the Osun people.
“You cannot be more than a man of the people than this,” said the actor who also said he was sure no other name would be in the minds of Osun people when voting other than Aregbesola. “
For Dotun Oladipo, Publisher of The Eagle Online, “this has all the trappings of how to use sport or physical exercise to galvanize the citizenry towards participatory democracy. You cannot have a docile populace when you put in place programmes such as this that bring them out of their shells,” said one of the leading online publications in Nigeria. But seeing their governor walk with them, dance with them remove all those myth, which I think is one thing Governor Aregbesola is trying to demystify,” Oladipo said.
“How many governors can walk among their people the way your governor has walked without people throwing sachets of pure water,” asked Kalu. But we have walked today, there was no pure water. Rather, what we saw are cheers, waving of hands in demonstration of love for your Governor. I congratulate you Governor Aregbesola, for this wonderful innovation.”
But could Kalu have been wrong to call it an innovation? A senator from Ebonyi State in the South East part of Nigeria, Emmanuel Onwe could not but describe Walk-to-Live as “an innovation in the Nigerian Space.” We have friends in the PDP, we will tell them that, in Osun, from what we have seen, PDP is lacking. Senator Emmanuel Onwe
Much as Aregbesola would say the Walk-to-Live is to make his people healthy, the Saturday April 5th event further shows how much of confidence the administration has over its popularity with the people. The event took place on a day that the opposition Peoples Democratic Party was organising its governorship primaries at the state capital. But despite being a leading member of the Peoples Democratic Party, Kalu said this would not stop him from endorsing what he saw as the good works of Aregbesola.
“Omisore is my personal friend,” the former Abia State Governor declared point blank. He drew a deafening applause from the crowd. I am still a member of the Peoples Democratic Party, but what I have heard and seen about your governor made me to come out in the open to support good work. Iyiola Omisore is personal friend of mine, but I will always say the truth. Few days that I have spent here and the way his people talked about him truly showed that governor Aregbesola deserves another term to complete that good work that the Lord has used him to start during his first term.”
Of course, it was a platform to reel out the various achievements of the current administration in the areas of education, health, agriculture, roads and other infrastructure, tourism, security and job creations.
“The governor seems to have a good grasp of what it takes to hold a people together,” said Musliudeen Tijani Adekilekun, a Pharmacist based in Birmingham United Kingdom who hails from Ede and is eyeing a seat in the Federal House of Representatives for the Ede South/Ede North/Egbedore/Ejigbo Federal Constituency.
Adekilekun’s assessment of the exercise is that it brings together almost all the stakeholders in the polity “in a way that no section of the society is left out of the vehicle for mass mobilization. Women, children, old and young have one reason or the other to want to follow him,” Adekilekun said.
Comrade Biyi Odunlade, who has the responsibility for organizing the event, considers the Walk-to-Live one of the most important assignments he had handled in his entire career.
“It is one assignment that tasks one’s sense of organization, concentration and cooperation,” said Odunlade. To Odunlade, an Ife-born politician, the need to conscious of the dual purposes the event serves places major responsibility for ensuring success.
“Every edition of the programme is to me a major tool for making our people live a better, healthier live. And at the same time, the fact is not lost on us that Walk-to-Live has assumed a life of its own as a catalyst for mobilization. I think we are not failing in those major regards,” Odunlade said.
DAILY INDEPENDENT

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Abattoir – 1

PHOTOS from the Turning of Sod Ceremony for the Construction of Ultra Modern Central Abattoir in
Osogbo, State of Osun on Wednesday 15-04-2014

From left, Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Managing Director, Hanfriqul Nigeria Limited, Alhaji Kolawole Aresa and Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Security, Mr Wale Adedoyin, during the Turning of Sod Ceremony for the Construction of Ultra Modern Central Abattoir in Osogbo, State of Osun on Wednesday 15-04-2014

From left, Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Managing
Director, Hanfriqul Nigeria Limited, Alhaji Kolawole Aresa and Commissioner
for Agriculture and Food Security, Mr Wale Adedoyin, during the Turning of
Sod Ceremony for the Construction of Ultra Modern Central Abattoir in
Osogbo, State of Osun on Wednesday 15-04-2014

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (2nd left) laying foundation for the Construction of an Ultra Modern Central Abattoir in Osogbo, State of Osun on Wednesday 15-04-2014. With him are, his Deputy, Mrs Titi Laoye-Tomori (3rd left); Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Security, Mr Wale Adedoyin (4th left); Managing Director, Hanfriqul Nigeria Limited, Alhaji Kolawole Aresa (left); Sub-Consultant, Hanfriqul Nigeria Limited, Mr Dapo Ademosu (5th left) and others.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (2nd left) laying foundation
for the Construction of an Ultra Modern Central Abattoir in Osogbo, State
of Osun on Wednesday 15-04-2014. With him are, his Deputy, Mrs Titi
Laoye-Tomori (3rd left); Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Security, Mr
Wale Adedoyin (4th left); Managing Director, Hanfriqul Nigeria Limited,
Alhaji Kolawole Aresa (left); Sub-Consultant, Hanfriqul Nigeria Limited, Mr
Dapo Ademosu (5th left) and others.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (left) laying foundation for the Construction of an Ultra Modern Central Abattoir in Osogbo, State of Osun on Wednesday 15-04-2014. With him are, his Deputy, Mrs Titi Laoye-Tomori (2nd left); Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Security, Mr Wale Adedoyin (3rd left); Sub-Consultant, Hanfriqul Nigeria Limited, Mr Dapo Ademosu (4th left) and others.

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (left) laying foundation for
the Construction of an Ultra Modern Central Abattoir in Osogbo, State of
Osun on Wednesday 15-04-2014. With him are, his Deputy, Mrs Titi Laoye-Tomori
(2nd left); Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Security, Mr Wale
Adedoyin (3rd left); Sub-Consultant, Hanfriqul Nigeria Limited, Mr Dapo
Ademosu (4th left) and others.

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10.5m Out-Of-School Children: Raising Enrolment Through Free Meals

10.5m out-of-school children: Raising enrolment through free meals
Home Grown School Feeding and Health Programme (HGSFHP), launched in 13 states as a pilot project in 2005, was designed by the Federal Government to, among other things, address the high rate of out-of-school children. Since then, only Osun State could carry on, writes MOJEED ALABI tweet

Eight-year-old Isola Adam and his six-year-old sister, Opeyemi Adam, had never been to school. They had lived with their grandmother in the remote village of Aaje in Orolu Local Government Area of Osun State, where their mother had taken them to after their father’s death.
Their mother, Mrs Juliana Adam, is one of the labourers standing every morning at Railway Line at Old Garage area of Osogbo, to be picked up by bricklayers in need of daily workers.
She lost her husband, a commercial bus driver, barely four years into their marriage; and since then, life has been very difficult for her. Hence, the decision to take the children to her mother in the village so that she could face life challenges alone.
However, with the modified school feeding project in public primary schools in the state, Adam had brought her two children to town and enrolled them in Grade 1 at the St. Michael Elementary School, Agowande, Osogbo. Similarly, Ilias Sarafa, upon the completion of his participation in the mandatory National Youth Service Scheme (NYSC), recently visited his hometown, Ilobu, in Irepodun Local Government Area of the state. He had made the unscheduled visit to his siblings who were schooling at home since their parents live in Ondo State where they are engaged in farming. But what Sarafa found out surprised him.
“I had some money on me when I visited them and I was afraid I might not be able to meet their needs because I expected them to have exhausted their foodstuffs and pocket money. But I was surprised to see them looking well-fed while also attending to their homework without being prodded.
“Even their kerosene was not exhausted, and their elder brother, who is in secondary school, said the food being served his three younger ones who attend Ansar-U-Deen Elementary School, Laaro, had sustained them. He said sometimes, when they could not finish their food in school, they bring the rest home,” Sarafa explained.
The story is the same in Ile-Ife, where 10-year-old Daniel Temitope was withdrawn from a private school in Abakaliki, the Ebonyi State capital and was enrolled at Baptist Central Elementary School, Ilare, Ile-Ife, because his parents felt children of their neighbours attending the public school in the town were doing well.
Daniel, who was in Primary IV in Abakaliki, was placed in Grade II in Ile-Ife, when he could not pass the test conducted for him to be admitted. Asked what his opinion was about the new school, Daniel said; “They give us food here and they don’t teach us in Pidgin English.”
In all the state’s primary schools, especially in the rural communities of Kuta, Ile-Ogbo, Oba-Oke, Obaagun, Ogbaagba, Ifon-Osun, among others, investigation revealed astronomical increase in primary school enrolment; the development was predicated on the state’s food project, which has been rechristened Osun Elementary School Feeding and Health Programme (O’Meal).
According to the deputy governor, who doubles as the Commissioner for Education, Otunba Grace Laoye-Tomori, the education summit organised in 2011 and chaired by the Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, formed the basis upon which the investment in education stands, especially the repackaging of the school feeding project.
She said: “When we assumed office in 2010, what we found the kids being fed with was not attractive to us.
“Apart from the cocoa drink which was very good, the food wasn’t rich enough and to address that, we asked nutritionists and dieticians from the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife and the Osun State University, for professional recommendations on food that will be ideal for children in their formative years.
“That was meant to address the stunted growth we discovered among the kids, especially those in the rural areas and recommended were foods with carbohydrates, protein and fruits on a daily basis.
“Apart from feeding them, we also dewormed them every six months. Statistics as at the end of July 2013 showed that on a weekly basis, we use 15,000 chicken; 7,800 crates of eggs, 400 tons of fresh fish and we also slaughter 35 heads of cattle for them. “So we spend N14.9 million on the school feeding project on a daily basis.” According to her, the government now spends N3.6 billion annually.
Investigation also revealed that the effort is already yielding results, especially in the areas of reduction in hunger among the children; improvement in their nutritional status; increase in school enrollment, attendance and retention in the classroom. All these measures, the state government said were aimed at achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Investigation also showed that the programme, which started across the state’s 1,378 primary schools on April 30, 2012, with 155,318 pupils, increased enrolment by almost 25 per cent within a month.
By May of that year, the figure had increased to 194,258; a total of 38,000 pupils had been rescued from the streets.UNESCO’s report of January 2012 stated that Osun was the second state with the highest number of out-ofschool children in the South-West with Lagos, Ogun, Ondo and Ekiti states clearly ahead. But by July 2013, report of the National Bureau of Statistics recorded that Osun has the highest figure of primary school enrolment. Confirming the situation, a class teacher at Saint Michael Elementary School, Mrs Fasilat Ajiboye, told New Telegraph that the enrolment in her class at the beginning of the session was 40, but by the third week, it increased to 50. “As you can see, those pupils who are not putting on their school uniform are some of the pupils just admitted and that is because they have not been allocated their uniform, since it is given free by the state,” Ajiboye said. Similarly, one of the cooks, Mrs Eyinade Adebisi, said the initiative had helped the pupils greatly. According to her, on Wednesdays, when eggs are served on rice, the pupils eagerly look forward to their lunch time. “For us too, we are enjoying it. When we cook for the pupils on weekdays, we also work as caterers on weekends and that brings us extra money,” Adebisi said.
The former Minister of Education, Prof. Chinwe Obaji, during whose tenure the school feeding project was introduced, said the idea was in realisation of the central role of nutrition to education. According to Obaji, that informed the partnership with the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD), World Food Programme (WFP), United Nations International Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and other International Development Partners (IDPs) to initiate it. Apart from resolving hunger crisis among children, retention in class, and other benefits, the former minister told New Telegraph that the initiative was also meant to promote local agriculture that benefits rural farmers by using locally-sourced foods, providing regular orders and a reliable income for local farmers. True to Obaji’s claim is the situation in Osun, where a total of 3,007 women were appointed as food vendors by the state, and 1,000 farmers drawn from across the nine federal constituencies of the state were assisted to plant red cocoyam. The red cocoyam, nutritionists advised the state government, is more appropriate for the kids than other types of yam. According to the Operation Officer of O’Meal, Mrs Olubunmi Ayoola, about 90 women farmers were recently trained in modern method of cultivating cocoyam and were offered financial support after their graduation to commence their farming job.Ayoola added that the eggs being produced in the state were no longer enough for the supply required to feed the kids and that the state had also encouraged farmers to bring their products for the ready-made market. She said: “To further enhance this programme, the governor recently signed the Osun State Elementary School Feeding Transition Strategy Plan document with the representatives of the Board of the Partnership for Child Development (PCD) of the United Kingdom.”
The development, Obaji said, was what the Federal Government had targeted when it introduced the project in the 13 states selected from the six geo-political zones and Abuja in 2005 on a pilot scheme. They are Bauchi, Cross River, Enugu, Imo, Kano, Kebbi, Kogi, Rivers, Ogun, Osun, Nasarawa and Yobe states. “I am very sure if the other states had not backed out, the same effects being experienced in Osun now would have been recorded in all the other states, and the case of the 10.5 million out-of-school-children would not have arisen at all. “That may have also helped in curbing the insurrection currently being experienced in some northern states, because I could remember Yobe in particular was added then,” Obaji said. To justify the importance of food to education, a recent visit by our correspondent to Makoko, a slum in Lagos, revealed a countless number of children who claimed they had never been to school because they hawk for their parents. Ayomide Muka is a 12-year-old girl and only child of his mother, who said she was not allowed to attend school because she had to take fish to Agege market every day. “My mother will not allow me to go to school because she says I must work for what I would eat,” Muka said.
But according to the former Dean of the Postgraduate College, University of Lagos, Akoka, Prof. Aloy Ejiogu, nations with the best education policies do not toy with the quality of education offered in their basic schools, regarded as the foundation of learning. Ejiogu, who cited Finland, United States of America and India as nations where educational revolution had tak- Sanctity of Truth Tuesday, My mother will not allow me to go to school because she says I must work for what I would eat Obaji Ayoola Atinmo Ejiogu Aregbesola Laoye-Tomori UNESCO’s report of January 2012 stated that Osun was the second state with the highest number of out-of school children in the South-West with Lagos, Ogun, Ondo and Ekiti states clearly ahead. But by July 2013, report of the National Bureau of Statistics recorded that Osun has the highest figure of primary school enrolment.
Confirming the situation, a class teacher at Saint Michael Elementary School, Mrs Fasilat Ajiboye, told New Telegraph that the enrolment in her class at the beginning of the session was 40, but by the third week, it increased to 50.
“As you can see, those pupils who are not putting on their school uniform are some of the pupils just admitted and that is because they have not been allocated their uniform, since it is given free by the state,” Ajiboye said. Similarly, one of the cooks, Mrs Eyinade Adebisi, said the initiative had helped the pupils greatly.
According to her, on Wednesdays, when eggs are served on rice, the pupils eagerly look forward to their lunch time. “For us too, we are enjoying it. When we cook for the pupils on weekdays, we also work as caterers on weekends and that brings us extra money,” Adebisi said.
The former Minister of Education, Prof. Chinwe Obaji, during whose tenure the school feeding project was introduced, said the idea was in realisation of the central role of nutrition to education.
According to Obaji, that informed the partnership with the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD), World Food Programme (WFP), United Nations International Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and other International Development Partners (IDPs) to initiate it.
Apart from resolving hunger crisis among children, retention in class, and other benefits, the former minister told New Telegraph that the initiative was also meant to promote local agriculture that benefits rural farmers by using locally-sourced foods, providing regular orders and a reliable income for local farmers.
True to Obaji’s claim is the situation in Osun, where a total of 3,007 women were appointed as food vendors by the state, and 1,000 farmers drawn from across the nine federal constituencies of the state were assisted to plant red cocoyam. The red cocoyam, nutritionists advised the state government, is more appropriate for the kids than other types of yam.
According to the Operation Officer of O’Meal, Mrs Olubunmi Ayoola, about 90 women farmers were recently trained in modern method of cultivating cocoyam and were offered financial support after their graduation to commence their farming job. en place, said the school feeding projects had helped in no small measure to achieve such feat.
Also, the President, Federation of African Nutrition Societies, Prof. Tola Atinmo, said the school lunch programme had been in place in the United States as far back as 1946, saying the initiative had helped the country greatly.
Atinmo, who was part of a training programme on nutrition for school teachers in Lagos recently, advised teachers to encourage parents to always provide for their wards.
Commenting on the danger of neglecting children, the Executive Secretary of Lygel Youths and Leadership Initiatives, an Abuja-based non-governmental organisation, Mr Olalekan Oladapo, said it was unfortunate that in the midst of widespread corruption staring Nigerians in the face, many states could not introduce school feeding project on account of funding challenge.
Oladapo said his organisation would not hesitate to sue government, both at the federal and state levels, to ensure the initiative in Osun was emulated.
He said: “We need to encourage these kids to go to school these days, especially with the high rate of unemployment in the country.”
 
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Free Train

Free Train
In its continued effort to make life meaningful and abundant for the people, the Government of Osun says its free Easter train service will begin on Good Friday.‎
A statement by the Commissioner for Commerce, Cooperatives an Empowerment, Mr. Ismail Jayeoba Alagbada, said the first train would take off from Iddo Terminus in Lagos to Osogbo by 10AM. on Friday.
The service, he added, would allow indigenes and people living in Osun and it’s environs to come home and celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ with their families and loved one. ‎
Alagbada noted that the last round of the trip would be on Easter Monday when passengers would return from Osogbo to Lagos by 11AM.‎
According to him, the gesture is in line with Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s administration initiative to make life better for the people of the state.
He said, “The government of Aregbesola is a people-friendly government, a government totally committed to unlocking the latent potential in our people.
“For the fourth year running, free train ride has become a tradition in the state, particularly during festive periods.
“I want to use this opportunity to urge our people to grab this unique opportunity provided by the governor and join the ride to spend your Easter holiday in Osun where you stand the chance to get closer to the most endowed tourist land in the South West.”
The free train initiative is to convey indigenes of the state from Lagos and some cities in the South- West to and from Osogbo during festive seasons‎

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