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CAN & Imams – 1

Photos from the Solidarity Visit by Muslims and Christians Leaders in Ife South Local Government areas to the Governor in Osogbo, State of Osun on Thursday 10-04-2014

From right, Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) Ife South Local Government Area, Pastor John Oladimeji and President, League of Imams and Alfas, Ife South LGA, Alhaji Soliu Alesinloye, during a Solidarity Visit by Muslimss and Christians Leaders in Ife South Local Government areas to the Governor in Osogbo, State of Osun on Thursday 10-04-2014

From right, Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) Ife South Local Government Area, Pastor John Oladimeji and President, League of Imams and Alfas, Ife South LGA, Alhaji Soliu Alesinloye, during a Solidarity Visit by Muslims and Christians Leaders in Ife South Local Government areas to the Governor in Osogbo, State of Osun on Thursday 10-04-2014

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (centre); Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) Ife South Local Government Area, Pastor John Oladimeji (2nd right); President, League of Imams and Alfas, Ife South LGA, Alhaji Soliu Alesinloye (2nd left); Coordinator, Quick Impact Intervention Project (QIIP), Mr Dele Ogundipe (right); Chief Imam, Mefoworade Ife South, Alhaji Lukman Arowolo (left) and others, during a Solidarity Visit by Muslimss and Christians Leaders in Ife South Local Government areas to the Governor in Osogbo, State of Osun on Thursday 10-04-2014

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (centre); Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) Ife South Local Government Area, Pastor John Oladimeji (2nd right); President, League of Imams and Alfas, Ife South LGA, Alhaji Soliu Alesinloye (2nd left); Coordinator, Quick Impact Intervention Project (QIIP), Mr Dele Ogundipe (right); Chief Imam, Mefoworade Ife South, Alhaji Lukman Arowolo (left) and others, during a Solidarity Visit by Muslims and Christians Leaders in Ife South Local Government areas to the Governor in Osogbo, State of Osun on Thursday 10-04-2014

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (4th left); Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) Ife South Local Government Area, Pastor John Oladimeji (5th right); President, League of Imams and Alfas, Ife South LGA, Alhaji Soliu Alesinloye (3rd left); Coordinator, Quick Impact Intervention Project (QIIP), Mr Dele Ogundipe (4th right); Chief Imam, Mefoworade Ife South LGA, Alhaji Lukman Arowolo (2nd left); Reverend Wale Olanrewaju (2nd right); Chief Imam Isale-Ife, Ife South, Mallam Azeez Sikirullahi (3rd right) and others, during a Solidarity Visit by Muslimss and Christians Leaders in Ife South Local Government areas to the Governor in Osogbo, State of Osun on Thursday 10-04-2014

Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (4th left); Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) Ife South Local Government Area, Pastor John Oladimeji (5th right); President, League of Imams and Alfas, Ife South LGA, Alhaji Soliu Alesinloye (3rd left); Coordinator, Quick Impact Intervention Project (QIIP), Mr Dele Ogundipe (4th right); Chief Imam, Mefoworade Ife South LGA, Alhaji Lukman Arowolo (2nd left); Reverend Wale Olanrewaju (2nd right); Chief Imam Isale-Ife, Ife South, Mallam Azeez Sikirullahi (3rd right) and others, during a Solidarity Visit by Muslims and Christians Leaders in Ife South Local Government areas to the Governor in Osogbo, State of Osun on Thursday 10-04-2014

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Ede-ruler

Ede-rulerThe Timi of Ede, Oba Munirudeen Adesola Lawal, Laminisa I, has enjoined the Osun State government to sustain its zero tolerance for environmental degradation to flood and other environmental disaster in the state.
Oba Lawal stated this during the bi-weekly market environmental sanitation exercise, last Thursday, supervised by the wife of the state governor, Alhaja Sherifat Aregbesola, in Ede.
The traditional ruler, who noted that the bi-monthly sanitation introduced by the present administration in the state had inculcated virtue of cleanliness in them, charged government to intensify its campaign against unwholesome environmental practices in the state.
Addressing market women, Alhaja Aregbesola, who is also the Ambassador of Community Lead Total Sanitation (CLTS), urged them to always keep their environment clean and ensure day-to-day sanitation in their markets to free the state from all forms of communicable diseases.
Alhaja Aregbesola, who emphasised the need for people of the state to imbibe culture of washing their hands with water and soap, maintained that the state would not relent in its efforts of sustaining zero tolerance for open defecation.
She called for collaboration of all stakeholders in the state in the task of promoting hygienic environment so as to improve standard of living of the citizenry.
She also expressed satisfaction over the commitment of market women to the sanitation exercise, saying that women had demonstrated that they were fully keyed into environmental programmes and policies of the present administration in the state.
BIOREPORTS

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Ekiti, Osun Elections: Litmus Test For Jega

As Ekiti and Osun gubernatorial elections draw nearer by the day it’s important to continue to hammer it home for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Professor Attahiru Jega and his Commission the need for free, fair and credible polls in these two states.
This call becomes very imperative in view of the credibility problem the Commission suffers from owing to the wishy-washy manner it conducted the Anambra state gubernatorial election last year November which made the outcome of that election unacceptable to the people.
The whole world knew what happened in the case of Anambra where INEC wobbled and fumbled in the conduct of the election of just a single state and ever since that poor outing the body has not gotten opportunity to redeem her battered image. Thus for people to rebuild the confidence they had in the Commission for her impressive showing in the conduct of the 2011 general elections the coming elections in Ekiti and Osun offer the Commission a great opportunity which it cannot afford to bungle.
No doubt the eyes of the whole world are set on the coming gubernatorial elections in these two states and surely for INEC the elections will prove to be a litmus test having come out with a soiled image from the Anambra gubernatorial election. This is the reason the Commission cannot afford to fail. In these two states INEC must work hard and be sincere enough to meet the expectations of the people apropos delivery of credible election results.
And it’s important to stress it here again that the process of having a free, fair and credible election starts with a credible Voters Register. Without a credible VR then any intended election is doomed. Professor Jega’s INEC must not forget that it failed to meet the expectations of the people in the case of the Anambra governorship poll due to the irregularities in the VR of that state.
Therefore to avoid a repeat of the failure  the Commission recorded in Anambra it must correct all irregularities in the VRs of Ekiti and Osun before the commencement of the elections because presently, there are complaints about irregularities in the Voters Registers of these two states. And let INEC not believe that it has much time. Of course it will be erroneous to hold such an opinion because these coming two elections are just a stone throw away in term of time; the reason why the Commission must waste no time in correcting whatever anomalies in the VRs of these states.
Two reasons are important for mention why Professor Jega cannot afford to fail in the elections of these two states. For one these elections provide opportunity for the respected Professor not only to redeem his Commission’s image but his own image too which has been negatively affected by the shoddy manner his lieutenants conducted the Anambra governorship poll. The way the coming elections are conducted will go a long way in determining Professor Jega’s and his INEC’s future. It will determine whether Nigerians will still trust him to conduct the 2015 general elections.
For the reason above Jega must ensure the credibility of these coming two elections. He must not only ensure a level playing field for all the participating political parties in the would-be-elections, he must be seen to do so. And the second reason why Jega cannot afford to disappoint the people is also because of the volatile nature of these two states. Thus any attempt by INEC to fumble in the conduct of any of the coming two elections then it will surely lead to people’s revolt with dire consequences for the nation.
And it’s a good thing that Professor Jega – in his characteristic candour – having owned to the shortcomings of his Commission in the conduct of the Anambra governorship poll, has also promised to deliver free and fair elections in these two states. Thus the whole world is looking up to him to make good his promise. Therefore the onus is on him to deliver on his promise if he still wants the people to have confidence in him. And he needs it. He needs to rebuild people’s confidence in him like the situation was before the Anambra shabby experience.
I will not complete this piece without appreciating Professor Attahiru Jega’s admission of deficiency in the handling of Anambra governorship election by his Commission. I think his humility, sense of candour and sense of responsibility deserve to be applauded. For this is about the first time in the annals of this country that a personage – at that leadership level – would come out to admit failure on the part of his Commission.
With that Jega has proven to be a good example which our other leaders must learn to emulate. As humans we are bound to make mistakes because we are not perfect. Thus when mistakes occur and we own to it it’s not cowardice; it’s a mark of courage. For it takes courage and humility to admit one’s mistake. But to pose contrariwise is to arrogate the quality of infallibility to one’s self and this is arrogance. Of course infallibility exclusively belongs to God.
Thus unlike his predecessor who conducted the worst elections in this country and still had the audacity to be boasting around that he gave the country the best elections, Professor Jega deserves a pat on the back for summoning the courage to say the truth on the Anambra election even though people had expected him to cancel that election outrightly and organise a fresh one.
Finally, since Jega stood his ground in the case of Anambra that the errors associated with the election were not substantial enough to warrant total cancellation and as he preferred to order fresh elections only in the affected areas, then the coming Ekiti and osun elections offer him and his Commission a great opportunity to prove to the world that truly, the Anambra experience was a correctable human error. Whether Jega ‘s INEC will correct the error or repeat the same mistake, Ekiti and Osun will tell.
DAILY INDEPENDENT

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OSUN COMMENCES CONSTRUCTION OF MODERN ABATTOIRS, SAYS JOBS WILL BE CREATED

In its continued efforts to make life meaningful and create wealth for the people of Osun, the governor of the State, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola will on Friday turn the sod of a modern Abattoir in Iwo.
In a statement by the Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Security, Mr. Wale Adedoyin, pointed out that the modern abattoirs which will be located in Ile-Ife, Ilesha and Osogbo will create more jobs and wealth for the people of the state.

He added that the abattoir is a semi-motorized Modern one with facilities to slaughter, process, store meat and meat products from Cattle, Sheep and Goats.
The Commissioner also noted that, the Abattoir in Osogbo and Ilesa will have Capacity to handle 300 heads of Animals per day, expandable to 500 heads per day.
He stressed that the Abattoir to be built in Iwo and Ile-Ife will have the capacity to handle 200 heads expandable to 400 heads per day, with a time of completion put at 18months.
According to him, “the administration of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola is committed to improving the commerce of the state, this is a government of the the people with a priority of making life more abundant for the people.
“These projects when completed will in no small measure reduce the health risks that the kind of Abattoirs that we have before now.”
BIOREPORTS

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Commissioning of AUD – 2b-1

 State of Osun on Thursday 13-03-2014
OTUNBA Lai Oyetundan is the chairman Osun State Schools Infrastructure Development Committee. In this interview, he speaks on the controversy trailing the policy and the impact it has made so far. Excerpts:
WOULD you say the reclassification programme has addressed the perceived ills in the education sector in Osun state?
The reclassification is one of the series of policy options adopted by the government to address perceived ills. There are so many aspects to the ills. To a group of people who needed quality education, what we had was non existent, the system had been left to rot and the result of course, reflected the rot. We were not getting satisfactory results.
Results from internal and external exams, indicated less than three percent pass rate. That cannot be acceptable and could not have been ignored by any responsible government. What to do therefore, depends on policy options adopted by the government to revamp the sector. What we call reclassification is a matter of a way to address the pupils report  in the morning for their schooling.
What we have done with the reclassification is to reclassify the students into three broad age groups, which are the elementary group, middle school and the final year of secondary education. That is the totality of reclassification. How does that age grouping affect anybody? It does not offend anybody because it has scientific background and rationale.
Do you really need reclassification to reform the sector?
Do we really need to do anything at all? Should we have left it the way it was and continue to do the maintenance approach that we said had not been yielding the same result? Don’t forget that reclassification is just one of several things we are doing but it underlines a broad scope of the measures we have taken.
The research and consultations left us with very little options than a very drastic approach to do what we are doing. We are not just building schools. We first of all addressed the needs of the pupils, who have become disinterested in schooling.
They had become disillusioned and their moral had gone so far down that going to school was not just as important as we took it in our time. We had to motivate the students. Again, you must realize the environment which we are operating.
So, you cannot look at what we are doing in isolation but through a spectrum of a responsible government and a leadership that has demonstrated keen interest in the welfare of the man on the street. The children’s needs were addressed, we gave them uniforms free of charge. We also fed them which cost the state government N2 billion annually. These were actions taken.
In looking at what we are doing, it is a sectoral approach that is meant to remove those clips in the smoothness of the system. If the student is motivated and is prepared to learn, if the teacher is motivated and he or she is prepared to teach, what of the environment?
The environment we had, was a scandal. When teachers leave school by 2 pm, the environment is taken over by the undesirables. It was totally unacceptable. So we needed to do something about the environment too, so that all the ingredients and elements of the system will be addressed. That is the rational behind it.
So far would you say the impact has been felt?
We must understand the depth of what has been happening and it does not just happen over night because the rot we are talking about did not just happen over night, it was a negative decline over time. What this government has done is to address the society and not just education.
Already, performance has gone up from less than five per cent to well over 45 percent in just two years of addressing the education sector but it is bound to improve further. The objective of what we are doing is to transform our school system to conform with modern thinking and rank among the best in class and international best practices.
How far has the State government gone in dialoging with or convincing those opposed to this school reclassification programme?
Change is always accompanied with some elements of opposition even from those who will benefit from the change because of the latent fear of what change portends.
We recognise this and apart from those with vested interest, is there any rational for anybody to oppose the reclassification programme? Let us be fair to ourselves, there is really no opposition to reclassification. The churches are not opposed to it, the mosques are not opposed to it, the teachers are not opposed to it and our people are not opposed to it.
But there are those who must have something to flog for their own selfish political reasons. We know they exist but I am more concerned about the larger society that has adopted it.
The change we are looking at is a systemic change, it does not stay in one place because we will continue to tinker with the system all the time. We have said that we want our system to conform with modern thinking.
VANGUARD

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OPINION: Aregbesola’s Many Deserved Merit Awards

Man-of-the-Year Award bestowed on Governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf AregbesolaKINDLY permit me to air my opinion on the burning issue above-stated in your medium, which we trust and respect so much as ours; and which we pride as the instrument for wresting our society out of the vicious grip of self-seeking, callous self-styled leaders.
I strongly believe that we should also be committed to bringing to the fore, the good qualities of our own leaders and get them well appreciated during their lifetime, rather than celebrating them posthumously.
We have seen governments and administrations in the State of Osun. Lots of them have come and gone within the space of almost twenty-three years that it had been created. We have seen military administrators; governors and helmsmen of sorts – called by whatever names – govern the state one after the other.
We have seen deceivers in their grand designs jostling and gallivanting around for awards and decorations while their uneventful days in office lasted. At the end of it all, the state stood at a level that was below zero as at the Year 2010 – nineteen good years into its creation!
Then, came on board the great emancipator, Ogbeni Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola! He would have come without pomp and pageantry usually associated with such emergence in most places, but the long legal tussle, which snowballed into his ascendancy, compelled wild jubilations, that at last, the state had shaken itself out of the grip of its captors, who held her hostage for many years.
Unlike many Nigerians, who had once found themselves in similar situations, Aregbesola was not overtaken with euphoria of victory. He instantly swung into action; rolling out his programmes, policies and projects meticulously one after the other as promised. From the inception of his administration till date, there had not been a dull moment. The governor himself is full of life, action, motion and activity.
At the beginning, he set aside all attempts by groups and corporate organizations to bestow awards on him. His reason was that he had to wait till achievements began to trail his strides. Those achievements were not slow in coming. Barely 100 days into his administration, Aregbesola had succeeded where many in his position had failed woefully in donkey years! He empowered 20,000 unemployed graduate youths as first batch of the State of Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (O’YES).
Today, the second batch of the scheme is almost approaching its mid-term period. Not only this, strings of achievements trailed Aregbesola in all sectors of life; Education, Health, Agriculture, Commerce and Industry, Transport, Human Resource and Infrastructure. Today, the State of Osun has been so radically transformed that someone, who had left its shores since times preceding the governor’s coming on board would now need a guide to tour the state, as virtually everything has changed for better.
There is therefore little or no need to rationalize the recent streams of awards coming to this great achiever. He did not jostle or crave for them; he simply earned them. If a national newspapers in the line of credibility of Daily Independent could confer an award on a governor; if the dreaded Independent Corrupt, Economic Practices and Related Offences Commission (ICPC) could award a serving governor; if the British House of Lords could be panting after a man’s well of knowledge; if, to cut the long story short, the overwhelming majority of the people who are subjects in a state could be raining prayers on a governor for his quality service to the people; then what explanations do we wait for?
What am I saying? By his strings of achievements, Aregbesola deserves to be awarded and honoured ten thousand times over. I give kudos to this quintessential Man of the People, recently decked with “Man of the Year 2013” Award. I however charge him and pray for him not to relent in his service dispensation to the people. I also advise the people to give him the best of their support and cooperation and translate this into vote, more so that another round of Governorship Elections is approaching in the State of Osun. This is the only way we can keep the good work going.
Osun a dara o.
DEJO DARAMOLA, Tinumola Estate, Osogbo, State of Osun
OSUN DEFENDEER

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Call Minister To Order, Osun Speaker Urges

Osun State House of Assembly Speaker Najeem Salaam has urged the National Assembly to call the Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan, to order.
Salaam alleged that Adesiyan perpetrated illegalities during the voter registration, adding that the minister “was on a mission to destroy the peace in the state”.
In a statement by his media aide, Mr. Goke Butika, Salaam said: “Public office is meant for public service and public good, not brigandage and brutalisation of defenseless citizens. Adesiyan’s misconduct suggests a hidden agenda that cannot be divorced from violence for rigging. It is imperative for the National Assembly to call the power drunk minister to order.”
He condemned the alleged assault on the first democratically elected governor of the state, Alhaji Isiaka Adeleke, by the minister, describing it as “a bad signal for the August 9 governorship poll”.
The Speaker said he got reports of how Adesiyan allegedly moved from one constituency to the other, using policemen and thugs to scare away registered voters from some polling booths in Ila, Ipetu-Ijesa, Ife, Ayedaade and Ifedayo.
THE NATION

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UNDERSTANDING OSUN POLITICS, BY NIYI AKINNASO

One major problem with many a reporter is the tendency to exaggerate or even concoct facts in the struggle for exclusivity in reporting a story. Jayson Blair, who was forced to resign from The New York Times in May 2003 was such a reporter. In a subsequent lengthy article by a team of Time’s journalists, it was revealed that “He fabricated comments. He concocted scenes. He lifted material from other newspapers and wire services. He selected details from photographs to create the impression he had been somewhere or seen someone, when he had not” (The New York Times, May 11, 2013).
Another problem is the tendency to develop a sensational, and often misleading, caption for a story in order to capture the readers’ attention. Such was the case with many newspaper reports of the theft of Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s mobile phone in 2013 in which attention was drawn to the wrong quarters. The two problems I just identified detract from the noble journalistic purposes of informing and educating the public, while also putting the government on its toes. And they should be discouraged.
Yet, these are among the problems that pervade newspaper reports about contemporary Osun politics, featuring Aregbesola and his development projects in the state. A further disadvantage of distorted reports is in generating misleading data upon which arm-chair commentators base their opinion. As I read hundreds of reports, commentaries, and editorials on Aregbesola and Osun politics in the last three years, my mind often decided to investigate the facts. In what follows, I share some of my findings with the public.
Osun’s demography and political divisions are particularly interesting, and they should be understood before dabbling in the state’s politics. Although 28th out of 36 states in land size, Osun is 17th in population at about 3.5 million. Curiously, although smaller in size and population than Ondo, Osun has 30 Local Government Areas, whereas Ondo has only 18. While the relatively large number of LGAs may be useful in bringing the government closer to the people, it is a disadvantage when it comes to overhead costs, especially in the light of Osun’s limited resources.
The religious composition of Osun is even more interesting, featuring a predominant Muslim population; a minority Christian population; and a dwindling population of traditionalists affiliated with Ifa, Osun, and other deities. A unique feature of Christianity in the state is the early presence of the major denominations, notably, Baptist, Methodist, and Anglican, and the emergence of Evangelical Churches, with the Christ Apostolic Church in the forefront. No wonder then that Osun is the natal home of many contemporary religious leaders in the country, including Pastor Enoch Adeboye, the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, and Pastor William Kumuyi, the Founder and General Superintendent of the Deeper Life Bible Church.
Worshippers of Traditional Religion are not left out either. The Osun Osogbo Grove, declared a World Heritage Site in 2005, attracts worshippers and tourists from all over the world every August, during the annual rites of the Osun deity. Anthropological research also reveals that there are renowned Ifa priests across the state, especially at Ife, Ede, and Osogbo. Although despised by Christians, Muslims, and modernists, these traditionalists are prime custodians of Yoruba tradition. Osun also has a significant share of old settlements, such as Ile-Ife, Ede, and Ila-Orangun, which have played a major role in Yoruba history.
The intersections among history, culture, religion, and politics have been a feature of Osun social life since the inception of the state in 1991. The more a government seeks to reach more people and areas of social life, the more controversy is generated along various social cleavages. This is particularly true of the religious divide between Muslims and Christians. It is a divide that political opponents often exploit and to which Aregbesola has fallen victim on various occasions
Two recent examples of the political exploitation of religion by critics and opponents are Aregbesola’s plan to build an inter-denominational worship centre and the orchestrated uniform crisis at the Baptist High School, Iwo. In both cases, the real issues were sidetracked. No one wanted to recognise the commercialisation of religion in Nigeria, and the need for Osun to seek economic benefits from building a worship centre that would attract thousands of buyers and sellers to the state. The real issue must be with Aregbesola. Aregbesola is building a worship centre only to placate Christians who are purportedly displeased with his educational policy. He must be taught about the separation of Church and State. We must take religion out of schools. We must stop Aregbesola from Islamising Osun. All bombastic statements of no consequence.
What about the educational policy that created the context for the uniform crisis? Well, religion is still the story, because it was the hijab worn by some female students that led others to wear their own religious insignia; it doesn’t even matter if only a handful of students were involved in a student population of 2,500. And it doesn’t matter if the crisis was so localised that it only happened in one school!
In the ensuing discussion about the uniform crisis, the education policy that gave rise to the uniform was ignored. Who cares about educational policy anyway? I remember the response given by someone, who claimed to know Osun very well, when asked to describe aspects of Aregbesola’s educational policy he knew well. He gave a one-word answer: Hijab. The response highlights the sensationalisation of hijab in news stories about the ongoing educational reform in the state. I consider this very unfortunate, given how much I know about the policy and how well it reflects best practices in advanced countries to which the elite send their children for training.
The good thing, though, is that the policy is working, because it is an excellent one. Elementary school kids in the state are fed every school day. The first batch of Opon Imo went to final year High School students, who are graduating soon. Incentives and capacity building for teachers over a 4-year period have resulted in a dramatic improvement in the School Leaving Certificate Exams. Four years ago, only about seven per cent of High School students in the state had five credits, including English and Mathematics. Today, it is 47 per cent. This figure should improve when the ongoing reforms kick in fully.
Another aspect of the educational reform that has eluded discussion is what I call “collateral” . First, the plan to build 100 Elementary, 50 Middle, and 20 High Schools is an employment booster for the next few years. Already, many families are being sustained by the ongoing construction of these schools across the state. So far, 14 Elementary, 15 Middle, and two High Schools have been completed.
Second, the policy of providing lunch for all Osun schoolchildren in Elementary Grades 1-4 has led to the employment of over 3,000 food vendors across the state. Each one was given an interest-free loan to purchase necessary equipment and empowered to also cater for profit in their localities. Moreover, thousands of farmers were provided with loans for poultry farming, while interested youths were empowered for fish farming.
Third, the school uniform policy led to the establishment of a garment factory, which now employs hundreds of youths from across the state. Viewed from the perspective of employment generation alone, Aregbesola’s educational policy has made a significant impact already.
I use the education sector simply to illustrate one point. We should strive to get beneath the surface in news reporting and commentaries. If we don’t, we run the risk of misleading the public.

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Protect Your Votes, Aregbesola Urges Osun Residents

osun-state-governor-mr-rauf-aregbesola_-_copy_01
Gov Rauf Aregbesola of Osun has called on trade unions in the state to sensitise residents on the need to protect their votes during the Aug. 9 gubernatorial election.
Aregbesola made the call on Wednesday while receiving members of the Nigerian Union of Tailors (NUT) who paid him a courtesy visit.
The union had earlier endorsed the governor for a second term.
The governor said that the endorsement was an indication that the people of the state understood the vision of his administration.
“Please don’t stop at the endorsement but continue to tell our people to jealously protect their votes and ensure that their votes count,” Aregbesola said.
Earlier, the state Chairman of the union, Alhaji Olayiwola Akinloye, said members of the union in the state had converged in the state capital to demonstrate their support for the administration.
Akinloye said the state government created employment for more than 3,000 tailors with the establishment of Omoluabi Garment Factory in Osogbo.
(NAN)

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AREGBESOLA

AREGBESOLAI had planned to head straight for Oshogbo the capital of the State of Osun on Monday March 31st when I arrived Lagos from Houston on United Airline. The mission was to have a heart-to-heart talk with the Governor of the State, who some old students of Imesi-Ile High School, Imesi-Ile still fondly call “Comrade”. That was how the young people in my lone home-town’s High school  referred to the radical and cerebral young man who they said had fireballs in his belly, gusto in his bones, wise and weighty words always from his mouth and speed in his feet as he drove  to want to  “change the whole world”.
But before you change the world, you must change the corner where you are.  He was just straight out of High School in 1975, and it didn’t take him too long to win the hearts of many, and of course incur the wrath of some. Some of the people he swept off their feet with his candor, straight talk, almost restless and restive moving-train approach to work are still with him today dredging holes, building bridges, building roads,  constructing  world-standard schools, feeding the hungry, clothing the elderlies, and touching lives in his administration even after almost 40 years of relationship. When you meet this guy once, you will want to meet him again.
Taking his rightful seat in the expansive government quarters as governor was very rough and arduous for him. The travel lane was brutish, gruesome, eerie, and some of his close aides and friends fell under the hammering effect of sharp-edged axes, cudgels and machetes of known and unknown murderers and miscreants, while some breathed their last when hot bullets from assault rifles were pumped into their bodies during that memorable process of trying to get back a mandate that was in the tenacious grip, clasp and grasp of the opposition party PDP and its leader-governor, Olagunsoye Oyinlola. But today he is Governor, Ogbeni, or simply Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola.
My appointment was originally for Tuesday April 1st  at 8pm, and I was looking forward to taking the governor on regarding a lot of issues especially the whispers and gossips about Hijab and Islamisation policy which his opponents have cunningly architected as an albatross (though now weakened) around the neck of his administration.  8pm came and crawled to 9.., 10…, 11… and close to midnight, my governor was a no-show! Then a phone call came from one of his confidants profusely spewing out apologies that I was already boxed up to accept. I didn’t travel across the Atlantic Ocean to eat Oshogbo bush-meat; there are make-shifts in Milwaukee that will make me equally happy.
The governor, I learnt was on his way from Abuja the nation’s capital around that time of the night and then he would preside over an executive council meeting that would last until the wee hours of Thursday. “That’s how it is every day, except when he travels outside of Nigeria”, someone told me. “When does this guy sleep”, I asked? I secured a rescheduled appointment for 10 a.m. Thursday morning. I got as far as his house, saw him in his black jeep as the convoy sped past me to Ekiti State for a campaign event with Governor John Fayemi. But this man had asked that I should come talk to him!  I was livid, but as a pastor, I didn’t want to show it, but the governor’s confidant who also is a pastor knew I was done. I then took a self-consolation tour of the vast premises of the Governor’s quarters; snapped some pictures, enjoyed the breeze of the beautiful town of Oshogbo, broke my 100-days fast, and decided to call my protocol officer in Madison to put me on the next flight back to Milwaukee en-route Houston. Then a revelation I had before I left the US flashed in a reminder before me. In the revelation, I met the governor and he hugged me and set a dinner-table before every one of us present, and I dined with him. “I will meet this man”; i said to my soul.
But there was no dinner table set before me when I finally met Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola on Thursday night. Our discussion was feisty, friendly and generally sweet-tempered while it lasted. He even poked fun at himself when he showed me a caricature in a Nigerian Newspaper depicting him as an Islamic cleric, a “Mullah” who speaks no other language but hard-core Arabic. That was one of the few times he laughed very hard. He loves his faith, he believes what he believes, and he is who he is as we are all who we are. But anyone saying he is an Ayatollah should understand that out of the 38 members executive council of the government (Commissioners and Special Advisers) 24 are CHRISTIANS, four of them are pastors, and he single-handedly appointed them. He didn’t have to.
Out of about the same number of Permanent Secretaries, 30 are CHRISTIANS. Out of the 26 members of the State House of Assembly, 16 are Christians. To call this guy an extremist who wants to condition all of us to worship Allah is far-fetched in my assessment of him as a servant of God and as a behavioral scientist. I guess in politics, everything is fair game. Rauf had a lot to say, and he wanted to continue talking to me, but almost 40 people were in the lobby waiting to talk to this man and shake his hands. And this was already after midnight!
To be continued…

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