Photos showing reactions of the people of the State of Osun at the Flag-Off campaign for the Governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola ‘s re-election into office, at Government Technical College, Ile-Ife, State of Osun, yesterday, Tuesday 27-05-2014
Category: General
The Federal Government has been advised to do the needful not only to ensure that the Chibok abducted girls are released, but also to ensure that there is maximum security in all the nooks and crannies of the country.
Osun State governor, Ogbeni Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola, gave the advice while receiving members of the Nigeria Union of Teachers in the state led by the State Chairman, Saka Adesiyan, who thronged the governor’s office on a bring ‘‘back our girls’’ solidarity rally as directed by the National President of the union.
On behalf of the state helmsman, the State Head of Service, Mr. Olayinka Owoeye, asserted that it is the primary responsibility of government to provide security for all and sundry, explaining that if they shirk this sacred responsibility, pressure is needed to make them do the expedient.
While appreciating the state governor for putting necessary machinery in place for absolute security in the State of Osun, Mr. Olayinka Owoeye said that it is only in an atmosphere of peace that there can be progress.
He then thanked the Nigeria Union of Teachers for the courage demonstrated in joining the rest of the world to solicit the release of the abducted Chibok girls.
In the address of the National President of NUT, Alogba Michael Olukoya, presented by the state Chairman of the union, Saka Adesian, the Federal Government was called upon to demonstrate enough social responsibility by guaranteeing security of lives and property in the land.
The president of NUT re-iterated the need to declare a state of emergency in the education sector, explaining that the first emergency need of Nigeria education system is to guarantee conducive and peaceful learning environment.
Olukoya also demanded that the Federal, as well as Borno and Yobe states government should pay adequate compensation to a total of 173 teachers who, according to him, lost their lives to various attacks by the insurgents.
The Independent National Electoral Commission as a critical institution of democracy cannot afford to fail again in its responsibility.
Nigeria, like many other parts of the world, has not been exempted from the malady of election and because of that, the people have never trusted the umpires that have manned elections over the years. Even when the nomenclatures of the body changed, not any significant improvements were seen in terms of the quality of elections.
From way back in 1959, when the Electoral Commission of Nigeria (ECN) was established to conduct the 1959 election to 1960 when then the Federal Electoral Commission (FEC) was established to conduct the immediate post-independence federal and regional elections of 1964 and 1965 and later in 1978, when Federal Electoral Commission (FEDECO) was created by the regime of General Olusegun Obasanjo to organise the 1979 elections, which brought Alhaji Shehu Shagari and also the 1983 exercise, elections have never reflected the wish of the people.
In December 1995, the late General Sani Abacha, had dissolved NEC in 1993, established the National Electoral Commission of Nigeria (NECON), which also conducted elections into local government councils and National Assembly but the elected officials were not inaugurated before Abacha’s death, in June 1998.
When eventually in 1998, General Abdulsalam Abubakar dissolved NECON and established the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), elections conducted since then have been by INEC.
Through the years, elections have been anything but fraud. In fact, since voting started in Nigeria in 1923, the elections of 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011 and the most recent ones being the governorship elections in Edo, Ondo and Anambra States, have been substantial proofs that elections in Nigeria are always marred by irregularities.
While there were high hopes that the Anambra election would have provided INEC with the opportunity to convince Nigerians that it was capable of conducting a near hitch-free election, it gave a less than average performance with the election fraught with irregularities.
Curiously, at this point in the nation’s history, Nigeria is at a crossroad. The 2015 election is considered a make or mar election that cannot go the way of previous elections, especially in the areas of irregularities and rigging.
There is tension among the major gladiators in the country. It is an election where the North is insisting that power must return to it while the minority South-south where President Goodluck Jonathan hails from is insisting that the president must have a second term at all cost. Therefore, INEC does not have the luxury to mismanage the coming elections, starting with Ekiti and Osun in June and August respectively.
The general feeling among the people is that if INEC succeeds in giving Nigerians a credible election, the possibility is that frayed nerves will be calmed. But where the contrary is the case, not many can predict what such portends for the future of the country, beyond 2015.
An option before INEC is that it must conduct a credible, free and fair election in Ekiti State where governorship election comes up next month and Osun State, in August, as a way to convincing Nigerians that it can conduct the 2015 election next year.
Though political parties have continued to allege plans by opposing sides to manipulate the process in both states, what is expected of INEC is that it should put in place a water-tight voting arrangement that would prevent the irregularities.
The good news however is that INEC had purchased voters’ card readers to test run in Ekiti and Osun as prelude for the general election. But that relief is temporary as there are indications that INEC is contemplating not using the facility again. It would have helped detect and eliminate multiple voting, which is the bane of conducting successful elections in Nigeria.
Although INEC is yet to make a categorical statement on the issue, the Coalition of Civil Societies in Osun State gave it seven days ultimatum which had expired to come out clearly on the use of voters’ card reader in the Ekiti and Osun elections.
Spokesperson for the group, Comrade Abiodun Agboola said the groups would force INEC to use voters’ card readers to guide against inconclusiveness of election as was in Anambra; failure which the body said it intends to draw the attention of the international community to the matter.
Suspicion was further exacerbated following the incident that preceded a recent by-election in Delta State. Before the election, INEC Resident Electoral Commissioners (REC) in Cross River State, Dr. Mike Igini, had told Nigerians that the Commission was ready to deploy card readers for the election. Strangely, the facility was not used during the election. It was conducted with hitches which forced the loser to question the credibility of the election.
Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State and his Osun State counterpart, Rauf Aregbesola, have repeatedly expressed concerns and have continued to implore INEC to give their states credible elections. For Fayemi, the concern is that because of the coming 2015 election, Ekiti could be seen as ground to prove the acceptability of the PDP in the South-west, and as such some people may resort to other means to make the point.
“My greatest worry is that there are elements who would want to turn this election into a referendum about national politics. It is not! This election is about Ekiti people – 2.5 million people who want a government that is progressive; that is accountable; that is transparent and can deliver the goods to them – provide jobs for the jobless, healthcare for its people, feed the hungry and improve the infrastructure.
“I see a lot of exaggerated clamour for entering into the South-west; that we need a vehicle to break into the South-west in order to break the control that the opposition has – the grip of the opposition on the South-west, and we must take Ekiti and once we take Ekiti, we will take Osun after,” he said.
His Osun State counterpart, Aregbesola has never ceased to urge the umpire to do all that is necessary to conduct an acceptable election in Osun and Ekiti States. Recently, during a rally held for Governor Fayemi in Ado-Ekiti, he tasked Nigerians to compel INEC to use the voters’ card reader for the elections in the states.
“It is significantly illogical for Jega’s INEC to argue that the magnitude of the infractions at the last election in Anambra was not sufficient to cancel the election outright. We cannot trust a body with such illogical thinking to do a good job of the next election especially because even the basis of that process – which is the voters register – had been mysteriously mutilated so massively that a considerable number of voters could not find their names on a register that had contained their names at the verification process.”
However, Jega, a former President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), has persistently said the conduct of the governorship elections in both Ekiti and Osun States would be a catalyst for the 2015 general election.
With admission of failure in the Anambra election, what is cogent is that if INEC does not give Nigerians a credible election in the two states, Nigerians would lose hope in its ability to give the country an acceptable election in 2015.
The consequences of failed elections in Ekiti and Osun are going to reflect negatively on the entire body polity of Nigeria. Nigerians will call for Jega’s sack. Even where he was not sacked and he conducted the presidential election, what is obvious is that losers have grounds to doubt the credibility of the election.
Therefore, with Jonathan’s assurances that INEC would get adequate funding, irrespective of the fact that the National Assembly had slashed its budget, what INEC should be doing to sustain democracy in Nigeria today, is to go to the drawing board and come up with a most reliable action plan.
This will allow for credible election devoid of logistical problems that could put a candidate at advantage, so that the election results are the true reflections of votes cast. It is only by so doing that Jega and his team can be seen as having contributed to stability in Nigeria.
THIS DAY
The Osun Government has approved over N108 million for the construction of three plantain mills to boost productivity, an official said on Wednesday in Osogbo.
The Director of Produce, Ministry of Agriculture and Food Supply, Mr Joseph Adeniyi, told the News Agency of Nigeria that Gov. Rauf Aregbesola of Osun had given approval for establishment of the mills.
He said that though the fund had yet to be released for the project, the amount was appropriated in the 2014 budget.
According to him, the mill is estimated to cost N36.029m each, with the first to commence operation this year.
He identified the proposed sites Ife-Odan in Ejigbo Local Government Area, Ode-Omu in Ayedade Local Government Area and the third in Ijeshaland.
The produce director said the government believed that the establishment of the mills would facilitate increase in plantain and yam production.
“This administration is committed to the development of agriculture to encourage mass production of food items and with some programmes put in place for supply of inputs and finance.”
According to him, the project will boost the economy of the state.
He further said that the government was in a joint venture with a private company, to mop up grains in the state, preserve it to avoid wastage, ensure supply of inputs and encourage farmers.
Osun State Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, has said that the current security challenges the country is currently facing were a result of economic depression.
Aregbesola made the assertion in Osogbo at the opening of a two-day capacity building training for security personnel organised by the Society for Peace Studies and Practice of African Studies, University of Ibadan.
Ogbeni Aregbesola highlighted unemployment, lack of infrastructural development and clai m of superiority of one religion over the other as other causes of the security challenges the nation is facing.
Aregbesola, who stated that peace is not just the absence of violence but also the absence of animosity among the people, stressed that peace cannot be bought but built through mutual understanding.
Establishing a link between economic depression and social challenges, the governor stressed that social crisis is always a product of economic hardship the people are facing, noting that the crisis in the North is a manifestation of lack of development.
He however urged religious leaders to guide against making their followers believe that one religion is superior to the other.
He pleaded that nobody should be forced to practise any religion while calling for respect for every belief and faith.
The state governor, who condemned the actions of suicide bombers in the country, described them as psychopaths who have been derailed by a lot of negative vices.
In his address, Chairman, Board of trustees, Society for Peace and Practice, Prof. Olawale Albert, stated that the institute was brought together with a view to working for the peace of the country.
He commended the governor for the tremendous work going on in the state while appreciating the him for investing so much in the peace of the state.
He also expressed delight at the creation of a mediation centre in the state, saying the institute would do all it takes to support it.
Security agents including the Nigerian Police, the State Security Service, the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps attended the training.
He disclosed this at the dinner organised for Osun ‘One-Day Alternate Governor’, Master Habibllah Ayoola Ayodele. The governor stated that his guiding principle was to become an agent of positive change, which would impact on the people in a way that will improve their conditions.
He said those who seek power for the sake of it and other personal gains often realise that power without social enhancement for the society’s responsibilities is useless.
In his remarks, the state’s ‘One-Day Alternate Governor’, Ayodele, said he was overwhelmed by the enormity of the purposeful leadership provided by the governor to the people of Osun State.
Ayodele, who was selected as the overall best student in Omoluabi High School Debate held among public secondary schools in the state, said that he had learnt the virtues and values of hard work and diligence from his parents who he described as his role models.
He said he knew that Nigeria will only survive its many ‘man-made afflictions’ when good people who understudy society like Aregbesola assume positions of leadership.
About his impression of governance of the state, Ayodele averred that he had never had any negative impressions about politics and governance of Nigeria, only that political scene in the country scares a good number of well-intentioned Nigerians.
His words: “I have never had any negative impression about the politics and governance of my country. If good people like Governor Rauf Aregbesola stay out of politics, bad people are in it, then the good will suffer and the bad will take preeminence.
Osun State government yesterday, again, restated that Governor Rauf Aregbesola-led administration in the state, had no intention to sack or retrench workers despite the paucity of fund being witnessed across the nation.
It insisted that it would rather embark on training and retraining of all categories of workers in its service.
Deputy Governor and Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Grace Titilayo Laoye-Tomori, spoke in Osogbo while declaring open a Train-the-Trainers workshop with the theme Project: Water Education for Teachers, WET, organized for some selected public school teachers in the state by the Osun State Universal Basic Education Board, SUBEB in conjunction with Nestle Nigeria Limited and Starbright Nigeria Limited.
Mrs. Laoye-Tomori, who said the state government had placed teachers’ welfare among its priorities, said prompt payment of workers’ salary, including teachers, remained the hallmark of the present administration.
According to her, the state government would not relent in providing infrastructure and teaching aids in schools.
Earlier, Chairman of SUBEB, Prince Felix Awofisayo, represented by the Permanent Secretary of the board, Mr. Fatai Kolawole, commended the efforts of the state government in uplifting the standard of education in the state.
Afro beat musician and a former member of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti’s Egypt 80 band, Duro Ikujenyo, thought he had known all about his native Yoruba culture and tradition until he had a chance encounter with the famous goddess of fertility, Osun, opened his eyes.
“I didn’t know much about Osun until I observed some friends of mine from Brazil and Cuba writing songs about Osun. I felt ashamed that foreigners could show so much reverence for a deity that originated from my own homeland. I must confess that I hardly knew enough about the religion and history of my people. A lot of things had changed. So I decided to learn more about Osun,” he says, in a recent interview with our correspondent.
Ikujenyo says he was privileged to attend a past edition of the Osun Osogbo Festival. During the festival, there was an exhibition on the Trans-Atlantic slave trade in a small village close to Ijesha and he was there.
After the event, he gained a fresh insight into the real meaning of slavery. He continues, “I realised that the slave trade was not just what most people thought it was. Its scope and dimension was much bigger than I had imagined.”
After the Osun-Oshogbo Festival, he was moved to record a new album, a tribute to Osun the Yoruba goddess of fertility extolling her virtues and qualities.
Ikujenyo believes that Osun is closely connected with the future of Africa. He describes the deity as playing a pivotal role in a much-desired cultural re-awakening in the continent. “This is the essence of what I have done in my new album,” he says.
The product of his adventure is a six-track album titled Pe Osun, produced under the Gold Records label.
PUNCH
The Osun State University (UNIOSUN) has emerged the second runner up in the 2014 Africa Regional Inter-University Debate Competition organised by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Institute for African Culture and International Understanding in partnership with the Centre for Human Security and Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library.
The university was represented by Temiloluwa Ogundele, a 200-Level Law student, and Olusegun Faleyimu, a 200-Level Languages and Linguistics student.
The objective of the debate was to enhance communication and literary skills of African students and provide a scholarship platform with a long-term benefit of promoting African unity and derive solutions to developmental challenges facing African countries.
Thirteen African countries, including Benin Republic, Egypt, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Mozambique, Niger Republic, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa and Nigeria participated in the debate. Crawford University and Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra Leone, Freetown, Sierra Leone won first and second positions respectively, while UNIOSUN came third.
Temiloluwa was adjudged the best speaker in one of the sessions. The award was presented by the Chairman of the Governing Board of the Centre for Human Security, Professor Akin Mabogunje.
The event was attended by Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, Prof Hassana Alidou, Director of UNESCO Regional Multi-Sectorial Office for West Africa, Dr Minkailu Bah; Minister of Education, Science and Technology in Sierra Leone, Prof Juma Shabani, Prof Tunde Babawale, Prof Peter Okebukola, Dr Mary Khimulu and Dr Christopher Kolade.
THE NATION
Download inspiring Quotes from the Governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. Today’s Quote is focused on the highlights of the rewards of good governance. Visit the website at www.osun.gov.ng or Twitter @stateofosun for more updates on the State of Osun and its projects.