OSUN State government has concluded arrangements to immortalise late German cultural icon, Mrs. Susanne Wenger and others who have contributed significantly to the development of arts and culture in the state.
The state government said it will put in place a hall of fame to immortalise both living and dead cultural icons for their various contributions to cultural development in the state.
Chairman, Osun State Tourism Board, Mr. Abimbola Daniyan at a press conference in Osogbo yesterday also explained why the state government has committed huge sum of money to tourism development in the state.
Special Adviser to Governor Rauf Aregbesola on Culture and Tourism, Mr. Oladipo Soyode stated that artistes who are traceable to the state would be included in the state’s hall of fame.
He said though Susanne Wenger who died about four years ago has not had any monument named after her, the state government has always been celebrating her during the annual Osun Osogbo festival.
GUARDIAN
Category: General
Committee Head of Service-1 From right Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Head of Service,Niger State, Mr. Ibraheem Yakubu and his Kano State counterpart, Alhaji Umar Jalo, during the visit of Committee of the Review of earlier Reports on the Scheme of States Civil Service; Federal; Local Government;Judicial Employee and 1999 Constitution to the Governor in his office, Osogbo, State of Osun on Monday 19-08-2013
Committe Head of Service-2 Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Head of Service, Adamawa State, Alhaji Musa Kaibo and Deputy Governor, Mrs Titi Laoye-Tomori, during the visit of Committee of the Review of earlier Reports on the Scheme of States Civil Service; Federal; Local Government; Judicial Employee and 1999 Constitution to the Governor in his office, Osogbo, State of Osun on Monday 19-08-2013
Committee Head of Service-3 Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Head of Service State of Osun, Mr Sunday Owoeye and Mr Francis Bajowa, representing Federation Head of Service, during the visit of Committee of the Review of earlier Reports on the Scheme of States Civil Service; Federal; Local Government; Judicial Employee and 1999 Constitution to the Governor in his office, Osogbo, State of Osun on Monday 19-08-2013
Committee Head of Service-4 Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Abuja Head of Service, Mr Rotimi Anifowose; Mr David Olagbenro, from office of the Head of Service and Imo State Head of Service, Mrs Agustina Opara, during the visit of Committee of the Review of earlier Reports on the Scheme of States Civil Service; Federal; Local Government; Judicial Employee and 1999 Constitution to the Governor in his office, Osogbo, State of Osun on Monday 19-08-2013
Osun State Government has announced plans to offer soft loans to artisans and traders to enable them succeed in their vocation as this empowers them to contribute their quota to the state economy.
Governor Rauf Aregbesola who disclosed this during the formal inauguration of the state chapter of the Federation of Informal Workers’ Organisation of Nigeria (FIWON), in Osogbo said that if artisans and traders who form informal workers are assisted by government to succeed, the economy would be more stable and the entire country would be better for it.
The governor regretted that in spite of the importance of the artisans and traders to the economy of a state and country at large, many governments, especially at the center still do not recognise their role in the development of the economy.
He said: “The success informal workers make in your businesses will determine the level of development in our economy. Because government don’t pay attention to your role in the economy, that is why our economy has not developed more than this and that is why there is poverty everywhere.”
“Our government is saying that we can’t do it all once, but gradually, we will continue to introduce programmes that will take off poverty among our people.”
All the staff of the Ministry of Information and Strategy have been commended for their untiring efforts in ensuring that the Ministry is always kept clean through the weekly environmental exercise. The Permanent Secretary in the Ministry, Engr. Segun Aduroja gave this commendation while monitoring the weekly environmental exercise carried out by the staff of the Ministry. Engr. Aduroja said since cleanliness is next to Godliness, one does not need anybody to prompt him or her before making sure that, one lives in a healthy environment.
The Permanent Secretary who specifically commended the manner in which the staff responded to the cutting of weeds in all the surroundings urged them not to be deterred but should rather strive to maintain the tempo. He said the present government has since inception inculcated in the inhabitants of the state the culture of living in a good and clean environment.
The onus therefore, is on the people to imbibe the habit. He stressed further that several millions of naira had been spent to clear canals, waterways and drainages in every part of the state, all in an effort to enable the people live happily without entertaining the fear of flooding which many states have experienced recently.
(Culled from- http://www.onewsportal.com)
The Governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola has assured the displaced MDS Market Association in Osogbo that, there is availability of thirteen (13) hectares of land at their advantage which will be monitored for an organized development.
The Governor who was represented by the Commissioner for Lands, Physical Planning and Urban Development, Arc. Muyiwa Ige admonished the affected traders to stop displaying wares under canopies and umbrella along the corridors of the road because of the safety of their lives.
Arc. Ige assured the traders that their request of palliative will be tabled before the Governor for consideration. He also urged the traders to relocate speedily to either of the two available International Markets in the state capital.
(culled from www.onewsportal.com)
The enhanced infrastructures coupled with a conducive and ideal investment have attracted both domestic and international investors to Osun State.
With these, three investors; namely RLG Communication (a telecommunication/electronic company), Omoluabi Garment Factory and a Chinese company that will produce Opon Imo have already been attracted to the state.
Governor Rauf Aregbesola disclosed this while speaking with Journalists in Osogbo.
The governor also told newsmen that huge achievements were being recorded in the aviation sector with the ongoing airport being constructed in the state.
He said: “The airport project is not being built for the sake of having an airport alone. It is a project embarked upon to attract investment to the state. We can tell you now that we have signed a hanger facility contract agreement with two companies. When completed, the helicopter hanger facility would be the first in West Africa. By all these we plan to make the airport the aircraft hub in Nigeria.”
While saying that his administration was irrevocably committed to the ongoing transformation of Osun into a modern state, Aregbesola noted that it would stop at nothing at ensuring the successful completion of the ongoing urban renewal and beautification projects in nine cities selected for the urban renewal project.
The Governor said, “Every Nigeria deserves to live well anywhere they find themselves. All Nigerians must live in comfortable stead irrespective of where they are their ethnic or religious leanings.
He also disclosed that government intervention in education has started yielding dividends as the state now has the highest rate of primary school enrolment in the whole country put above 80 percent, adding that the state equally leads 35 others with the highest number of female enrolment in the same tier.
According to him, various policies of his government have also reduced poverty in the state to a meager 3.0 percent, the lowest in the federation by the figure released from the National Bureau of Statistics.
“What I can categorically tell you is that every step we take is tied to the lofty idea of making Osun to be self-subsisting and self-sufficient socio-economically.”
Source: http://businessdayonline.com/2013/08/osun-list-gains-of-investment-drive/
Dr Wale Bolorunduro, the Osun State Commissioner for Finance, Economic Planning and Budget, in this interview with Tunde Oyekola, speaks on the raging public debate on the debt profile of the administration of Governor Rauf Aregbesola and other issues. Excerpts:
What are the bases of the economic empowerment of the state by the state administration?
I will start by referring to a document which is the, six Integral Action Plan, which Mr. Governor used to contest election in 2007 and with which he won the election. His strategy is providing alternative solution to the problems facing the people. Mr. Governor has already coded his people oriented programmes into a book called the Green Book. This book is a people-oriented plan which clearly stated the objectives, the action that was used in taking Osun to the Promised Land.
The action plans include banishing hunger, unemployment and living problem; to restore healthy living, peace and harmony; to create an enabling environment, among others.
How are we going to improve educational system? We would build educational infrastructures, schools. When the private schools association in the state paid me a courtesy call, I told them that, this administration would build new schools across the state, and example of it is the one in Alekunwodo which is a model for other contractors to copy. And as I am talking to you, we have another 25 schools that are about to be completed and will be ready for commissioning before the forthcoming election.
Where is the economic linkage and where is the economic empowerment? The contractors that we are using were from the state (Osun). The labour and the materials we used were also from Osun due to the Osun Policy Content which says, we must use 75 per cent of the labour and get the material where the work is being done, you can see economic linkage there.
We employed artisans across board which we got some of them from the Technical Schools in the state and trained them. We even trained painters which would paint those schools. There is an aluminium and roofing company again, so we want these schools to be roofed with an aluminium sheets, because we don’t want our children to be distracted during rain.
It is not just a co-incidence that we have peace in Osun. We will create social-economic situation across the state by opening more roads. We are creating economic empowerment when people who have properties are having economic value.
We are also supporting the local government by constructing 238 kilometres of roads throughout the state. We want to empower the artisans by getting jobs and have money in their pockets; they are going to buy food in Osun.
Before the governor came into power, he had done a research on Agriculture. So, tools were given and also access to land by giving a 10 hectares of land to farmers. So, each farmer would have two hectares of land.
Once you can improve production, then the sellers would start exporting it to the outside world especially Lagos metropolis. We will be the only state that have built commodity exchange where a guarantee price would be used to sell products to farmers.
We want to develop the traders who sell their farm produce to Nigeria Breweries and this will make them to improve on economic programme of the state. You can see our urban renewal programme in our cities such as Osogbo, Ile-Ife, Iwo, Ilesa, Ila, Ikire, Ikirun and Ejigbo. As we are doing urban renewal in Ejigbo, the economic linkage with our people in Diaspora and Ejigbo will make the town a new city in its entirety. This also goes to other cities in the state.
We also talking with experts who are going to train some people on hospitality business, we are engaging a private developer who would assist in building befitting hotels. So, if we have a three-star hotel in Osun, business will boom because those business men and women would be able to stay in befitting hotels and transact business and this will boom and enhance our economy. So, these are the linkage that you can see in Osun. We have youth empowerment that is O’yes that deals with those youth that graduated from our higher institutions without getting jobs for years.
After serving the generality of the people, they were given N10, 000 every month for 20,000 of them which runs to N200million (monthly) being injected into the state economy.
Some members of the first batch of this O’Yes have trained themselves to be professionals in various fields. As I am talking to you, I have finalised arrangements for some of them to go to Germany to go and train for six months as successful farmers. So you can see economic linkage and economic empowerment in the state of Osun.
For O’Meal programme, the caterers were given utensils to use for cooking. Their clothes were sewn in Osun and they are given room to serve their people whenever they are free.
50,000 eggs were also supplied and given to students. You can see that the food stuff were supplied by the farmers. They are also taking fish from O’Fish and Chicken from O’Bush, So, when someone comes here and say he want to teach us about economic programme, then the person does not know what he is talking about.
You can’t do education programme without going into what will make it to work well. So, we go into cloth making with the establishment of Omoluabi Garment Factory which is the biggest factory in Nigeria today and it will accommodate 3,000 workers.
Also, we are going to have trainers from China who will train the prison inmates on skills acquisition. Let us also fast track and look about our other programmes, Mr. Governor is putting up a programme of building up youth through the calisthenic programme which engendered leadership qualities in those children. Omoluabi boys and girls who would soon be launched will inculcate spirit of good leadership in the youths. These are laudable programmes of Mr Governor in improving economy of the state.
How are you sourcing fund for the projects?
At the base, we have gave promissory notes to our contractors, and this has given us a good basis which the contractor takes to the banks for borrowing money of which would make the contractors to perform. From the Capital Market, we should have borrowed N30 billion as the past regime borrowed N18 billion. You see, if former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola had not been removed, he would have sacked workers because he borrowed N1 billion every month.
You can see that the organised labour in Osun State came out publicly to praise Mr. Governor for the people-oriented programmes he has been able to run in the state.
All these things are because of economic engineering. To go to the capital market is in vague, because we have to be rated through international market raters. We encourage other states to go into our programme through this issuance of bonds, and do things normally. Our own bond base is the O’School programme. Other states use our scheme, programmes and ideas so, we have expanded the space. Pension Commission are now working towards this line now in making sure that Pension bond is operating in Osun.
If you want to finance your deficit and cannot deliver the economic value and pay back easily, you are doomed. The private school operators have contacted me on how to get ‘Opon Imo’, so this is a great development of the educational sector in Osun. The Ayegbaju Market, a private sector financed and that of Aje market as well as the on-going International Airport at Ido-Osun. In Osun, we are always challenging each other and always opening ways to private sectors for participation.
What is the debt profile of the state?
It is very simple. It is N30 billion, and it is a seven-year programme.
What is the motivation behind the renovation of the nine general hospitals and how much would it cost the government?
The renovation will gulp the sum of N1.7 billion and we have mobilised the contractor with about N600 million. Then, why are we doing this? The general hospitals are our heritage left by our forefathers. So, they are our monuments. I will give the example of the General Hospital in Ilesa, which I ateended when I was young, because the hospital is well planned and the facilities were intact then, but nowadays things have changed. So, why should we allow those facilities to rot? Hence, the N1.7 billion has been thrown into the budget of Osun, and this would let the artisans to work there and improve the economy of the state. We want the hospitals to look attractive and only that, a place where to rest and have a neat arena.We want Osun to be a place where people will come and say we have a good hospital in place.
What is the level of budget implementation in the state?
We happen to be the first state that can predict how much we are spending on our capital expenditure. Today, I can look at how much we have spent in three sectors. There is what we call outliers in the budget. Our revenue has moved up now. We are also paying the pensioners directly into their bank accounts, because it makes it efficient. We would have gone far, but the organised labour thought that we wanted to boot out workers. But now they can see that we have good plan for them.
Despite the huge amount being spent on agriculture, it seems that average citizens are finding it difficult to put food on their table in the country. Can you adduce any reason for this?
Osun is relatively stable. The price of food is relatively stable. It was in Osun that we don’t have flood and this was due to the dredging of our rivers. We are trying to automate the system in the sense that each farmer would be able to get inputs directly from the government. Investigations have shown that the prices of commodities in Osun are not high. In fact, market men and women in the state can also confirm it to you.
In order to improve environmental sustainability, Osun State government has distributed 2.5 million trees to be planted across its 30 local government councils.
The state Governor, Mr. Rauf Aregbesola, said this at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, on Tuesday, when his administration inaugurated the tree planting initiative.
At the ceremony, Aregbesola also bagged gold awards from the university’s Institute of Ecology and Environmental Studies, National Park Services, Abuja, and Environmental Health Officers Registration Council of Nigeria, Abuja.
Aregbesola, who said an additional five million trees would be distributed across the states for planting, added that the initial two trees were raised by the state government.
Source: http://www.punchng.com/news/osun-distributes-2-5-million-trees/
Osun State indigenes living in and outside the state have commended Governor Rauf Aregbesola for his commitment to improve railway system in the state, as a means of transporting goods and services.
Indigenes of the state, who returned to the state from Lagos, Ilorin and Ibadan, through railway system last Friday and Saturday, expressed their happiness on the improvement on the use of train in the state.
The travelers said traveling by trains has lessened the cost for transportation, saying that they spent lesser money using the trains, when compared to traveling by commercial buses.
According to a resident of Ikotun in Lagos State, Alhaja Rafiat Ademola, there was an improvement in the use of trains, saying that many people traveled to Osun State by trains for the Eid ElKabir festival.
Ademola said; “I noticed that more trains have been coming to Osun and other states like Kwara. I decided to travel by train when I discovered that traveling by rail was cheaper than patronising commercial buses during the festive season.
For instance, I was charged N2500 for my transportation and luggage fee at a motor parkat Ikotun, Lagos, while trying to come to Osogbo by bus. I later decided to travel with the train when I could not bear the bus cost. I paid only N500 for my transportation”.
She therefore commended Aregbesola for resurrecting the use of train in the state, maintaining that road accident would be reduced with the use of railway system of transportation.
Speaking with OSUN DEFENDER at the Railway Station, Old Garage, Osogbo, a resident of Ilorin, Kwara State, Mr Abdul-Rahman Oriola, also called on the Federal Government to commit funds to the rehabilitation of railway system in the country.
While commending Aregbesola for his commitment to resurrecting train usage in the state, Oriola said travelers would spend less, while traveling by train.
Source: http://www.osundefender.org/?p=22324
I HAVE lived through several administrations since the creation of OsunState and none has had the sort of visible impact that this man has had in so short a time.
Perhaps what makes the difference is that no governor before him has approached the issue of the environment from a deliberate policy perspective as he is doing. He has developed a coherent policy on the environment, with a focus on health, which he has been implementing since he took office.
Previously the situation in Osun was characterised by heaps of refuse everywhere, resulting from people uncaringly dumping waste in any open spaces they deemed suitable for that purpose – on roadsides and road median, in streams and rivers and just about anywhere. Another prominent feature of the landscape was the ubiquitous markets that opportunistically sprang up everywhere, with their enormous capacity for generating garbage. It needs little emphasis that we have had to live with the resultant untoward health implication, and we actually lived through the flooding consequent upon silting and blocking of waterways by refuse. Flood-occasioned destruction of lives and properties is one of my most enduring recollections of the reign of the last administration in the state.
Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, on assumption of office, declared a state of emergency in environmental sanitation, with his O’Clean programme aimed at ridding our environment of filth and getting the people to have a change of attitude in the way they treat the environment. The 90-day emergency period saw a mandatory weekly sanitation exercise in Osun and the weekly cleaning of markets and places of work. This is strengthened by the daily street cleaning exercise by the O’YES volunteers.
Obviously, ridding the streets of garbage heaps requires a waste management policy. The government of Ogbeni Aregbesola is no less impressive in this area. Besides getting the people to clean up and gather their refuse, collection and clearing of rubbish have been a fruitful partnership between government and private waste collectors who charge fees, but go into the inner streets where government trucks cannot reach. And there is the fee-free government alternative, but which requires taking one’s refuse to designated collection points for onward evacuation to landfill sites for processing. The green-painted garbage trucks – and I’ve seen scores of them – with their peculiar honk are now a part of our daily morning traffic in Osun. The waste management is aimed at achieving an integrated system that will comprise transfer-loading-stations in all the local government areas of the state, from where the refuse would then be carted away to the central landfill site. Recycling facilities that are still under construction are a component of the system. These facilities, meant to enable the re-use of plastic waste, are to be complemented by a buyback scheme for plastic waste for a more effective control of the hazards constituted by plastic bottles and pure water sachets.
The environment policy includes the comprehensive dredging and de-silting of the quite numerous streams and rivers across Osun to make for free-flow of water. Anybody who is well familiar with the landscape in Osun State would understand what it means to take up the dredging and de-silting of its extensive network of streams, rivers and tributaries. Yet, this is precisely what Ogbeni Aregbesola’s government has been doing, and is still doing, even now, because the dredging and de-silting are still ongoing. The exercise has covered streams and rivers extending over large areas, including Ipetu-Ijesa, Ife Ilesa, Ejigbo, Iragbiji, Ode-Omu, Iwo, Ila-Orangun, and Osogbo, the state capital. In Osogbo alone, more than 15 rivers, streams and canals are being dredged and de-silted.
The effect of all these dredging and de-silting activities has been the safety of the lives and properties of the people of Osun from the devastation of flooding that was their lot under the immediate past administration in the state. It is on record that there has been more rain since Governor Aregbesola came into office yet there has been no flood, especially in Osogbo, unlike the tragedy that flooding has wreaked in neighbouring states in the South West.
Ogbeni Aregbesola’s environmental policy also covers urban development and beautification. Here, indiscriminate market activities are being discouraged, while ultra-modern market complexes are being constructed around the state. Notable among these are Dagbolu, Aiyegbaju and Aje markets, which are all in various stages of completion.
The beautification project involves the development and modernisation of strategic public spaces for public use in a manner that enhances the landscape architecture of our cities. The HassanOladokunPark at Gbongan Junction and the FreedomPark at Old Garage Roundabout stand out in this regard. The beautification also involves a massive tree planting exercise, for which some 2.5 million seedlings of different tree species have been purchased. The trees are intended to line the major roads right from the OyoState border into the heart of the major cities in Osun, including the state capital, Osogbo. The trees will not only serve as beautifiers, they will also serve as checks to erosion as well as help to limit the negative impact of stormy winds, not to mention their roles in reducing greenhouse gas emission.
In only two years, Ogbeni Aregbesola’s environmental management is already a legacy that will be better appreciated.
Mr. ALABI OYELEKE, a commentator on national issues, wrote from Osogbo, Osun State.
– See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/04/osuns-changing-environment/#sthash.5bj6jRKC.dpuf
Source: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/04/osuns-changing-environment/