The Governor of the State of Osun has reiterated his commitment to care for people with disability irrespective of their status, by empowering them with means of livelihood for survival in the society.
This was made known by Governor Rauf Aregbesola, who was represented by former Special Adviser on Youths and Sports, Comrade Biyi Odunlade at the closing ceremony on skills acquisition programme for persons with disability.
The event took place at Osun Rehabilitation Centre, Ilobu and was organised by the State Ministry of Women, Children and Social Affairs.
The Chairman ,House Committee on Women, Children and Social Affairs, Honorable Isreal Aloba also speaking at the ceremony, encouraged the beneficiaries not to be static, but develop more on the skills acquired. He then affirmed the support of the members of the State House of Assembly to the welfare of people with disability.
Earlier in her welcome address, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Women, Children and Social Affairs, Pharmacist (Mrs.) Omolara Ajayi congratulated the beneficiaries for being empowered by Governor Rauf Aregbesola despite the economic recession in the state.
She described the gesture of Governor Rauf Aregbesola as passion to bring special people with disability out of the shackles of poverty and erase stigmatization that is often attached to their status.
The beneficiaries were selected from Local Council Development areas, area offices and Administrative Offices across the state.
Category: Politics
The executive governor of the state of Osun Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola has urged teachers in the state to create and engage students in secondary schools in extracurricular activities so as to prevent them from involving in nefarious activities.
The Governor said this during the grand finale of a debate organised by Segun Adegoke Youth and Development Foundation (SAYDEF) for secondary school students in the state held at the Ikire campus of Osun State University.
Aregbesola who was represented by the Executive Secretary of Osun Education Quality Assurance and Morality Enforcement Agency, Dr Ayodele Owoade urged the teachers to be committed to their jobs and assured them that the arrears of their salaries would be paid.
The governor commended the founder of the SAYDEF, Mr Segun Adegoke for his positive impact on the youth and his contributions to the betterment of the lives of other people in the state.
At the end of the debate, Regina Mundi Girls Secondary School, Iwo emerged the overall winner. Greys International School, Ede won the second position while Deeper Life International School, Agunbelewo Osogbo came third. The winners got cash prize and learning materials.
Owland National School, Olupona came 4th in the competition while Fatimah High School, Ikire came 5th and they also received cash and other consolation prizes.
The founder of the SAYDEF, Mr Segun Adegoke said he set up the foundation to motivate youths and encourage them to engage in intellectual activities.
The Bank of Industry and Oduduwa Foundation have sealed a N1bn financing scheme for the benefit of small businesses in Osun State as part of measures to address youth unemployment and poverty in the state.

Under the MoU, the bank will provide loans to youths and businesses in Ile-Ife, as well as other beneficiaries outside the community.
According to the bank, the fund will be made available for on-lending to entrepreneurs within the agric, agro-allied, solid minerals and services sectors at an interest rate of 7.5 per cent.
A statement quoted the Acting Managing Director, BoI, Mr. Waheed Olagunju, as saying during the signing of the agreement in Ile-Ife recently, that a substantial part of the loan would be disbursed to women, youth and businesses showing high potential for job and wealth creation along the value-chain of the identified sectors, as well as capacity to repay the loans.
He said, “We have been partnering multinational and corporate companies, but today, we are collaborating with traditional rulers. These are people who have access to the grass roots. Partnering them is a way of ýdemocratising entrepreneurship.
“We identify areas in which communities have comparative advantages and invest in them. The beneficiaries will be selected using the global best practices.
“For this edition, about 15 to 20 per cent of them will be those who deal in local production, especially value-addition. We are working with the Entrepreneurship Development Centre of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. Applications are expected to be submitted and a joint committee of the BoI team, the Oduduwa House and OAU team will access it. They are to be monitored by members of the committee and elders, especially the traditional rulers.”
Olagunju added that the first batch of potential beneficiaries had been trained by the EDC, as the bank was alfready building capacity of entrepreneurs before disbursing the funds to them, adding that at least 5,000 youths would benefit from the initiative.
On his part, the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi, emphasised the need to get youths empowered, saying that was necessary for the nation’s continuous growth.
He challenged monarchs across the country to be dedicated to youth development in their communities.
Oba Ogunwusi said, “If the youths of today are empowered, many generations will benefit from them and poverty will be abolished. Today’s event is another giant step in the history of Ile-Ife.
“We are moulding the future of our youths in the areas of agriculture and agro-allied industry. I put a challenge to other monarchs to engage in community partnership. We should stop relying on government.”
The State Programme Officer of Osun School Feeding and Health Programme (O’MEAL), Mrs Olubunmi Ayoola has charged the food vendors in the Government Elementary Schools across the State to serve pupils with quality and nutritious food in line with government directives.
Mrs Ayoola made this charge while addressing the food vendors at a workshop in Osogbo and Ilesa.
She said Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola’s administration has invested so much in the feeding of pupils in public elementary schools and this has manifested in the increase in the enrolment of pupils in the schools.
Mrs Ayoola explained that, the inclusion of Orange Fleshed Sweet Potato (OFSP) in the menu is to add more value and increase more vitamin A intake in pupils in public schools.
She therefore advised the food vendors to always serve fruits as provided in the menu table of the pupils.
Highlight of the activities was the demonstration of cooking of Orange Fleshed Sweet Potatoes .
The State Operation Coordinating Unit of Youth Employment and Social Support Operation, Bureau of Social Services has started releasing the Single Register of poor and vulnerable people for public works in the State after clearance from the World Bank.
The Public Workfare component of YESSO had collected its list of beneficiaries based on selection criteria as entrenched in the operation manual of YESSO. The Public Workfare Program Implementation Unit led by Mr. Gbenga Odulaja came to SOCU office with his team in April and July 2016, to mine from the Single Register for the first and second phases of Community-Based Targeting respectively.
Beneficiaries are aged between 18- 35 yrs with not more than 0-9 yrs of education
There are 1,088 eligible persons spread across 303 communities in 12 LGAs covering the 3 Senatorial Districts.
The beneficiaries were selected from households nominated as the poorest by ALL stakeholders in each community viz: Elders Group, Women Group & Youth Groups
Majority are female & about 30% suffer from one handicap or the other
The Speaker,Osun House of Assembly, Mr Najeem Salaam, says the parliament will continue to support the Governor Rauf Aregbesola-led executive arm of government in providing affordable healthcare for the citizens of the state. Salaam said this on Wednesday in Osogbo while receiving the members of Diabetes Association of Nigeria (DAN).
The speaker, who noted that Governor Aregbesola had improved the health care delivery in the state, said the government would be encouraged to do more.
He urged all other stakeholders in the health sector in the state to support Governor Aregbesola-led government’s programmes in providing affordable and qualitative healthcare for the citizenry.
In his remarks, the House Committee Chairman on Health, Mr Leke Ogunsola, said diabetes was an ailment that kills if proper care and enlightenment were not given to the public.
Ogunsola said if these had been done, people would know the causes and how to prevent diabetes.
Also speaking, the DAN National Vice-President, Mr Sunday Olayemi, commended the assembly for supporting the association in its fight against diabetes.
Olayemi urged other states’ parliaments to assist diabetic patients in tackling the challenge of insufficient drugs for patients in the hospitals.
The Governor of Osun State, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, on Thursday extended his condolences to the family of Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi who died on Wednesday.
Aregbesola described the late Gbadamosi as a leading industrialist, humanist, art and culture promoter and writer.
In a condolence message signed by the Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Office of the Governor, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, Aregbesola described the death of the industrialist as the “passage of a good man.”
The Governor, who prayed for the repose of Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi’s soul and extended his condolences to the immediate family, members of the business community, the people of Lagos state where he hailed from and Nigeria at large.
Aregbesola urged Governor Akinwumi Ambode of Lagos State, people of the Business and Art communities to take with equanimity the death of Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi, describing it as an inevitable end for all.
Aregbesola said: “The late Gbadamosi lived his live for the good of humanity. He was a good man. He built reputation as a credible businessman and industrialist. His love for philanthropy was remarkable. He loved culture and spent his resources to promote arts. It is painful to loose this good man but one clear lesson is the transient nature of life itself.”
“On behalf of the good people of Osun, it is our fervent prayer that Allah will grant him Aljanah Firdaus and give the people of Lagos State the fortitude to bear the loss.”
On September 1, all roads led to Osogbo, the Osun State capital. The occasion was part of the state’s celebration of the Silver Anniversary of its creation by the military president, General Ibrahim Babangida, on August 27, 1991, along with 11 other states, namely, Abia, Adamawa, Anambra, Delta, Edo, Enugu, Jigawa, Kebbi, Kogi, Taraba and Yobe. The significance of Osun State’s celebration lied, in part, in the fact that it was the only one President Muhammadu Buhari participated in.
The president’s participation was by way of visiting a couple of the state’s newly built primary and secondary schools before finally inaugurating the Osogbo Government High School. The school must be one of the largest, most beautiful and most well equipped secondary schools in the country.
Actually the school, as the governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, explained in his welcoming address, is three-in-one, each with a student population of 1,000, its own principal and staff but with an overall supervising principal and sharing academic and sports facilities.
The high school may be top of the line, but it is only one of a dozen or so high schools that Governor Aregbesola has built or rebuilt as part of his comprehensive restructuring – today’s buzz word for every politician seeking relevance! – of primary and secondary school education in the state to give its students the quality education they need to transform their state from Third World status to First in one generation. (It reminds you, doesn’t it, of the famous title of the autobiography of Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s late prime minister, who lifted his country from Third World to First in one generation).
When Aregbesola first became the governor in November 2010, he inherited a public school system typical of public state system all over Nigeria – dilapidated, over populated, under staffed, under equipped, and badly managed schools. As a man who apparently believed the key to human progress is education, the governor resolved to end the rot.
As the man himself told it in his welcome speech on Thursday, the first step he took in ending the rot was to convene an education summit for the state chaired by no less an icon of the virtue of knowledge than Wole Soyinka, black Africa’s first Literature Nobel laureate.
Out of the summit emerged four elements for the transformation of the state’s public schools: their feeding and health programme, reclassification of the schools into elementary, middle and high schools, infrastructural development and the provision of what Americans call edtech (the use of technology to drive education), but which the state called Opon-Imo (Yoruba for tablet of knowledge) for all students.
The building of the high school President Buhari inaugurated last Thursday fell into the third category in which so far the Aregbesola administration has constructed or reconstructed 28 elementary schools, 22 middle schools and four high schools, with another 14 virtually completed.
Aregbesola was, of course, not the first to convene an educational summit. Long before him, the Northern Governors’ Forum did so in Kaduna. Individually the governors also made the right noises about ending their region’s notorious educational backwardness. To date their actions have not matched their noises. Instead, the region has dropped even further behind than it was during the First Republic.
Educationally backward as the North was back then, its leaders, with its premier, Sir Ahmadu Bello, in the forefront, walked their talk about bridging the gap between the region and the rest of the country. Meaning, they invested heavily in primary and secondary schools so that the region could produce quality materials qualified for admission into any tertiary institution anywhere in the world.
With all due humility, I can boast that I am one of those materials. I and my cousin, retired Major-General Mohammed Garba, and a childhood friend, Professor Mustapha Zubairu of Federal University of Technology, Minna, attended Native Authority primary schools in Kano, first in Tudun Wada for the first four years from 1957 and finished at Kuka Primary School after another four, having had to repeat my final year because I failed to gain entrance into a secondary school in my third year in 1963.
Kuka was located between Sabon Gari where we lived and Fagge. It was a walking distance from our home on Niger Road. All around us were Igbo and Yoruba most of whose children attended private and mission schools. In the evenings of weekdays all of us attended private lessons to improve on our chances of doing well in school. I remember we used to beat the children who went to private and mission schools in the evening classes, especially in English.
I am always amused each time people talk about the magic Chief Obafemi Awolowo performed with free education in Western Region. Of course, it was a great achievement which showed Awo’s foresight. Even then I am always amused because while the great premier of the West gave free education, in the North we were paid to go to school and we did so in hundreds of thousands, if not in millions.
The problem, I think, was that the next generation of the region’s politicians chose to pay only lip service to investment in education, especially primary and secondary education, without which invariably we could only send garbage into our tertiary schools. And as they say of computers: garbage in, garbage out.
I know this for sure because of the experience I had teaching in my alma mater, Ahmadu Bello University’s Mass Communication Department for six years until I left two years ago. During the last three of those six years, I made it a habit to test the English language of all my students, both under- and post-graduates, at the beginning of each semester.
The test was a simple one of correcting 10 sentences with errors in grammar, spelling and punctuation. The average failure rate for all the students was a dismal 70 per cent! The highest score was 8 and you could count those on your fingertips.
The conclusion is obvious; our universities have generally been taking in barely literate materials because our primary and secondary schools have suffered criminal neglect.
In giving primary and secondary education top priority to the extent of even borrowing to reform Osun State’s public education system, Aregbesola has demonstrated that he has his heart and mind in the right place. As a mutual friend, Chief Ikechi Emenike, who also witnessed Buhari’s inauguration of the Osogbo Government High School said, the governor’s educational intervention “reflected an abiding love for his people and a deep appreciation of history and his legacy.”
President Buhari summed it even better when he said in his speech the governor was only keeping the promise of the ruling party to provide free and qualitative basic education by implementing the Basic Education Act.
“What we are witnessing here today,” he said, “is the formal fulfilment of that promise in Osun by the state government. The cost effectiveness of this project can only be seen when we consider that this school will graduate an average 1,000 pupils in a year and in 50 years it would have produced 50,000 well trained and well equipped pupils, many of who will go to higher institutions and will form the backbone of the administration of our country.
Over six years ago, an award-winning columnist of the New York Times, Thomas Friedman, wrote an article which underscored the importance of quality basic education and which I have had cause to refer to on these pages and elsewhere. He titled it “ Pass the Books. Hold the Oil.”
It was published in the Times of March 10, 2012. Every politician concerned about the dismal state of our education at all levels should read that short – roughly 1,070 words – article. In it Friedman narrated how a study by rich-country club, the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (O.E.C.D.), established a negative linkage between natural resource dependent countries and knowledge.
The club looked at the bi-annual test of 15-year olds in Mathematics, Science and reading comprehension in 65 countries and the total earnings of each of them as a percentage of its Gross Domestic Product. The test was called PISA, Programme for International Student Assessment.
The study, Friedman said, showed that the bigger a country’s revenue from natural resources as a percentage of its GDP, the poorer the knowledge and skills of its pupils. For example, participating Middle Eastern countries like Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, Algeria, Bahrain, Iran and Syria that were natural resource rich performed poorly compared to Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey, also in the Middle East, which were natural resource poor. So, Friedman concluded, “Oil and PISA don’t mix.”
As always there were exceptions to his thesis. Canada, Australia and Norway, also countries with high levels of natural resources, he pointed out, still scored well on PISA, in large part because all three countries had established deliberate policies of saving and investing these resource rents, and not just consuming them.
The three countries provide great lessons for us as a natural resource dependent country by showing that oil and PISA can indeed mix.
As a country we may have so far blown away our oil fortune, but clearly Aregbesola has shown as governor of one of the poorest states in the country that you don’t have to be rich to plan for the future of your children.
The Permanent Secretary, State Ministry of Health, Dr. Akinyinka Esho has disclosed that the State of Osun Ministry of Health in collaboration with its federal counterpart has carried out 10,150 free surgeries in breast cancer, cervical and prostate cancer screening as well as Hepatitis B and Diabetes Mellitus screening across the state.
According to him, the on-going free medical surgery is being executed within Federal Health Institutions across the country in which the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital Complex (OAUTHC) is saddled with the responsibility of providing free surgery services to indigent citizens in the state.
He added further that, the free surgery medical service will last for one hundred days and the (OAUTHC) Ile-Ife will attend to people from Ife and its environs while the OAUTHC Rural Comprehensive Health Centre, Imesi-Ile will serve Ilesa axis.
On behalf of the State Government of Osun, Dr Akinyinka Oluseyi Esho hereby enjoined those who reside around the two centers mentioned to take advantage of the on-going free surgery and screening exercise.
Our attention has been drawn to a protest by a group of pensioners at the state capital, Osogbo, today. This is ill-conceived and the reason is this: As their protest was ongoing, some of them were getting bank alerts for August while some had received their pay since yesterday. It does not sound good at all that the protest by this group is taking place the very day the pensioners are getting their pay. Given the commitment already demonstrated by the state government, we know this action by this group is not supported by the majority of pensioners in the state.
Local Govt.& Pry.School Pensioners have been paid up to August 2016 like all Workers in the State. Same goes for the pensioners who retired from the state’s civil service. The arrangement is that Pensioners earning below N20,000. are paid in full,while those earning above N20,000. are paid 50%. While we sympathize with our workers and pensioners alike for not paying up to date of October, it’s pertinent to state that this is not peculiar to Osun and indeed, Osun has made efforts that should be commended by all especially in the face of national cash crunch.
There is no basis for accusing Aregbesola of diversion of any fund because simply put there is just nothing like that. And it must never be forgotten that it is this same Aregbesola administration that increased government’s commitment on pension from about N150m monthly to over N650m monthly. A government with no commitment to workers and pensioners’ good is not likely to have done this.
Signed:
Semiu Okanlawon
Director, Bureau of Communication & Strategy,
Office of the Governor.
Osun
16th, November, 2016.