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MRS ILORI

MRS ILORIThe Government of Osun on Monday, donated health materials for integrated measles campaign to 30 local government areas in the state as part of measures to reduce the spread of measles. The materials donated included measles vaccines, deworming drugs and vitamin c, among other items.
The state’s Commissioner for Health, Mrs Temitope Ilori, while presenting the materials in Osogbo, said that there was the need for improved immunisation activities to save children from child-killer diseases.
“There is the need to visit remote communities to help kick measles out of the state,’’ she said.
She added that 10,000 personnel had been recruited and trained at the state and local government levels for the next round of immunisation campaign.
“The exercise is expected to kick-off tomorrow, November 2 and it will end on November 11. The people need to come out en masse and immunise their children,” she said.
The state’s immunisation officer, Mrs Ade Osun, urged the people of the state to embrace the opportunity by volunteering themselves to be immunised when the exercise kicked off.
Osun said that the exercise was aimed at protecting children from nine months to five years against measles in the state.
She urged every member of the society to join in the crusade against measles.
TRIBUNE

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Opon-Imo4

Opon-Imo4
Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State has given assurance to school teachers in the state that his administration is ready to distribute an electronic device known as Opon Imo to them.
The governor said this on Thursday in Ede during an interactive forum between the governor and the people in the constituency.
He said the distribution of the device to pupils in public schools in the state had started impacting positively on their academic performance.
He appealed to parents and teachers in the state to assist in monitoring the use of the devices previously given to some pupils by the state government.
He said some people had been criticising the inclusion of Ifa knowledge in Opon Imo but advised parents to ask their children to read either the Holy Bible or Koran to them from the device, depending on their religious beliefs.
Aregbesola, who said his administration was determined to transform education in the state, added that the device would assist in boosting saving and learning among the pupils.
“The same appeal goes to all parents. Ask your children to read either the Bible or Koran to you on the device. The Bible and Koran are some of the subjects on the device. Ask them to read to you and monitor the way they use it.”
The governor, who assured the people that the school reclassification policy of his administration was aimed at further transforming the education sector, said that no place would be without a school.
PUNCH

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Sukuk bond – 3

Sukuk bond - 3Bonds are essentially debt instruments that will be repaid by the entity that issues them. Issuing Islamic bonds make borrowing cheaper and limits the chance of a debt crisis.
Since 2006 when the Paris Club of creditors agreed to cancel a massive $18 billion of Nigeria’s debt, enabling the country to become a credit-worthy nation, Nigeria has since become one of the fastest-growing economies in the world.
But that achievement meant that the nation’s infrastructure gap has to be bridged to sustain its economic growth. To do this, the federal government has majorly relied on the domestic bond market. State governments have also resorted to the bond market to finance their budget deficits and development needs.
In its annual National Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA) released by the DMO recently, the total domestic debt of the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) reached N1.471 trillion last year. This is an increase of 19.34 per cent compared with the N1.233 trillion domestic debt figures the previous year. As at December 2011, the value of federal government bonds listed in the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) was N3.54 trillion. The amount, which represented the total sum borrowed by the federal government to finance various projects, was issued from 2003, with maturity dates of up to year 2030.
This is apart from the N3.5 trillion Assets Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) bond. Late in 2011, AMCON listed its N1.675 trillion zero coupon bond on the NSE, with the last tranche expected to be listed soon.
Meanwhile, analysts have warned that the growing domestic debt may result to a debt crisis if not checked. Others have advised the government to look for cheaper alternatives to finance its transformation agenda.
One of the cheaper alternatives today is Sukuk or Islamic bond, which is interest free. Regular bonds are  a debt that is going to be repaid by the entity that issues them. However, with Islamic bonds, this is not the case. Instead, they will give you a piece of ownership in something.
Islamic bonds or sukuk are a type of security that works differently from traditional bonds. Sukuk essentially means financial certificate in Arabic. Islamic bonds are not used in the same way that traditional bonds are used. Under Islamic law, the charging of interest is strictly prohibited. Therefore, interest is not paid on this type of bonds. Because of this, the bond is structured differently so that they can adhere to Islamic rules. Sukuk are structured to pay a fixed profit rate rather than a coupon and are commonly backed or based on real estate or infrastructure.
Leading by example, State of Osun has begun offering the country’s first Islamic bond, taking a major step towards developing an Islamic finance industry in Nigeria. The issue makes Nigeria the first big economy in sub-Saharan Africa to market a sukuk. The offer will close at the end of this month. The sukuk is based on an Ijara structure, a common leasing arrangement in Islamic finance, which bans the payment of interest. Local credit rating agency Agusto & Co gave an A rating to the sukuk, suggesting it will attract ample investor demand.
Other African countries are also embracing large-scale Islamic finance as they seek to tap cash-rich Middle Eastern investors to finance their large infrastructure programmes. Africa is home to roughly 400 million Muslims  but until now only Gambia and Sudan have issued any sukuk, and they were for tiny sums on a short-term basis.
Defending the decision of his government to issue a sukuk, Osun State Governor, Rauf Aregbesola,  said the N11.4 billion sukuk bond under the government’s N60 billion debt issuance programme was not an Islamic fund but an instrument of development. The governor, who spoke at the completion of board meeting of Osun Sukuk Company Plc, explained that the bond would be used to finance road projects and other developmental projects embarked upon by his administration.
He said: “The sukuk has an Islamic name but just one out of the 42 investors, Jaiz Bank, is Islamic. Sukuk is just a nomenclature, the investors are secular Nigerians. Can we say First Bank Plc is Muslim or Christian bank? No, so other investors there except one with Islamic character.
“This is not a special Islamic fund but a means of accessing fund for development for the benefit of the people of the state. The sukuk bond is a veritable avenue for us to access capital to develop our state. We want our people to also see this opportunity that opens to us as such. In name, the bond is Islamic but it has the conventional bonds’ characteristics and is coordinated by the regular capital and money market investors.”
Osun State Commissioner for Finance, Budget and Economic Planning, Dr. Wale Bolorunduro, described the sukuk as a unique product.
Bolorunduro said the bond made it possible for the first time in Nigeria for a government to open itself up to the capital market in transparent manner.
He said the landmark achievement had offered the Osun State government the opportunity to optimise capital for business purposes.
The sukuk bond was issued in accordance with the enactment of the Osun State Bonds, Notes and Other Securities Law 2012 and setting up the Osun Sukuk Company Plc.
Analysts said the Nigerian Sharia-compliant bond issued by Osun State while relatively small at $62 million, signalled the start of a trend.
culled from THIS DAY

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NAT DEFENSE

NAT DEFENSECourse 22 participants of the National Defence College Abuja have commended the Government of the State of Osun for using its Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES) and other strategic youth engagement programmes to reduce youth restiveness in the state.
This was the conclusion of the Course 22 members during its presentation following the study tour of Osun with the theme: ‘Infrastructure as Catalyst for Development in the State of Osun: Issues and Prospects.” at the Sani Abacha Hall of the National Defence College in Abuja.
Navy Captain B E Dauda on behalf of participants applauded the Governor Rauf Aregbesola-led administration in Osun for its OYES initiative that has become a model for other states in Nigeria on how to bring unemployment to its barest minimum in spite of the meagre resources at its disposal.
He also commended the state for its financial ingenuity which has allowed the state to embark on developmental projects that has restored progress and prosperity to people of the state.
According to him, “I want to use the opportunity of this presentation of the Course 22 participants of the National Defence College Abuja following a Geo-Strategic tour recently carried out by us to commend Aregbesola’s three year old administration.
“This among others is to applaud Osun for using the OYES to arrest idleness and restiveness among youths by profitably engaging them despite the fluctuations in federal allocations.
“Our geo strategic tour of the state indicates prudent management of resources accruing to the twenty two year old state under Gov Rauf Aregbesola’s administration”. The Naval Officer pointed out.
He revealed that the fluctuation and dwindling Federal allocations to states in the country poses significant threats to infrastructural regeneration in states of the Federation.
Group Captain Iroubuisi in his own remarks held that the Course 22 found out during its stay in Osun that there is an appreciable decrease in crime rate in the state as a result of the engagement of youth through the OYES scheme.
He also commended Governor Aregbesola for its government’s internal revenue generation as well as massive encouragement given to farmers committed to agriculture.
In his words, “We of the Course 22 of the National Defence College want to commend Osun for the robust security infrastructure provided in the state.
“Our findings have also revealed a sharp decrease in crime rate in the state as a result of the engagement of youth through the OYES scheme of the government.” Group Captain Iroubuisi stressed.
In his response, the Commissioner for Information and Strategy in Osun, Mr. Sunday Akere, noted that figures of the National Bureau of Statistics identified Osun as NO 1 in public schools enrolment.
The Commissioner held that the feat was achieved as a result of the state’s investment of N12. 7million daily for the feeding of pupils in primary schools across the state.
Hon. Akere also added that, “it was on record that twenty one states of the country were ravaged by flood last year, but for the foresight of our amiable governor, the state has not recorded any since the inception of the administration in the state because of the regular channelisation and dredging of waterways in the state.
“Aside the OYES scheme which you have noted, various companies to mention a few like the Omoluabi Garment Factory, RLG, an Information Technology company are some companies established in the state to provide employments for the youths of the state.” The Commissioner revealed.
OSUN DEFENDER

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Photos from the official presentation of a book entitled ‘Isa Ayo Salami: Through Life and Justice’, in Honour of Honourable Justice Isa Ayo Salami, at the Nicon Luxury Hotel, Garki Area 8, in Abuja, yesterday.

From Left –Governor Ekiti State; Dr. Kayode Fayemi, Honourable Justice Isa Ayo Salami; Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; Justice Ayo Salami's wife, Olayinka  and former Chief Justice of Nigeria; Hon.Justice Muhammad Lawal Uwais, during a Book Presentation, titled:  Isa Ayo Salami: Through Life and Justice in Honour of Honourable Justice Isa Ayo Salami, at Nicon Luxury Hotel, Garki Area 8, Abuja on Wednesday 30th

From Left –Governor Ekiti State; Dr. Kayode Fayemi, Honourable Justice
Isa Ayo Salami; Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola;
Justice Ayo Salami’s wife, Olayinka and former Chief Justice of
Nigeria; Hon.Justice Muhammad Lawal Uwais, during a Book
Presentation, titled: Isa Ayo Salami: Through Life and Justice in
Honour of Honourable Justice Isa Ayo Salami, at Nicon Luxury Hotel,
Garki Area 8, Abuja on Wednesday 30th

 
From right -Governor State of Osun; Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, his  Zamfara State counterpart,  Abdul’aziz Abubakar Yari and their Ekiti State counterpart, Dr. Kayode Fayemi during The Book Presentation,  tiitled: Isa Ayo Salami: Through Life and Justice In Honour of Honourable Justice Isa Ayo Salami, at Nicon Luxury Hotel, Garki Area 8, Abuja on  Wednesday 30th October, 2013

From right -Governor State of Osun; Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, his Zamfara
State counterpart, Abdul’aziz Abubakar Yari and their Ekiti State counterpart, Dr. Kayode Fayemi during The Book Presentation, tiitled: Isa Ayo Salami: Through Life and Justice In Honour of Honourable Justice Isa Ayo Salami, at Nicon Luxury Hotel, Garki Area 8, Abuja on Wednesday 30th October, 2013

 

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OSSIEC Promises Free And Fair Local Government Election


The Chairman of the State Independent Electoral Commission, Mr. Segun Oladitan has reiterated the commitment of the newly inaugurated board of the commission to conduct a free, fair and transparent local government election in the state.
The Chairman stated this during the meeting of the board held at the headquarters of the commission in Osogbo. He noted that members of the Commission are people that have made their mark in their various callings and as such would not engage in acts that would tarnish their image.
He stressed that the Commission would adhere strictly to the principle of one man, one vote with a view to making the vote of the people to count. He stressed further that the Commission will not serve the interest of any person or group no matter the pressure from either politicians or any self seeking individual.
He therefore solicited for the support of all and sundry particularly the media so that the effort of the Commission to enshrine an enduring democratic principle yields positive result.
OSUN DEFENDER

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Aregbesola-Rauf1-600×800

Aregbesola-Rauf1-600x800
“Any Agricultural venture that does not lead to the production of sufficient food for the citizens of any society is a failure”
These were the words of the Governor of the state of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola while speaking as the guest speaker at the Executive plenary of the maiden edition of ” Agbeloba Agric-Buisness Forum” put together by the Ekiti state government at the Ikogosi warm spring resort in Ekiti state.
Speaking further at the event which has as its theme; Engaging Ekiti State Resources to Develop Competitive Agri-Food Sector, Ogbeni Aregbesola said the best assistance the federal government can give to farmers is to set a guaranteed minimum price on agricultural products so as to encourage more people especially the youths into the business of agriculture.
While highlighting the huge economic value of agricultural products, Ogbeni Aregbesola said that the food needs of Lagos alone is enough to serve as a ready market for any state who can invest in the sector saying that the food needs of Lagos alone is worth 3.5billion naira on daily basis which can enable any state that can key into it to earn about 350million naira daily.
The Governor noted that the significance of the forum is that it will open the eyes of many to the opportunities that have been wasted as a result of not committing essential resources into the sector which is capable of giving the nation hope and guarantee the future stressing that a nation that can not feed itself is dead.
Ogbeni Aregbesola who noted that any nation that depends on others for food is non existent pointed out that the 11billion dollars that Nigeria spends on the importation of food is not sustainable and makes the nation vulnerable saying that it is shameful that Nigeria is the biggest importer of fish and the second largest importer of rice in the world.
He explained that the school feeding programme in the state of Osun is already making millionaires out of the poultry business because about 300,000 eggs is needed on a daily basis which makes the state to look elsewhere to neighbouring states of Oyo and Kwara to be able to meet the demand thereby encouraging states to look inward and develop the agricultural sector.
The forum which has brought together the who -is -who in the agric sector is expected to run for three days.
OSUN DEFENDER

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SONY DSC

SONY DSC
Prime Minister David Cameron made a bid to position London as a leading hub for Islamic finance on Tuesday, announcing plans for Britain to become the first Western country to issue a sovereign sukuk, or Islamic bond.
The planned issue, worth around 200 million pounds and expected next year, would be much smaller than an originally planned sukuk but would provide a much-needed liquidity management tool for Britain’s six Islamic lenders and could encourage local firms to consider issuing sukuk of their own.
Britain’s push to promote itself as a leading Islamic finance hub comes as competition heats up with other financial centres in Asia, led by Malaysia, and in the Middle East.
Britain first announced plans for a sovereign sukuk five years ago but that issue never materialised as the country’s Debt Management Office decided the structure was too expensive.
The new proposal is less than a fifth of the size of the original and is designed to boost London’s status rather than to diversify Britain’s investor base.
“I don’t just want London to be a great capital of Islamic finance in the Western world, I want London to stand alongside Dubai and Kuala Lumpur as one of the great capitals of Islamic finance anywhere in the world,” Cameron told the World Islamic Economic Forum being held in London.
Sukuk are investment certificates, which follow religious principles such as a ban on interest and gambling.
The global Islamic banking industry is expected to tip $1.8 trillion by the end of this year, according to consultancy Ernst & Young, and is starting to attract interest among big Westernbanks because of rapid growth of trade involving wealthy Gulf economies.
Malaysia, the world’s largest marketplace for sukuk, is shifting efforts from local market development towards attracting global issuers, while Dubai is revising regulations to attract sukuk issuance and trading.
Britain is the European base for several Middle East banks and a major centre for Middle East investors, whose assets include Harrods department store and Manchester City football club.
London has sukuk legislation in place and has attracted more than $34 billion in sukuk listings from around the globe over the last five years. Sizeable issuance from local firms, however, has remained elusive.
The government sukuk, by enhancing London’s status as an Islamic finance hub, should not stumble on the Debt Management Office’s “value for taxpayer” objective, a test which the original plan of five years ago failed.
“The government was previously looking at a relatively large programme of sukuk issuance as part of its regular financing programme, but has now changed its strategy to look at a more modest sukuk issue in order to derive wider benefits such as instigating activity in the Islamic finance industry,” a Debt Management Office spokesman said.
A smaller issue was also more likely to be cost effective, he added.
The investment-grade sukuk would be welcome news for local lenders which could use it as a liquidity instrument, said Richard Williams, finance director at Bank of London and the Middle East, the UK’s largest standalone Islamic bank.
“This challenge will now be resolved and is one of the final measures in creating a truly level playing field for the UK Islamic banks,” said Williams.
The London Stock Exchange also announced plans to launch an Islamic index which would identify companies which are filtered according to Islamic principles, which work in much the same way as socially responsible screens.
Islamic investments have already been used to finance London landmarks such as the Shard skyscraper and the Olympic Village.
REUTERS

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Commissioning of Salvation Army Sch-5

Commissioning of Salvation Army Sch-5
My first name is Aseez. You are likely to encounter the name in its many mangled variations to suit local accent. I can understand the twisted distortions. We are not Arab. I attended a Catholic primary school, then a Methodist High School. I accomplished this while rote learning the Koran in Ile Kewu (informal Koranic school). Meanwhile, I earned my first degree (no honorary causa at this level in my days and still hope that the tradition has not changed) at the University of Lagos.
I studied in Germany and finally acquired higher degrees in the United States of America. Today, having lived in over ten countries in Africa, Europe and America, speak English, French and German as well as two African languages, and gone on pilgrimage to Mecca and visited the Dead Sea in Jordan, I am unapologetically and proudly a Sango devotee. I am literally wedded to the chants and sacred recitals of the inspiring Trinidadian Orisa priestess, Ella Randall. I listen to her with an exhilarating fervor as I step into the wetness of every morning. Her diction is so clear you would never imagine that she did not grow up in the groves and shrines of revered Orisa in the heart of Yorubaland.
I was born after my sister Felicia, who is a devout Catholic. We spar a lot these days after I have given her the Western Union Control Number. I remind her the umpteenth time that the money is for her upkeep as the Catholic parish she worships in fleeces her of the little that I am able to remit to her to keep body and soul together. She is a retired school teacher and if you are not in a ministerial position to charm your directors into buying you a two bullet proof limousines for a paltry U$1.6 million, you appreciate what it means in Nigeria to be a retiree. My other sister, Jumoke, is a home maker to a decent husband whose only distraction from her devotion to his wife is the love of Jesus. Somebody say Amen!!! When last I was home, they had packed the family van with my nieces and nephews and spent a whopping four days sleeping in the open attending the last convention of one of those mammoth prayers camps of those quasi Pentecostals prosperity campaigners along the Lagos-Ibadan expressway.
Their Church has a university and the founding pastor rides in an executive jet. One of my nephews is in college in Cotonou in Benin Republic. I have asked no questions out of respect for the sovereignty of their home. My youngest sister, Tinuke, is a devout Muslim who becomes edgy at the prospect of missing any of her quotidian five prayers. She is actually named Muibat. She is a teacher too. We are all the children of Salami Oyeladun and Rabiatu Amope. My father has a black moon imprinted on his forehead from his unflinching devotion to Allah. In the family hierarchy, he comes next to his senior brother, our Baba Gebu-shortened form of Gabriel, a fanatical local leader of the Assembly of God’s Church-Jehovah Witness. Baba Gebu was the patriarch of our compound -Ile Gbelekale in Oyan, Odo-Otin Local Government area of Osun. My sister, his daughter- not cousin, please- Anti Rebecca, is easily my favorite in the family. We are a seamless family even now.
Last year, I shed tears as I visited Oyan. It was not because I was home to bury my father who was never tired of reminding me he was unenthusiastic about his long overtime around here. After all, Lagbaja and Temedo, all little boys born yesterday, had passed on. We knew not to compound his reluctant stay further by such thoughtless announcements. My visit to Oyan was thus a celebration of the life of my dad, who the very fecund mind of my sisters had put at 125 years. Baba Gebu had long passed on. The reasons for my tearful eyes were mixed. The first was the unassailable depth of the serenity that I found in Oyan. Nestled under the protective shadows of the bald Ese Egun and Aisin hills, you felt the soothing sweep of the wind howling down into the valley of Oroto.
The turbulence of winds tumbling down from their heights is moderated by the long blades of the tall savannah grass that acquiesce in its gracious obeisant bow to the airy waves. The unending kaleidoscope of the savannah acquires an incredible colour as the furtive sun rises in its full majesty as a fiery ball of heat in the early morning. All these give the Oroto river, lazying and slithering, the permanence of a surface of a shimmering mirror. You can touch the fishes as they carelessly, even if gracefully, float by. But Odun Agba was my favorite. The stubborn masquerade who wrestled the Oloyan was always sure to lose. Reminiscences of a lost time!!
These joyful sentiments on a home return were countervailed by the parlous state of the town. The CAC Church still sits near the Oja Oba. The stained glass of its windows had lost is gloss. The old spire looked rusty. I did not have the opportunity to get a glimpse of Baba Gebu’s small home Assembly. When he was with us, it was a kerosene lamp lit church. And his daily crackling with the house door and gate in his hurried fidgets to open the Assembly announced it was dawn.
I am not sure how many of the old Witnesses are here with us or the size of the congregation now. However, what was unmistakable in Oyan was the strident voice of the muezzin and the tolling bells of the miniature cathedral striking in their eternal harmony over Oke Odo; Oyan’s failed attempt at building a new suburb for city returnees and wondrous prodigals like me. But the religious harmony among the Muslim and Christian faithful living alongside the many open and closet adherents of traditional Orisha worship was revealing of the continued innocence and vitality of the humanity in Oyan. More importantly, it reflected the preeminence of the sense of cultural unity and the unadulterated notion of a people under a true caring God whatever his configuration in the minds of the individual-Olodumare- among the people. Against the background of the social turpitude in the land, I reveled in the deep serenity I found at home.
But what shattered the joy of home coming after over 30 years was the comatose state of Oyan Grammar School. The wavering tall oil-palm trees that lined the rustic boulevard into the school premises were sad and unkempt. The grass was overgrown. The roofs of the old school building were blown off. They had, like many other things in this pervasive rot, succumbed to the wrath of unchecked elements. These sights assaulted the mind as they heralded the complete dilapidation of a local institution that in the early sixties was a pride to the people of Oyan and its environs.
The school attracted students from all over the West and beyond. Its inspiring credentials notwithstanding, OGS was never given a thought by all the administrations of the Old Oyo State and the various administrations of the state. Still Oyan Grammar School was an exemplary poster child of constructive community engagement in the 1950s and the 1960s. As if to spite the successive negligent administrations, Oyan consistently produced authentic first class scholars-I mean Grade 1s who could defend the integrity of their grades- at the West African School Examination-without cheating! And Oyan was not a parochial institution. Christians and Muslim, and I dare say, closet traditional worshippers went through its open gate. Importantly, the school passed through them too. And they excelled and did not go into life as some religiously indoctrinated bozos and zombies. The local Scriptures Union (SU) was active and so was an incipient Muslim Students’ Society (MSS) on its premises.
This picture of the golden era of the Goyans of Osun State, and indeed of all such pristine academies over Nigeria, must not be killed by the misplaced agenda of misguided religious fanatics on the two aisles of hegemonic faiths in the country. In thinking only in terms of the perpetuation and ascendance of their parochial world views driven by the canticles of religious faiths that actually have no bearing to us as a people caught in the throes of a harsh international order, the religious bigots standing in the way of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola are doing a lot of discredit to our state and Nigeria. Surveying the landscape of Osun and having keenly kept abreast of developments in my home state and Nigeria, I had independently on my own come to the conclusion that without the kind of bold initiative taken by the Ogbeni in Osun state, we could easily be breeding the same mindset that underpins the Boko Haram in the north of the country.
We are at a critical juncture as a nation. It is important for us to take a critical view of tensions that have degenerated into open fights in some communities in Yorubaland and to begin, even if a little late, to take steps to nip these tendencies in the bud. Both Christians and Muslims have been intolerant of traditional religious worshipers who have yet to demand our rights and respect as the most credible national religious institutions in the land. Most disappointing are some of our highly revered elders who seem to have abdicated their expected roles to hold the nation together and seem to be caught in the unproductive blind competition for the ascendance of partisan faiths. There was an era when, to be sure, this did not matter.
But times have changed, even in Yorubaland. In the long term, this segregation in schools has a potential to eventually consume our grandchildren in religious antagonisms. I fear that the multiplier impact of the law of incrementalism in social processes may catch up with our children when our pitiable bones are rotten in our graves. Boko Haram presents a case in point. When some thoughtless people in strategic offices decided to play politics with the Sharia, little did they realise what genie they were releasing out of their gourds. We should think of the catastrophic powers of the whirlwind of the little winds that we are busy sowing today.
At the tertiary level, the two religious convictions are busy polarising educational experience of the young ones. It is a dangerous development. While it is the right of all to invest their monies in whatever cause they choose to propagate, let it be understood that what Nigeria and Yorubaland require today are integrative institutions that provide the platform to a diversified class of students for a balanced development of character to complement serious intellectual pursuit. Very soon, Muslim and Christian employers would begin to give preference to graduates of their faith-based colleges. Whether this is done overtly or as a subterranean underpinning of the labour market is not important. Nigeria has yet to develop the legal framework to avoid the potential deleterious cascading impact of this unregulated mushrooming of highly parochial faith based education at the higher levels. We are dividing our children.
Some may argue that religious institutions abound in many so called countries. That may be true. But the ultimate fates of their societies is not exactly my calabash of ogi (pap). In any case, the contexts are different. My apprehensions relate to the long term impact of this frenzied entrenchment of religious divides in an environment hitherto reputed for harmonious relationship and respect within a common cultural heritage. On this, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola’s initiative to integrate schools in Osun state has my unalloyed support.
I know the spirits of my father Salami and the patriarch of Ile Gbelekale, Oyan, Baba Gebu, would approve of this. Finally, I recall one of the last memorable father son/encounters with my dad. He asked me why I had ceased my congregational prayers. To my answer that that I had become a Sango devotee, he gave a knowing smile and said to me “Iya Sango so be” Iya Sango-my grandmother- had said so” prophesying that her children would return to the sacred grove as she helplessly wailed as a mad and fiery Alfa destroyed her shrine in the 1940s. My dad did not expect her mother’s prophecy was going to be fulfilled so soon. The segregationist prayer warriors are on the wrong side of history and humanity.
Mr. Alalade is a regular contributor to TheNEWS magazine.

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ILORI

ILORI
Osun State Ministry of Health says it has intensified efforts to clamp down on quack Doctors and patent medicine sellers in the State.
Commissioner for Health, Doctor Temitope Ilori stated this during the appearance of the State Ministry of Health before the Joint House Committee on Finance and Appropriation and Health for the 2013 Budget Performance Review.
Doctor Ilori said as part of efforts of the administration of Governor Rauf Aregbesola to ensure quality health care services in the state, the present administration is focusing on sanitizing health sector to ensure quack medical practitioners are removed from the system.
The Commissioner pointed out that the Ministry had renovated nine hospitals in nine Federal Constituencies of the state which were in deplorable conditions so as to make quality health services accessible to the people.
In his response, Chairman, House Committee on Health, Mr. Leke Ogunsola charged the Ministry to continue the good work while assuring them of the support of the House.
RADIO NIGERIA

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