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Politics / Re: Fayose Vs Fayemi: Who Commissioned More Projects Within Their Respective 4 Years by olu070706(m): 9:08am On May 30, 2018 |
Those are the debt profiles of all states in Nigeria as at December 2014 and December 2016 respectively as it is on DMO website. You can check for that of Ekiti and make your conclusions. Note that Fayose became governor in October 2014. seguno2:
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Crime / Robbery Ongoing At Festac by olu070706(m): 12:10pm On Jul 15, 2016 |
Heavy Robbery Operations going on @ 4th Avenue, Festac Town, 2banks @ a go 1. Diamond 2. FCMB...Nigeria Army please help us, this one pass Nigeria Police matter and also fellow 9ja stay away from 4th Avenue 4 now, because of flying bullet, an innocent citizen just died and the robbers are even taking their time...Na waooooooo. I beg rebroadcast to save a life Source: Shared as received now on WhatsApp. Lalastica abeg move to front page asap |
Politics / The Charade Called 2016 Budget Presentation In Ekiti State by olu070706(m): 1:10pm On Dec 13, 2015 |
Here is Ekiti State Governor presenting the 2016 Budget to the Ekiti State House of Assembly. It was reported that after he finished presenting the Budget, he posed a question to the House that those in support of the Budget should say "ayes" and all the Honourable Members of the House of Assembly unanimously chorused "ayes". The Governor as seen in the picture then banged the Gavel. Thereafter, the Speaker of the House was reported to have posed the same question to the House and with a resounding unanimous "ayes" the budget was passed without any deliberation or consideration. What a House of Assembly!!!!! 2 Likes 1 Share
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Politics / Re: Nigerian Military Rescues 22 Children, 7 Nursing Mothers From Boko Haram (Photos by olu070706(m): 8:56pm On Jul 28, 2015 |
It is well. Kudos to the Nigerian Army. 1 Like |
Politics / Ekiti PDP Gets Notice To Quit Over Debt by olu070706(m): 8:32pm On Jul 28, 2015 |
The Peoples Democratic Party in Ekiti State has received a notice to quit from the landlord, asking it to vacate the state party secretariat in Ado Ekiti for failure to pay its rent. The landlord, a two-term State PDP Chairman and now a member of the All Progressives Congress, Mr. Ropo Adesanya, is aggrieved that the ruling party in the state allegedly issued him a dud cheque for the rent. Power supply to the party secretariat has also been disconnected by the Benin Electricity Distribution Company over unpaid electricity bills. Adesanya, who was the PDP Chairman for eight years during which Governor Ayodele Fayose won the 2003 governorship election, is asking for N1.5m owed as rent. Describing the situation as “very embarrassing,” the Acting Chairman of the PDP in the state, Tunde Olatunde, who took over when the Chairman, Idowu Faleye, was purportedly removed, confirmed that the cheque issued to Adesanya was not honoured by the bank. Faleye, an ally of the governor, purportedly stepped down on May 13 following pressure from members of the State Executive Committee. Olatunde chairs a faction, which has 14 State Working Committee members and 51 members of SEC, who are the majority and occupying the party secretariat. He explained that Adesanya had already forwarded a petition to the Commissioner of Police, Etop James, on the alleged issuance of a dud cheque, which he claimed was “stopped for no just cause.” He said the cash could not be drawn from the party’s account at an old generation bank despite that the account had about N17m. Olatunde said, “The truth of the matter is that our party has been ejected for not paying our rent by our landlord, Chief Ropo Adesanya, eight-year party chairman and the man that produced Mr. Governor in his first term. “We are owing the man N1.5m and we issued him a cheque drawn in our account in an old generation Bank that has about N17m at the time we were using it but mysteriously, the cheque was stopped for no just cause. “Chief Ropo Adesanya has petitioned the Commissioner of Police for issuance of dud cheque and the Police have confirmed that there is money in that account. “The twist in the story is that Mr. Governor is saying that Adesanya bought the house nearly ten years ago when they sent him (Fayose) on exile. “In fact, public power supply has been disconnected from the building and we are suffering despite the fact that our party is in power and presently rules in Ekiti. “This party has been in power for almost one year now, the government has not funded us. The state exco members have not been receiving their honorarium and the activities of the party have been grounded.” When contacted on Tuesday, the factional Publicity Secretary loyal to the governor, Jackson Adebayo, said, “I’m not aware of that.” Olatunde said the party would sue the bank for throwing it into disrepute by not honoring the cheque when it had more than enough to pay in the account. When asked if the SWC had approached the governor to resolve the issue, he said the governor was aware but had not shown interest. Olatunde stated that the governor had been operating with the Faleye faction at the Government House, a situation he described as “illegal.” He added that the SWC members would continue to insist that the party was run in accordance with the party’s constitution despite the present predicament. http://www.punchng.com/news/landlord-issues-quit-notice-to-ekiti-pdp/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter |
Jobs/Vacancies / Re: MPG Resources by olu070706(m): 11:12am On Jun 30, 2015 |
Got the same message too, Nairaland don tear my eye. No dulling. |
Politics / Kayode Fayemi: A Governor They All Love To Hate, By Chief Samuel Bandele Falegan by olu070706(m): 3:37pm On Jun 13, 2015 |
I have cause to read the contrived attacks of a “triumvirate” of the likes of Segun Ayobolu, Segun Adedeji and one Jide Adamolekun that came up in succession in the news media recently, all attacking Dr. Kayode Fayemi in an unkind manner in order to destroy him from being made a Minister under Buhari administration. I know it is a conspiracy but pray that one day those behind it will regret their actions. To quote some destructive comments from them such as “worthless, of no electoral advantage vindictive, etc” will be mere repetition and paper wasting. Gentlemen, why are you in your concerted and hateful efforts and writings all coming together at this time to make sure that he plays no role under the Buhari administration? Envy, jealousy, hatred, conspiracy all rapped together because of some sponsors? Inordinate ambition and bad blood. You may or you may succeed in your determination to destroy Kayoed Fayemi. He has already made his mark in the art of governance in Ekiti. He has gone further to create a nitch for himself in conducting the best organized and well conducted APC Congress which saw the emergence of General Buhari that led to the latter being elected as a president of Nigeria thus, leading into a revolutionary change most unexpected in Nigeria’s political history. It is this hate-fear of him being made a Minister that your collective conspiracy has led to your article of hatred. What a sad reflection on conspirators who now use their ulterior motive to blame Kayode Fayemi for the loss of the June 2014 election and the recently concluded Ekiti State House of Assembly election. You deliberately played down on the rigging machinery of Federal authority which has now rebounded on the perpetrators especially on the outgone President Jonathan, who if he has conscience should admit guilt of employing falsehood and blackmail to deliberately impose Fayose on us in Ekiti. If you pretend not to know, I will expose two instruments of conspiracy which you try to play down. There are two element of the anti-Yoruba conspiracy that are interwovenly executed both taking and admission of Civil-cum – Military forms, but are actively promoted and supported by President Jonathan. The irony of the conspiracy is that, a non- Yoruba man (indeed from President Jonathan home state), in his commitment to national interest, exposed this plot while two Yoruba’s, Dr. Okupe and Dr. Abati implicitly supported the internally Yoruba- sponsored plot by their silence. The two elements are as follows: 1. The Eastern Nigeria – Anti Yoruba (West) Plot. The summary of the plot is that the East in its hatred for the Yoruba race felt that only the North and the East suffered the physical destruction under civil war. It is therefore their turn to make sure that the Yoruba suffer destruction. This plot was exposed through (Col) OmotNgene of the `creek army; in his 16 page diary of Monday 21st July, 2014 under two parts. The important aspects are quoted from Col. OmotNgene. Part 1: The Vampires’ Pact: Uba brothers and Ekiti/Osun State Election Contracts. “So how many sons and daughters of Ekiti and Osun State know that the June 21, 2014 Governorship Election in Ekiti and the coming Osun State Governorship Election were contracted to Chief Uba by the President Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP to deliver as electoral victory to PDP?. Do the Ekiti people know that going by the terms of that “election fixing” contract, Chief Chris Uba shall begin to take N650 million from Ekiti State treasury via the State’s Federal Allocation drawn at source every month effective from October 2014 after the swearing in of the new Governor? This is standing order exclusive of recurrent benefits in contract awards. Do the people of Osun know that the same condition applies to Osun State if Chief Uba should also succeed to deliver on the Osun Election Fixing Condition to the PDP and president Goodluck Jonathan? Do the people of Osun State know that should Chief Uba fixed the election and successfully deliver victory to PDP, Senator Iyiola Omisore as Governor of the State is sealed to pay him (Chief Chris Uba) a monthly sum of N850 million every month via the same channel of drawing from source upon release of monthly Federal Allocation to the State? The difference in the Osun’s Contract fee to Ekiti’s is because Omisore had preferred the lump sum of N850 million refund every month to Chris Uba without an additional pact of recurrent benefit of contract award. And this was accepted in this wise because for his State, Uba is not the direct beneficiary. You will know beneficiary in due course. Do the people of Ekiti and Osun State know that the Resignation Letters of Mr. Peter Ayodele Fayose and Senator Iyiola Omisore from being the Governor and Chief Security Officers of Ekiti and Osun States respectively were signed before Mr. President Goodluck Jonathan and in the presence of Chris Uba. These letters are being held in trust for both parties personally by Mr. President.” The Vampire Part 2: Revisionism as my cause for Defection. This led to the full- scale military operation under Brig. General Aliyu Momoh in Ekiti State as discussed later. “At incipient of the Amnesty programme when it began to claim credibility for irreversible commitment of the administration of President Yar’dua- may Allah (as mark of recognition and respect for his religion) grant him paradise eternity – signs of ethnic discrimination from Ijaw axis against other ethnic component arms of the NDM. The perniciously affected more were those from the Akoko-Edo/Ilaje axis of Edo/Ondo State conurbation. With keen sense of diligence to the list of potential beneficiaries, Yar’dua queried it twice and his interests in that ethnic balance percolated down for the minority to feel substantially. Indeed, how he perceived the acts of injustice I could not say, but he detected it and called for remedy. Evidence I personally accessed pointed to the office of his Vice President as the manipulator of those lists. After the demise of Yar’dua and Jonathan became officially in charge, the injustice resume in the later stages of the Amnesty implementation. But in a pretention balance of justice, the purported Edo/Ondo share for the 2010 was skewed, with impunity, in favour of Edo State but Ondo had fallen to the governance of a perceived “rascal – Dr. Olusegun Mimiko” Those deduction have since October 2014 been made monthly from Ekiti State Federal Allocation from source. That is why Fayose tells lies that it was Kayode Fayemi that wasted their money by deliberately playing on the intelligence of uniformed workers and people of Ekiti State. The change of government by the grace of God will expose the criminal conspiracy of Fayose and stop that rubbish. 2. The second evidence is what is called EKITIGATE made up of both audio and video recordings of direct military operation involving Brigadier Aliyu Momoh and Capt. Sagrin Koli Brigadier intelligence officer to Momoh. Therefore, you can see naked display of impunity, heartlessness, arrogance, abuse and misuse of power and man’s inhumanity to man. You can see how a whole Brigadier General who is supposed to use his office and position to protect the nation, uses his power to corrupt himself and compromise the trust imposed on him. Both Capt. Sagir Koli and Col. OmotNgeme are now declared deserters and hiding outside the country for protection. Rather than being acclaimed for chivalry and honour for conceding defeat, President Jonathan should search his conscience and see that he had used the concession of defeat to save himself from infamy; that is why he has been behaving like MACBETH in his departing activities. Mr. Conspirators, what you have done to run down Kayode Fayemi is an action worse that inactivity, a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury signifying nothing.” It is a spiteful political decision which does not reflect any credit on the balance and maturity of those who make them. Ask Dr, Okupe and Dr. Abati of the letter I wrote to the President and his Vice- president on the Utilization of SURE-P Funds. Did you let the President and his Vice-president see the letter? If you did, what action did he take that gave 80 percent SURE-P funds to PDP State of North and East, amounting of N2 billion each and two percent to the West with none to Ekiti State at all. Suppose Kayode Fayemi has won the June 21, 2014 Election or the APC has also won the 2015 House of Assembly Election, what would you have done? How many of you were ready to face the ravaging onslaught of federally sponsored Fayose phantom victory, coming from a ruthless Satan, worshiping in the synagogue of Demons? How many of you will like to be DON QUIXOTE at the WINDMILL, willing to knock your heads against the wall? If the paid writers from Ekiti, why are you so uncharitable to Fayemi? What part of Ekiti – towns, villages, hamlets did Fayemi not know and touch to execute his programme of development, which include rural road network, renovation of rural sector of our State. What about social security for the elderly, Job volunteer scheme, rural development and tourist promotion all of which had been cancelled by Fayose? What about the proposed railway line to transport crunch quarry stone from Ekiti to construction markets in neighbouring States? What about the proposed flyover at Fajuyi Park? What about the scores of foreign business partners that flooded Ekiti all of who had left the place because of Fayose’s impunity and the incitement of people like you? What about modern industrial park, civic centre, the new Pavilion all of which you deride as unnecessary waste. I know that your blindness to these initiatives and developments is because they are proposed for Ado, the State Capital. I am aware that some of these haters of Kayode Fayemi have asked for one favour, positions, contracts or the other and because he was not able to meet all their requirements, they now gang up against him. Until some of us are able to remove the past prejudices against Ado-Ekiti (to which one of the sponsors belong for selfish reasons could not discern), we should all stop by now at our so called level of education – overgrow and outgrow level of hatred of Ado-Ekiti. I have often said that the neglecting of Ado- Ekiti, the State Capital is neglecting the whole Ekiti and vice versa. I am like many of these conspirators are critical of Kayode Fayemi. Thank God Kayode has not put them in Isan, his home town. Can your Governor Fayose in his evil design wipe out the memory of good projects of predecessor? Can you see how he has desecrated the burial ground where late Deputy Governor Mrs. Funmilayo Olayinka was buried and a place meant for heroes of Ekiti? Kayode Fayemi, you are a man of destiny with the path to the top already paved by God for you, all the challenges along the road not-withstanding. I will not be surprised when it is the turn of Yoruba race, for you to be the President of Nigeria. You, an Ekiti man will be called upon to lead the country. Read Isaiah 60: verse 14 and sing this song: “Through the night of dark and sorrow. Onward goes our pilgrims band singing songs of expectation, marching to the promised land.” A note of caution to my newly elected President Buhari, with my full heart I say congratulations. If you are able to get my earlier letter to the former President on SURE-P, all oil leases listed in that letter should be reviewed in the interest of the nation. The owners, mostly Northerners are richer than all Northern State governments put together. As for Generalissimo “Ahmed Tinubu”, beware of the three wired sisters and their prophecies in MACBETH. Resist the temptation to be used by rascals against Kayode Fayemi. We too at our age and at home front in Ekiti feel the pangs of deliberate falsehood, incitement, hatred and undue interference as if there are no elders in Ekiti to cope with the situation. Those brought to you one of our senators to run down Kayode Fayemi are neither doing you and your image nor Ekiti any good. By their singular act of collective perfidy, they have committed a rape on human decency and have strained the relation that exists between man and man. No lie however potent can erase or remove the legacy Kayode Fayemi has left in Ekiti State. It is they who have problem and not Kayode Fayemi. They will soon realize and face the problem when they will soon be confronted with the “Roaring Lion” accompanied by the “Virginian Wolf”. Chief Samuel Bandele Falegan is former Managing Director of Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria and he is the Atoye of Ado-Ekiti newmail-ng.com/new/kayode-fayemi-a-governor-they-all-love-to-hate-by-chief-samuel-bandele-falegan/ |
Politics / Re: I Trust Buhari But Doubt His Environment - Tunde Bakare by olu070706(m): 11:40pm On Mar 17, 2015 |
freshcvv: All I'm saying is that he should never be affected by his environment and all shall be well. March 28 is here. |
Politics / Re: I Trust Buhari But Doubt His Environment - Tunde Bakare by olu070706(m): 11:31pm On Mar 17, 2015 |
I also believe in contact without contamination. If you can't beat them, never join them. Keep trying!!! 2 Likes |
Politics / Re: Evidence Of Buhari Been A Religious Fanatic (PHOTO) by olu070706(m): 7:59am On Oct 29, 2014 |
"...and to educate non-muslims that they have nothing to fear". I guess you all read that too in that same statement. 3 Likes |
Politics / Re: The Presidential Seat In 2015. Who Is (will Be) Your Choice? by olu070706(m): 6:47pm On Oct 28, 2014 |
Click this link to join the ongoing opinion poll. https://www.nairaland.com/1971053/opinion-poll-jonathan-vs-buhari |
Politics / Re: Opinion Poll: Jonathan Vs Buhari by olu070706(m): 6:22pm On Oct 28, 2014 |
Kokorokoo: Sorry, I don't get your point. |
Politics / Opinion Poll: Jonathan Vs Buhari by olu070706(m): 6:06pm On Oct 28, 2014 |
As the political terrain is getting set for next year's presidential election. I think it is apposite to have a poll of how Nigerians feel and who they will like to have as President come 2015. Although, the primaries are yet to be done, but it is most probable that President Goodluck Jonathan will fly the flag of PDP while General Buhari will fly that of APC. Be that as it may, if you want Jonathan to continue as President come 2015, hit LIKE. But, if it is Buhari, hit SHARE. JONATHAN ---- LIKE BUHARI ------- SHARE 9 Likes 16 Shares |
Politics / Re: Ekiti Agog As Fayemi Rounds Off Tenure With Legacy Projects Against PDP Thuggery by olu070706(m): 9:30pm On Oct 13, 2014 |
2cato: Just a trip to Ekiti will clear all doubts. 3 Likes |
Politics / Re: Attack: CJ Orders Shutdown Of Ekiti Courts by olu070706(m): 11:26pm On Sep 25, 2014 |
Na wa o. Ekiti at it again.
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Dating And Meet-up Zone / Re: 042 by olu070706(m): 8:13pm On Sep 16, 2014 |
042, a place to be. #Teamthinkerscorner |
Forum Games / Re: The Hilarious Picture Game by olu070706(m): 4:14pm On Sep 10, 2014 |
This really got me laughing uncontrollably and rolling on the floor when I saw it 3 Likes 1 Share
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Forum Games / Re: The Hilarious Picture Game by olu070706(m): 4:12pm On Sep 10, 2014 |
More 1 Like
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Forum Games / Re: The Hilarious Picture Game by olu070706(m): 9:50am On Sep 10, 2014 |
Some more 1 Like 1 Share
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Forum Games / Re: The Hilarious Picture Game by olu070706(m): 12:28am On Sep 10, 2014 |
Additional pics 2 Likes
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Politics / Re: Gov. Kayode Fayemi: My Ekiti Election Story by olu070706(m): 3:44pm On Jul 22, 2014 |
GBTYO:The last time I checked, he still remains Governor till October. @alabiyemmy And what does it matter that Nigerians value fake over quality. It doesn't make the quality one less of being a quality. |
Politics / Re: Gov. Kayode Fayemi: My Ekiti Election Story by olu070706(m): 2:37pm On Jul 22, 2014 |
Intellectualism at work. I duff my hat Mr Governor. |
Politics / Re: Gov. Kayode Fayemi: My Ekiti Election Story by olu070706(m): 2:36pm On Jul 22, 2014 |
You were accused of importing contractors from Lagos to do what local contractors can do. Why did you do this? This is rubbish. It is not even worth responding to because everyone knows the local content policy of our administration. I would rather my roads are constructed by contractors that I can hold their feet to fire and I can get sound warranty from them. We have had governors in this state who constructed roads that barely lasted six months because they just poured…so I believe that every naira that belongs to Ekiti should be utilized well for the Ekiti people. People can go and see the roads I have constructed and compare them to roads that have been constructed in the past. They should look at the drainages and yet some of the roads were constructed by Ekiti indigenes, the street lights were done by Ekiti indigenes, the evidence is there for all to see. So I am not going to apologize for using those who would make our money last. We dont have limitless resources in Ekiti, so whatever we are spending money on, must be worth our while and it must be quality products that would be used rather than just the typical “shagbe loju yoyo” work. It’s something you would hear from those who are not really serious. What I would not accept is to give a job to a politician or local person who would not deliver and then he feels like what is wrong with that, that’s my own share of the cake. I am sorry there is no share of any cake in my government. This is the commonwealth of the Ekiti people, if you don’t do it, go and face maximum consequence. Yes, I have offended a lot of local contractors for that but again I do not have apologies for that Why did you create LCDAs when you have only few more days in office? Again, that is a distortion. The process leading to the creation of the LCDAs has been on for one year. I set up a committee that took memoranda from various communities and I also invited them to come and defend their memoranda. This is a process and we are just getting to the end of the process. And what do you mean by few more days in office? I still have three months left in government. So there is nothing that says we should not do something that our people are very desirous of and that is why I am creating the LCDAs. INEC, the Police and the Federal Government are all contemplating adopting the ‘Ekiti Arrangement’ as a template for elections in other states. Do you share this sentiment? Well, I do not know what they mean by ‘Ekiti arrangement’. What is the ‘Ekiti arrangement’? Is it the harassment? Is it the siege? Or the intimidation? Oh yes, they don’t even have to contemplate, that is what they want to do. Their arrangement is in top gear for Osun too. That ‘arrangement’ allows them to impose their will on the people. I think the country is in for a long and tortuous journey because once the will of the people is discounted and you do it in a seemingly appropriate manner, then it becomes a fait accompli that would halt this democracy and I think that is what we all must be careful about. The abracadabra in Ekiti is not a template that can endure. It is a template that they would love to use but it is a template that would drive the country into perdition because people would wake up to the reality sooner rather than later that a government that has not demonstrated any capacity to make a difference in the lives of the people, a government that has desecrated everything that is decent about Nigeria yet wants to keep itself in office by hook or by crook can only be asking people to resort to other means to rescue the country. What lessons can be learnt from the Ekiti election by you as a victim, APC as a party, Ekiti people, governors of other states and politicians generally? The jury is still out on that Will this defeat not have negative impact on other elected officers of APC in Ekiti in the 2015 election? By this, I mean the Senate, House of Representatives, state house of assembly and the local government. Well you know the reality of that is going to be defined by the extent to which we are able to arrest what happened and all I can say to you there without going into too much detail is that the Ekiti story is not over. There are many people saying it is over but it is not. I don’t want to talk about what would happen to elected officials in 2015. What next after office? Where do you go from here? I am a politician, I have to continue to tend my sheep and Ekiti remains my theatre of operation. First, I am still the governor of Ekiti State and I have a lot of work to do to complete the agenda that I set for myself and that I set for Ekiti people. So that is what next. And I would always remain in the service of my people, my country and humanity at large. Dr. Thomas is a lecturer with Lagos State University (LASU) SOURCE:http://saharareporters.com/2014/07/21/gov-kayode-fayemi-my-ekiti-election-story |
Politics / Re: Gov. Kayode Fayemi: My Ekiti Election Story by olu070706(m): 2:35pm On Jul 22, 2014 |
Is this why people say your approach to governance is too theoretical or you think it’s not true? Of course, it is not true. Everything that we did was informed by analysis, deep-thinking of the Ekiti condition and what will take us speedily to sustainable development. If we do road infrastructure in a landlocked state, rural place, it is because we are very clear in our mind that those who want to bring the proceeds of their farms to the urban centres would be able to do it in a relatively seamless and painless manner. So if we connect our state with a network of multiple roads, it is not an accident when people care and set up facilities there. When I became governor, you can only refer to one standard hotel in Ekiti, maybe two: Fountain and Pathfinder. Since I became governor in Ekiti, not fewer than 10 standard hotels have sprung up. That’s a measure for you because they are providing jobs, facilities, leisure for people. There is nothing elitist about that or theoretical because for me, I am clearly convinced that handout is not what would make development real in Ekiti. Instant gratification does not bring development to any society, it is the enabling environment that you create for jobs to grow, for investment to come that would create opportunities to develop a sense of self-worth, and to begin to focus on how to earn a living, not to depend on crumbs from the table of politicians. So we have a fundamental approach to our politics and it is a very clearly defined social democratic agenda and we believe that the strong must provide for the weak and they must be in a position to pull up the vulnerable in the society. So we have a very clear social welfare programme that everybody commends. But at the same time we have what you might call a fiscally conservative program, which some people don’t like because we go after those who want to reap where they did not sow. We fished them out of the system, we blocked all the corruption loopholes in the system particularly in the civil service. Some are not happy about that. We demand accountability and transparency of ourselves and of others and that was why I declared my assets as the governor publicly and not privately. So, in our government what you see is what you get but if people are now saying that is theoretical then what is theoretical about opening yourself to scrutiny and expecting that to happen of every other public officer. What is theoretical demanding of people to pay appropriate tax whether they are lecturers in universities or commercial okada riders because the resources gathered from this would be used in the overall interest of everybody. Of course we have to pay for the free education, we have to pay for the free health care, we have to pay for social security and we cannot depend completely on what is coming from Abuja. You know I am not fazed by some of the resentment to this. Anybody who knows Western Nigeria’s history would remember what happened to Chief Obafemi Awolowo in 1954. Because of one pound tax imposed for free education, he lost a regional election. The same free education, 50 years later, is what everybody is praising him for. So, those who say it is theoretical, fine. Others have also said Fayemi is years ahead of his time. I don’t know whether that is true or not because there is nothing we are doing in Ekiti that is extraordinary. These are policies and programmes that have been tested elsewhere and they have worked in the overall interest of the people. For me, it is about our people, it is not about self. The Governor-elect referred to you as an honourable man, yet he said your achievements and performance were media hype because you built on his previous projects. He also said the Pavilion and the government house were of no economic value to the people. Are these comments befitting of a person described as an honourable man or was this used as a sarcasm? You have tried as much as possible to make me talk about Mr Ayo Fayose and I have tried as much as possible to avoid desecrating the office because there is no way I am going to talk about him or some of the remarks he makes that I would not have course to question the extent of his readiness for the office he wants to occupy. Honestly, I find it strange that anyone could say that a pavilion that has a sitting facility for 12,000 people, in a state where people come to do crusades, concerts and so on, and occupy secondary school pitches, would not find use. This is something that is bound to generate funds for the state if well managed. And I would be surprised if my brother said he could not see the economic impact of that. There is nothing that we have put in place that is not regenerative whether you talk of Ikogosi, the Pavillion, the Civic Centre or Oba Adejugbe Hospital. I don’t expect him to come now and see what we have put in Ikogosi and say he wants it to go back to the Ikogosi of his earlier period in office. I would hope not. Ditto, the Government House, the Civic Centre, Oba Adejugbe Hospital, Ire Clay Factory, the 700kms of road. So if he says I have built on what he did, well that’s what government is all about. It is a continuum. He should come and build on what I have also done now. The Governor-elect Ayo Fayose thanked the Labour Party candidate, Barrister Opeyemi Bamidele for helping him to win the election. Do you regret not having Opeyemi Bamidele on your side? Opeyemi Bamidele took his own decision, he is an adult and I think we should respect his decision. But likewise he would have to deal with the consequences of his decision, that’s all I can say about him. I would like to have everybody on my side. There is no politician who wants to have enemies. I will continue to say this, my politics is not politics of opportunism, it is politics of principle and I am not afraid to stand alone as much as I would want to have people on my side. I am one politician who is not afraid to stand alone for my beliefs. So if there were people who chose not to be on my side for whatever reasons, I can only wish them well. How do you explain the allegations of perfidy and nonchalant attitude leveled against most of your appointees? In politics, people always level allegations, in every political struggle, you would never find a 100 percent commitment, you would never find people acting in almost the same fashion. We ran a campaign, a hugely successful campaign. We would have people who will have their issues. There is no government in office that would have the groundswell of support that I had before it got to office. No government can maintain that because politicians being who they are, somebody who wanted to be a commissioner and ended up being a senior special assistant, he would continue to eye that position of a commissioner and would continue to feel under-utilized and unhappy for whatever reason. Somebody who feels he wants to be chairman of a board or a local government who ends up being given a supervisory councillor position will also have his bones to pick with the governor and of course all complaints stop at the desk of the governor. I am not going to say that all my appointees and political leaders performed excellently but I don’t think perfidy is an appropriate word to use to describe non-performance. Some people said your government was being run from Bourdilon. Others said you alienated Asiwaju Bola Tinubu from your government. Can you tell us the true version or what kind of relationship you had with Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu? One version says I am being micro-managed from Bourdilon, the other says he is his own man; he thinks he is an intellectual, he is independent, he has distanced himself from Bourdilon, from Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Asiwaju is my leader, I have never denied that, he has done a lot for me personally and politically and I owe him a great deal of gratitude for that. But our relationship is also based on mutual respect because it is not a relationship that started in politics. I was never a member of the Lagos crowd as you know. I was never a commissioner in Lagos, I was never a senator or even a resident in Lagos. I knew him way back, I knew him in exile and we forged a common bond that was dedicated to the removal of military rule in Nigeria and that relationship continued. He played a critical role when I was asked to run for the governorship position in Ekiti. He supported it with everything he could muster and when we went to the election and I won, we ran into road blocks that eventually led to the tribunal. He was also very central and supportive of all that we achieved. But what many people didn’t give him credit for, for those who don’t know him well, is that they expect him as our party leader to send them my way all the time and for many people he refused to do that. He said look, let these people run their government, if you have any advice to give them, you go to them directly but if you pass it through me, I would endeavor to deliver your message to them. But no matter what steps he takes, he would be analyzed, analyzed and analyzed. Whatever steps I take, I would be analyzed and over-analyzed. Therefore, it’s a no-win situation. They will say he is running Ekiti. The truth of the matter is that when it comes to specifics, I have enjoyed a great deal of advice from him because he was a governor before. There were things that I have done that if I asked him for advice, he would give it. That, this is how I did it during my time but you know your area is different, it is not as cosmopolitan as Lagos. You may need to manage some tendencies much more carefully. He was always willing to give us advice. You would always have this and all my colleagues also faced the same issues. But the same people would say that oh, he has abandoned Tinubu, he has embraced Adebayo. I don’t run my life on a zero-sum game basis. I have several leaders, and I have a lot of respect for them and they have a role to play both in my emergence and in the success of our administration. I just consider it “Beer parlour” talk when they say all these things and I know that Asiwaju himself knows that that is what it is. When these people sit down and concoct stories, and peddle rumors you can’t stop them. You can’t legislate against rumors unfortunately, particularly against political leaders. There would always be all manner of things being peddled. Am I my own man? Of course I am my own man. Do I have leaders I respect? Absolutely, I have a lot of leaders I respect and they need not be mutually exclusive. I can be my own man and still have leaders I can take wise counsel from. People, I mean, public analysts and politicians, have singled out your Chief of Staff as the major culprit for your defeat. Why did you allow him to have such massive influence on you? It is very funny but I find it interesting. Chiefs of staff by their very nature, they are seen as the attack dogs of their principals. Go into history, chiefs of staff are almost always hated. Chief of staff is traditionally an American-created office. In British politics, you probably would have cabinet secretary, principal private secretary and all that. The chief of staff is the person who coordinates the governor’s office. That automatically makes you an object of hate. The way you now manage it will define how you are seen. Most chiefs of staff are not liked at all. When Tunde Fashola was chief of staff in Lagos, I know what some of his colleagues in the cabinet used to say about him… so that’s the first thing to say. So if you are the chief of staff who is seen to be close to the governor…but the truth of the matter is that the chief of staff in any government is only as powerful as the governor wants him to be. So when people build myths around any government official, you are just providing an excuse and cover for the governor because the chief of staff is a shield. How many people want to see the governor? The governor’s office is a very busy office, part of the duties of the chief of staff is to manage expectations of people. On a normal day, if you get to Yemi Adaramodu’s office, he has more crowd there than you can ever find in my office because he has to manage a lot of people who are desirous of seeing the governor. Those who are unhappy that they are unable to see the governor don’t blame the governor even though it was the governor who would have been the one to give the instruction that “Mr chief of staff. I’m busy, I don’t want to see any one’. They put the blame on the chief of staff and in a situation like this, the blame game continues. I think it is unfortunate and I don’t think people should indulge in that, I think all of us have put in our best. There may have been lapses here and there but a lot of what they say about the chief of staff is unfounded and untrue. My chief of staff is not the most diplomatic person I can tell you that, that is his major problem, and it is also because he knows everybody very well and people don’t like to be exposed for their perfidy or their untoward act. There are things I would really not say about any politician, Yemi would say it and they would hate him forever for saying it. The governor rarely says anything that is negative or bad about anybody. But the chief of staff feels that it is his duty to protect the governor and to expose you if you are not working in the larger interest of the party. I recall when I came into politics, I knew what they used to say about a gentleman called Biodun Oyebanji who was chief of staff to governor Niyi Adebayo, I knew what they used to say about Alhaji Lai Mohammed when he was chief of staff to my leader, Asiwaju. It is the same story, so nothing new. |
Politics / Re: Gov. Kayode Fayemi: My Ekiti Election Story by olu070706(m): 2:34pm On Jul 22, 2014 |
Your defeat in your ward and your local government was disturbing. One writer said this was because people were angry that you built an “imposing structure” in your home town Isan Ekiti in the midst of poor people that you never took care of? What is your reaction? I think whoever wrote that was ill-informed. One, I don’t believe anyone would say that I was defeated in my unit and my ward. The result is there they should go to INEC and check. As far as I am aware, in my unit, I think PDP had one vote, Labour had 0 and I believe of the 168 people that voted there, I had 167 that voted for me in my unit. In my ward, I had 2022 votes to PDP’s 261 much less for Labour. How anyone would describe this as a defeat is a way of calling a dog a bad name in order to hang it. And to now talk about imposing structure, it is so disingenuous, I don’t even want to comment on it. The building that I have in my community, I mean my house, was built long before I became governor. It was declared in the assets that I declared on October 16, 2010. This can be googled, I am one governor who is proud to say I have led an accountable, transparent life as governor. Anyone who can come out and say I have added one block to any part of my house around the world since I became governor, I challenge the person to come out with evidence. I live a very modest life and there is no need for me not to. I have a small family and I have only one child. My politics is not politics of materialism but in Nigerian politics everybody opens their mouth and say whatever they like about you because that is the way Nigerian politics is. You must malign others in order to try and get some kind of foothold. I wonder what is massive about my house. So when I hear about this imposing mansion, I ask myself is he writing about me or writing about someone else and here was a journalist who said he had never been to Ekiti, because I read the piece. So, you then ask yourself, you write this and you have never been to Ekiti, where is your credibility? So this is where hatred blinds credibility. How would anyone take such a journalist who regards himself as a serious columnist serious when you write that. The same person you are talking about wrote that I have a university in Ghana and said that I have not denied that my wife has a university in Ghana. This is part of the misinformation that people spread even when they know it is a lie. A university is not what you put in your pocket. I have denied this at every opportunity I get and challenged the peddlers of the rumour to provide evidence, the university authorities in Ghana have denied this. They have come out to say that give us the evidence of this university. We know the universities that are in Ghana, we know those they belong to, yet you keep this Goebbelsian lie hoping that if you keep repeating it, it would stick. With time, somebody would now say oh, I read it somewhere and when somebody read it somewhere, what is the name of the university, who is the Vice Chancellor or president of this university, how many students are there, who exactly gave you this information, where is it written. But you know why they would go for a university, it is Fayemi now, he is an intellectual, an academic, you can’t say he has an oil rig or an oil refinery. That may not be believable, you can’t say he has a power plant. But if you say he has a university, they would say you know he is one of these elitist academics so that is the kind of thing that he would like. Quite frankly, for me there is nothing wrong in having a university, but I do not have a university anywhere in the world. But you then ask yourself, why do people lie? What does it advance? It diminishes them more. Like that columnist, he is greatly diminished now, at least in my eyes, and in the eyes of many others. Those who used to take him seriously before would think twice about anything he writes from now on because they know that his writing is not based on any objectivity. It is personal, hate-mongering, disingenuous lies that define him and it is unfortunate because we don’t need that for the growth of this democracy. There are some people that you take serious. This is not something you are reading in a junk publication, if you are reading it in one of those funny rags that they call soft sell, it is understandable but not in a mainstream newspaper in which this person is a respected columnist, it is not just done. Was there any connection between your defeat and the fact that you were never in control of the party structure in the state? What do you mean by not being in control of the party? What is wrong in having collective leadership in which other party leaders have a say in the party structure? Don’t forget we are in a party where there are former governors, senators, House of Representatives honourable members etc. Why should a single individual aim to control a party of several thousand members? My position as the leader of the party is not challenged by anybody. The party chairman and the executives are not necessarily new people to me. In fact, I played a critical role in the installation of the party chairman way back in 2006 when I was not even a governor, I was not even the candidate of the party because we had just formed the AC from the amalgamation of AD and ACD. When Jide Awe became the party chairman, and he had been party chairman for 8 years since then, he is somebody I have a great deal of respect for; he is committed; he was a student union activist like me before getting into politics and he has done reasonably well in the position of chairman of the party and I don’t indulge in self- aggrandizement. The party machinery works for the state. I don’t know what anyone means if they say that we were not in control of the party machinery. Who is then? Who is in control? Do you regret any of your actions, policies, utterances, behavior and programmes considering the outcome of the election? There is nothing we have done that we don’t think it’s the right thing to do. I have always said that governance is different from politics. When election ends, governance starts and you must be able to, yes, mix both, but at the same time you have a duty as a leader to take firm decisions when necessary in the best interest of the people. Governance is not a popularity contest, election may be a popularity contest but governance is about delivering the greatest good for the greatest number of the people and to that extent there is nothing that we did that we cannot defend in terms of their impact on the people. Whether it is our free education programme, we know what has changed now, we know what our hospitals used to look like, people can go there and see what they look like now. We also know what the infrastructure in the state used to be like and we know the quality of infrastructure we have since put in place. In Education, in healthcare, in agriculture, in rural development and community empowerment, in social security and women empowerment as well as provision of jobs, there are indelible marks of our administration. However, there were a number of policies that many deemed controversial and as I said, you hear so many pepper soup analysts who go around saying, ‘Oh, it’s because Fayemi was doing test for teachers and was looking for ghost workers in local governments and putting biometrics integrated pay roll system for the civil servants and all that.’ You know vision is always 20/20 after the fact. In all the steps I took, my primary interest was to better the lot of my people. Though there are aspects of some of our reforms that might have been handled differently, there is none we would have jettisoned. There are also aspects of our reforms that might have been communicated differently to the people particularly those affected because change is always difficult to swallow. People don’t like change. Sometimes, the price to pay for leadership is to be firm in your approach to change particularly when you know that that change would be in the ultimate best interest of the majority of the population. So, sequencing you can argue about and say timing, sequencing of the reform, players, path, processes are issues that we deal with when we are talking about effective and efficient governance. But the reality is that some of what we had to do we did and there is no need to regret anything we did because it was in the best interest of our people and I believe that posterity would judge us right on those policies. The Governor-elect, Ayodele Fayose has described himself as a grassroots politician and you as an elitist politician. Did this make any difference in the outcome of the election? Was there really a disconnect between you and the grassroots? Well you know, I don’t want to comment on anything that Mr Ayodele Fayose says. He is, as I have said to Ekiti people, my brother. I have a duty to weld together everybody who had been fortunate and privileged to occupy this very important position and they are not many. In a substantive manner, we are only talking about four: Niyi Adebayo, Ayo Fayose, Segun Oni and me. So, I would love a situation in which the office would not be desecrated no matter who occupies it and the people who have occupied it would have to display sufficient maturity to always come together in the interest of the Ekiti people. But some of the things that people say must be analyzed, again in the interest of those who are gullible enough to believe these simplistic soundings; grassroots, elitist and other nonsensical terms. These are terminologies, which have been bastardized by those who do so for reasons best known to them. No government can be more grassroots than the government we run in Ekiti. For the first time in Nigeria’s history, a governor does not do budget until he has visited communities and I have done this thrice now, for 2011-2013 budgets. So, it is not by accident that over 1200 projects dot various communities in Ekiti, which were specific requests made in those town halls and village meetings held in those communities. What could be more grassroots than that? I don’t make budget by sitting in Ado Ekiti. I go to various communities, in spite of the fact that I have a plan, I have an agenda, everybody knows the agenda, it’s something the people can recite and they recite it all the time. The eight-point agenda, the road map to Ekiti recovery. It was like a mantra. I don’t just stand on my agenda, I also go into communities and discuss objectively with them; what are your priorities for next year? What would you like me to do? There is hardly a single community that you can get to today that you would not find five, six or more projects determined by the people not imposed on them from Ado Ekiti. When people talk to you about grassroots and elite they are talking about somebody eating roast corn on the roadside or hi-fiving an okada rider. Excuse me, that is bastardization of governance, that is not grassroots politics. Grassroots politics in my view means affecting the lives of people at the grassroots in a fundamental way and improving their lot. The 25,000 elderly people that are collecting #5,000 every month in an institutionalized manner live in the grassroots, they don’t live in the air. The youth in the volunteer corps, the ones in the peace corps and youth in commercial agriculture, they are not urban-based, they are mostly in the grassroots. I ask people, how many times did people see Chief Obafemi Awolowo eating boli on the road just to demonstrate that he was a grassroots man. The person who used to do that then, of course, quite popular in his own sense, Adegoke Adelabu, the penkelemesi man. Yes, very popular, a rabble-rouser. He knew how to rouse the people but he also genuinely loved the Ibadan people. For him, it was a two-love engagement because he was an intellectual. S.L.A Akintola too. Awolowo was seen as standoffish, an intellectual not a social animal. I am proud to follow in that footstep. I have actually no regret if that is what it means to be elitist because the policies that we implemented affected people in the rural areas more than people in the urban areas positively. But honestly, I don’t want to engage in any political brickbat over the definitions of elitism and grassroots. Some have suggested that some of the agenda you set for your first term should have formed part of your second term agenda – the assessment test for teachers, the search for ghost workers in local governments and the civil service and demolition of some houses etc. Do you have any regrets for your actions? For me, objectively in politics of theory and practice of governance, one standard feature that crops up all the time is what we call sequencing. Yes, there are things that you may choose to do at a particular time but you also have to ask yourself, are we God? How can you plan for a second term when you have not even demonstrated to people what you can do with the first term. That’s an aspect people leave out when they are talking about sequencing and timing in governance. What if I leave all these legacies out and not do anything throughout the first term, simply because I don’t want to hurt a fly, I don’t want to rock the boat, I don’t want to demonstrate leadership. Leadership is not about not taking decisions particularly hard decisions. I believe people know where I stand on governance now, if you were to ask people. I was very touched when I read The Economist and the first line in the report read thus “one of Nigeria’s most reformed minded governors has been ousted from office”. We are all writing our own history, I do not accept the logic that oh, you know don’t rock the boat. What I have done is a measure by which others would be judged now and they would have their own time to demonstrate what they can do in the interest of the people. Are people saying that ghost workers must be entertained, are they suggesting that people must have loopholes to steal government money? Are they saying that the future of our children is not important to us and the quality of teachers should be ignored? Is that what we are saying? I am sorry, I don’t come from that school of thought. The school of thought that I come from stipulates very clearly, this is what I would do when I get to office, it was an agenda. I shared the agenda with people all over Ekiti state. It would be disingenuous on my part, to now get into office and not revive Ikogosi that I promised to bring back and not revive Ire Bricks Factory, one of key pegs of our industrialization agenda in the state and not revive the quarries in Igbemo or not fix the roads that I promised to fix. Or not get the health centers and the schools reconstructed. Ditto, I couldn’t have left the teachers the way they were. Now, Ekiti teachers are the best paid teachers in the country. Because I promised that I was going to put them on a pedestal that would improve the quality of the pupils produced by them. So when they get core subjects allowance and they get teachers pecuniary allowance and they get rural teaching allowance, is it just for nothing? They must also fulfill their own part by demonstrating dedication and commitment to the children. My interest is in those children and when I do the same in the university, it is not accidental that Ekiti has moved to number 17 out of universities in Nigeria from almost number 200 on the Webometric index in the space of three and a half years. The record is there for all to see. So if they like, because Fayemi is no longer there, let them return to the era of miracle centres and let them start selling handouts again in the universities. Let the lecturers abandon peer review in the appointment process. All the innovations that we brought even whoever occupies the seat would find out that these are things that should not be reversed in the larger interest of the people of the state. So, I have actually no apology, I’m sorry. |
Politics / Gov. Kayode Fayemi: My Ekiti Election Story by olu070706(m): 2:33pm On Jul 22, 2014 |
His defeat at the June 21, 2014 Ekiti governorship election has sent shockwaves through Nigeria’s political firmament. Many have tried to explain the outcome but opinions may remain undivided as to why a governor widely acknowledged to have performed well went down with such a heavy defeat. Now for the first time since the polls, Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, tells his own side of the story. He spoke with Dapo Thomas. by Dapo Thomas Jul 21, 2014 The outcome of the June 21 election in Ekiti shocked the entire nation and even the international community. To what extent were you disturbed by the result? Very disturbed indeed and worried for the future of elections in our country. Nobody goes into an election to lose especially when you have put a lot into it. When you have worked hard and earned the trust of the people, you should have every reason to feel confident you are going to be rewarded for the hard work and performance. I said in the course of the campaigns that this election, in my own view, would be decided on the basis of character and performance. On those two grounds, majority agree that we were heads and shoulders above every other candidate in the race. Leaving that aside, no candidate campaigned the way we did – touching every nook and corner of the state, towns and farmsteads alike. Most of the time we were on the field campaigning, PDP was nowhere to be found. We actually didn’t campaign like an incumbent. We campaigned as if we were the challenger, the underdog. But I must also say we were not unaware of the desperation of the PDP hierarchy to ‘win’ Ekiti by every means possible. We saw the federal forces at play in the election and they were undisguised in their desperation. Election is a process. An election is not just rigged when you snatch ballot box or when you change result at the collation centre. Election could be rigged by the processes leading to that election itself. When security agents that are supposed to be neutral for example go round picking party leaders the night before an election and party anchors on the day of election in a coordinated and choreographed manner with no charge levelled against them, clearly you had a pre-determined end that you are seeking. It is not time to go into any great detail about what we found to be unacceptable about the process which is why I was reluctant to give this interview in the first place. But we have also promised that the infractions will be documented and exposed because we owe Nigerians that. You don’t want to accept the fact that something went wrong with the APC in the Ekiti election? The election was not about Ekiti, it was turned to federal forces against APC in the state. If it was performance, head and shoulders we won the election and in terms of mobilization, in terms of campaign, in terms of issues. As a matter of fact, the PDP candidate had no issues. He was reactive throughout. No issues, no agenda, no manifesto. The only manifesto was I am opposed to any policy issue Governor Fayemi has raised or is implementing. I even give some credit to the Labour Party candidate who, even though at the last minute, still came out with a manifesto of what he would like to do in office. That clearly did not happen in the case of the PDP so we were really the only ones with a tested programme that had been implemented across the state. I have heard and read all sorts of “pepper soup joint” analysis about stomach infrastructure and people voting for rice and all that. Attractive as the analysis may be to some people, I don’t think it fully does credit to the Ekiti people. Really, yes there are tendencies of instant gratification that crept into Ekiti politics – particularly in the early days of PDP government in the state-but those tendencies are not so deeply ingrained as to imagine that our people depend on what they can eat here and now in order to determine what happens to their future. It just offers these elements a convenient explanation for the abracadabra that they inflicted on Ekiti State. But again, as I said, time will tell. We may find the opportunity now that the party has gone to court, we would find out from their own side. But I think it is important, as I said in my broadcast, to document all these extraneous elements; the siege on Ekiti by the military and other security agencies, the role they played in instilling fear in the state. There are of course a lot of arm-chair pundits who have argued that the security siege was insufficient to explain the loss of APC. Many of these pundits were not even in Ekiti during the election and had no idea what actually transpired. Two days to election, my colleagues who were coming for my final rally were stopped from taking off in some cases, mid-air in other cases and actually at the boundaries coming into Ekiti state. Ten days before then, my party people were attacked on account of the traditional sweep after the PDP rally. I was tear-gassed and ordered to be attacked on the instruction of the Vice President who was in Ekiti on the fateful day, the same Vice President who had boasted that Ekiti and Osun elections will be war front. Even after I lodged a complaint with the National Security Adviser and the Inspector-General, it was my own people who were charged with terrorism. So, this was a very carefully orchestrated agenda driven by the forces, federal forces who have been saying to everybody’s hearing that they must take Ekiti because Ekiti, for them, was the gateway to taking the South-west. So there is nothing that happened that cannot be explained. But you conceded defeat Did I really? We were left with two obvious choices following the announcement by INEC on the morning of the 22nd of June. One was to reject outright what we considered was clearly a blatant manipulation or to accept it. There were a lot of grey areas in between those outright choices. It is convenient to many who want to re-write history to say Fayemi accepted the result. But all you need do is read the transcript of my broadcast and you would come to a very different conclusion. With over 30,000 security agents in the state with clear instructions from the Presidency to do everything to place Ekiti in the president’s corner, it was a critical moment for the state and I believe it was more important to rescue Ekiti from bloodbath than to plunge it into one. I believe it was important to turn a new leaf and fight our cause without resorting to violence. That’s what the Federal government and the PDP had planned for. That’s the verifiable intelligence I received. And as the Chief Security Officer of the state, I had to decide whether to allow Ekiti to be turned into a killing field by trigger-happy security agents already on instruction to mow them down for protesting the abracadabra inflicted on them. Under the circumstance, my decision was clear: peace now, justice later. And really, do we want bloodbath in Ekiti? Do we want our people to be slaughtered? Do we want Ekiti to become the trigger for truncating Nigeria’s fledgling democracy? We felt we have a role to play in protecting this democracy no matter how flawed it is and that’s why I did what I did. Anyone who understands the English language well would know that that speech was not the concession speech that many people are talking about. Yes, I have said I won’t challenge the election in court and congratulated Mr Fayose, but that’s not tantamount to accepting the result. That’s about saving Ekiti. Anyone who heard me throughout the campaign would recall my consistent remarks that I won’t go to court for any reason, genuine or otherwise over the election. I was only ensuring that my word remains my bond. When Chief Obafemi Awolowo decided he was not going to court over the ‘moonslide’ victory of the NPN in 1983, was that acceptance of the election? In any case, now that my party has gone to court to challenge the election, the various infractions in the election would be subjected to scrutiny. Even at that, was the decision not too hasty and are you saying you did not regret doing this? I don’t know what you mean by “too hasty”. I have always argued that for me, my politics is without bitterness. It is politics of principles and politics of service. No sacrifice is too much to make for Ekiti people and I have always said it, from 2006 that I became active in Ekiti politics, I have always said that I would not govern over dead people and I would not allow the blood of Ekiti people to be spilled on the altar of politics. The choice was simple, I could have done otherwise and my supporters were ready. I could simply say to them, you can see the manipulation because everybody was shocked that this was not our vote. Don’t forget, we have 226,000 registered APC members in Ekiti State. We completed our party registration barely two months before the collection of INEC permanent voters’ cards and the continuous voters’ registration exercise was done. We used the same INEC polling units for our party registration. The simple argument that is being made which defies logic is that at least 100,000 of APC members did not vote for their own candidate. If as INEC says, we have 120,000 votes in the election and we have 226,000 members in APC, I am not talking of sympathizers, I am not talking of outsiders who love Fayemi, who are not card carrying members of the party, I am talking of party members who registered in Ekiti State, 226,000. So, you are either saying that out of those 226,000 members, 100,000 among them did not collect permanent voters cards or they collected but they did not vote for their candidate. That is simplistic analysis of what you are saying and these people when they got to the field, when they got accredited, they knew one another, they knew who was APC, who was PDP, we were getting feedback on how many of our members were in each polling unit and yet the results in most cases were at complete variance with the evidence before us. So, it’s not enough to take the result declared at face value. We need to dig deeper into what happened and those alleging ballot fraud and so called Zimbabwean option are probably talking about that. However, on the basis of the declared result, it would simply have amounted to sour grapes and being seen as a bad-loser if we didn’t take the initial step we took to calm frayed nerves but with sufficient caveat that the last has not been heard on the election. Here is the simple answer to your question. If I had triggered a crisis by rejecting the result, if I had made a different broadcast, a broadcast that simply says Ifaki people, they said you voted against Segun Oni and me; Oye local government, they said you did not vote for your son, are you going to let this daylight robbery go? It might have been the beginning of the end of Nigeria’s fledgling democracy and a lot of Ekiti people on both sides PDP, APC, non-partisan people, innocent souls would have been lost, what would be my gain in that? I am not hungry. I didn’t come into politics as someone who doesn’t have alternative. I did what I did by making that speech to save my people. So there was nothing hasty about it. I knew the plan that the military had, I knew the plan that the police had, don’t forget I am the chief security officer of the state and I get to hear from all these people. I knew the instructions they had given the soldiers because some of them were relating with me and they were not happy that they were being given instructions like the ones they got in Ekiti. As one of them told me, if they keep bringing us into these matters that are not our business, then they cannot complain if something totally negative happens. One of the soldiers told me that and it is an elementary principle of civil-military relations that the more you drag the military into civilian matters, you never know how it’s going to end. So it wasn’t hasty and I don’t want you to see it as if it was an acceptance speech…it wasn’t an acceptance speech. Please read it, if you read it, you would know that it was very conditional in very many ways. …..But in all this why didn’t you carry the party along? Who told you I did not carry the party along? You know there is a lot of myth and a lot of suppositions that people make. I did not just make the broadcast, I sat with party leaders. Who is who in our party in Ekiti were all with me when I went to make the broadcast. We all sat down and agreed on even the format it would take. This was not a broadcast I decided to make out of the blues. We knew we had not lost an election freely or fairly and we knew the agenda was to annihilate and maul down our people. We love our people more, and our interest is to secure them, to protect them than to just protect our office. It was a carefully calibrated speech. You mentioned something about “a new sociology of the Ekiti people evolving” in your historic broadcast. Can you elucidate more on this? It was just an honest reaction that if indeed this was your will, then it runs counter to what we know politics is about. In politics, performance is rewarded more often than not. Yes we have had instances, of Winston Churchill losing an election after he came back as a hero in the Second World War or Pierre Trudeau of Canada. It happens but the fact that it happens does not confer correctness on it. If you say oh, this is the view we have of this governor, he has performed, he has demonstrated competence, his acceptance profile is very high, everybody loves him, yes there are things we may not like about him, he is detached. He is not a social animal. But it still will fly in the face of logic unless there is a new sociology. Because once you say performance is not rewarded then all you are saying, the message you are sending to politicians is, you know what, you better don’t behave like Fayemi. You better get there and take care of yourself and your family and when it is election time, go out there and start sharing rice and boli and mouth organs and jump up on okada and say you are the peoples politician and I think it is a very dangerous message that we are sending about what politics should mean to our people. And that is why I said before that I didn’t even accept that that is what has happened because it is those who are hard put to explain their own success, this moonslide success, they are the ones saying you know it is because he is an elite governor, it is because we are on the street with the people. It is a very simplistic, a historical explanation. You will need to dig deeper and that information would come in due course. |
Business / Re: What Business Can I Invest 100,000 Naira by olu070706(m): 3:14pm On Jul 17, 2014 |
IBADAN ADO-EKITI & AKURE BUSINESS EMPOWERMENT LAUNCHES!!! Are You or Someone you know interested in building a residual income business and having a brand new car every 3 years; then you and that person needed to attend the LIBERATION EMPOWERMENT LAUNCH. Come and listen to the Fa$track Business Strategy, An Everlasting Option to Financial Freedom for ALL. 100% risk free. Testimonies. IBADAN VENUE: @ Fa$track Hall, 2nd Floor, Bethel House, Beside Eco Bank, Ojoo, Ibadan Date: Friday 18th July, 2014, By 5pm. ADO-EKITI VENUE: @ Conference Hall, Dave Hotel, Opopogboro, Ado-Ekiti, date: Saturday 19th July, 2014, time: 4pm. AKURE VENUE: @ Ijapo Event Centre, by Ondo State Housing Office, Ijapo, Akure, date: Sunday 20th July, 2014, time: 2pm. Be there and invite others. You'll be glad you did. |
Jobs/Vacancies / Re: Employment Test: 1+1=? Justify Your Assertion by olu070706(m): 6:09pm On Sep 15, 2013 |
I do not think this is about mathematics simpliciter, I think it is more like if you take money to invest, that is -1, when you make profit, it is +1. But +1 cannot come without -1, that is, without investment, there is no profit or gain. Secondly, it looks also like when you remove one person from an employment and employ another person, you end up with the same expense, no economic loss. That is, -1+1=0 IMO though. |
Nairaland / General / Re: Nairalanders E-protest Against Child Marriage: Sign your Petition Here Guys! by olu070706(m): 5:24pm On Jul 20, 2013 |
SIGNED |
Literature / Re: Say No To Child Marriage by olu070706(m): 4:22pm On Jul 20, 2013 |
muami: By Ayo Turton What a wonderful analysis you have made here, but on a second look, the Marriage Act puts the age of marriage at 18, so if someone who is already married before 18 is recognised by the constitution, this indirectly means that you can marry someone below the age of 18 even if that section of the constitution is talking about naturalization. So look at it from this perspective. |
Nairaland / General / Re: Freed Prisoner Prefers Prison To Being Released by olu070706(m): 3:51pm On Jul 20, 2013 |
[color=#990000][This shows the sordid state of Nigeria. He was forced out of the court rather than being handed over to a rehabilitation agency. If care is not taken, the guy is an automatic prison inmate within few days from now because he will try to go back to prison. A sorry case.] 1 Like |
Politics / Re: Details Of Ruling That Set Free Al-mustapha by olu070706(m): 6:21pm On Jul 13, 2013 |
Having read the extract of the submission of his Lordship, one cannot but lay the blame at the doormouth of the Nigerian Police for their inefficiecy and inability to carry out proper investigation and get evidence. The Courts only act on the evidence before them and the prosecution can only adduce evidence obtained by the police, so you see, Nigerian Police needs overhauling and proper training. 2 Likes |
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