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Osun is moving; Aregbesola is Working

Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

Tuesday, 22 July 2014

Why there must be heavy security for Osun election —Professor Oladipo

Why there must be heavy security for Osun election —Professor Oladipo

prof-oladipo1aProfessor Wale Oladipo,  the national Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) restates the commitment of the party to reclaim the South-West region, debunks the rumour that the Presidency is funding the party’s campaign, among other issues, in an interview with newsmen. JACOB SEGUN OLATUNJI brings excerpts:
The attack in Ile Ife, Osun State, has further heightened tension in the state ahead  the August governorship election. As a citizen of that state, what is your reaction to the incident?
I want to condemn in its entirety, the spate of violence that members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) have taken to Ile-Ife in the past few days. I am calling on the security agencies- the police, the Civil Defence and other agencies- to quickly wade in and arrest those who are maiming people. Ife is known for peace and we will continue to preach peace. However, we will not allow people, particularly the APC who are pained from their inglorious performance in Ekiti. Having seen the kind of support our candidate, Senator Iyiola Omisore, is enjoying, they are jittery. 
They are trying to do everything to ensure that the election doesn’t hold. They know that what befell them in Ekiti is about to befall them again in Osun State. I am using this opportunity to appeal to security agents to quickly come in and make arrest of the identified leaders who really led the onslaught on the peace-loving people of Ife. I make bold to say come August 9, Senator Omisore of the PDP will convincingly defeat Aregbesola. We believe in one man one vote, one youth one vote and such can only be realised in a peaceful environment. 
APC is a super minority in Ife because Omisore is from Ife. I am from Ife and we know the political colouration of Ile-Ife. Go and find out, every governor that has won a clean election in that state usually got at least 30 per cent of his votes from Ife. The APC is conscious of this and they have been rejected by Ife people. So, they want to create a scenario that is similar to how Aregbesola came in through the back door. You will recollect that the entire votes of Ile-Ife were cancelled by the Court of Appeal for Aregbesola to have majority of votes. I think they are trying to replay the same scenario by creating a problem in Ife so that there will be no voting in Ife.
There are claims from the APC that the replacement of the Osun State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Ambassador Rufus Akeju is to pave way for the PDP to win the governorship election in the state. How will you react to this?
A court of competent jurisdiction had questioned the neutrality of Akeju and yet the APC people were just defending him. Why must they be particular about a Resident Electoral Commissioner conducting election? Does it mean they have a deal with him? Do they have an arrangement with Akeju? Akeju himself is not complaining and so why is Lai Mohammed complaining? 
The credibility of an election depends on the neutrality of the electoral umpire. It was obvious that Akeju could not be neutral. They want him to conduct the  coming election? No, INEC has done the right thing and I don’t think the APC is questioning the neutrality and integrity of the new man, Mr Segun Agbaje, who was brought to Osun to conduct the polls. Why should they cry? Or do they have something to hide. 
As for us, we want a clean, free and fair election in Osun and with every sense of responsibility, I am confident that the PDP will win hands down.  People are tired of all these imported politicians. The economy of Osun is now comatose. I have small businesses in Osun myself that are no longer thriving because all services are outsourced from Lagos; all contractors are from Lagos. That is what Ekiti people have rejected and that is what the good people of Osun are going to reject come August 9. 
Others say your candidate, Omisore,is afraid of his own past. How is this going to impact on his campaigns?
You will recall that Aregbesola once said immediately PDP presents Omisore, he would go and sleep. Why is he now having sleepless nights? Why is he now in need of sleeping pills, when we have done what he asked us to do? Why is it that he is agitated? Why is he jittery? 
Omisore is on ground and he knows the terrain of Osun. He has been visiting village to village, ward to ward. If he is visiting a village, only people from that village are allowed to meet with him. We don’t rent crowd; we don’t need area boys from under the bridge in Lagos before we campaign in Osun. 
When we produced Ayodele Fayose, you will recall that Governor Kayode Fayemi started shouting that why should the PDP put up Fayose. You know the result. It is going to be the same sort of result in Osun. I am telling you confidently because we know the terrain. Fayose is the governor-elect of Ekiti and I am assuring you by the special grace of God that Omisore will be the governor-elect of Osun State, preparatory to the battle in Oyo, Ogun and Lagos State next year. And by the special grace of God, for the presidential election, I am convinced the PDP candidate will also win.
The scuffle between you and former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola appears to have favoured you lately following your endorsement by the South-West caucus of the PDP to fill in the slot of national secretary zoned to the region. What are you doing to accommodate all?
We are talking. Oyinlola is my big brother. Luckily, I am a prince and he is also a prince. So, I am sure he will not do anything to jeopardise the chances of the PDP. On the issue of national secretary, I am aware that the matter is still before a court of competent jurisdiction and so I should not comment on it.  
However, I thank the South-West leaders for the confidence they have reposed in me and I promise them I will not betray that trust. Luckily under my watch,we have won Ekiti and by the grace of God, we will win Osun and the South-West will give solid votes that will ensure that the transformation agenda of Mr President continues beyond 2015.
The PDP has been lampooned for snatching victory in Ekiti election through the militarisation of the state and fears are being expressed that the same will play out in Osun. What is your take on this?
What they tagged militarisation of elections, of course, was done to thwart the antics of those who wanted to use violence to win the election. It is these same people who will always complain about the presence of security agents. But if you have absolutely nothing to do with violence, in fact, the law says soldiers cannot stay in the polling unit and they were not there. They were just in other areas to stop people from moving weapons, illicit money and thugs across borders. Why are they concerned? 
They used the judiciary in the past to take away states and they want to use violence this time, thinking that the Federal Government will just fold its arms. The number one duty of a responsible government is to provide security and that is what this government is doing.  The same level of security was provided in Anambra State and we lost there and in Ondo State as well. The problem with the APC is that, if they win, the election is clean, there is no problem. But when they lose, they start talking all kinds of things. 

‘PDP’s tricks ‘ll not succeed in Osun’

‘PDP’s tricks ‘ll not succeed in Osun’

Former Oyo State Governor Omololu Olunloyo spoke with BISI OLADELE and TAYO JOHNSON on his  defection from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC), the Jonathan Administration and the recent Ekiti governorship election. He predicted that the tricks employed by the PDP to recapture Ekiti will fail during the Osun State poll.
What is your view on the current political situation in the country?
In my opinion, this is one of the worst periods in the history of this country. There is a government of mediocrity. In the first instance, you can interpret that anyway you like. There is the enthronement of mediocrity, fraud and all sorts of malversation. Anybody who has been connected with murder, arson and theft should not be allowed to contest any election in this country, especially when the matter has not been settled. Anybody who has been connected with fraud, serious fraud and is under the watchful eyes of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) should not be allowed to contest any election. I’m referring to the entire contestants. Ayo Fayose is my protégé. He attended the school I set up. He is a nice man, a rascal and he likes to enjoy himself. He supplies water when the people need water and meets their needs. He was good, but people misled him and asked him to go and do dangerous things. I’m saying you can’t contest any election from Agodi Prison and come out and be a senator. This is not possible, although Nkrumah went from prison during the colonial days. But, that is different and what I am saying is quite clear. No matter whose name it is, you can’t contest election from prison. We now have people convicted of fraud, arson, at the level of the EFCC, brazenly displaying their posters all about. Anybody can be accused at any time, but they have to clear their name first. A system that does not clear their name and allow them to move forward is moving the country backwards.
You were a member of the PDP. Why did you leave the party?
I left the party because the party was not serious. The party was not serious and I don’t think the party is still serious.
It is better for one to join no party than to join the PDP. First, they have no idea of reward. I have worked for this country for more than 50 years. We have been in positions for more than 50 years, in various positions. I was a commissioner at 27 years old. We were energetic, we were serious, and we had role models. In education, where I was and even then, I was not in Awolowo’s party, I would go to his house at Ikenne, Oke- Bola. Every member of his family can testify to that. I would go to his house and argue with him, talk with him and all that. I would go to UNESCO in Paris to see Awokoya, to also talk to Ajasin, those were the people responsible for the educational sector. We had people who inspired us. I tried to rejuvenate the education sector and ginger it up. Now, look at what the education sector has become. What I am saying in essence is that I have not been adequately rewarded.
We made a mistake, a bad one. Umaru fell ill, we did not know how to replace him. We did not know what to do.The slot of the presidency belongs to the Northwest, and you cannot be a President without a running mate. It is in the constitution, you can’t just go alone. Anyway, he finished his tenure. The party then committed a holler crime by choosing Jonathan. He is not from the Northwest. The ticket belonged to the Northwest. Not only did they choose Jonathan, they chose him in a way that I find revolting. What is revolting? they chose him unanimously. It was not as if it was the choice of his zone. Obasanjo, who preceded him, was a beneficiary of what one can say of all the efforts of Awolowo. I believe it was a crime for the PDP to have chosen GEJ. First of all, I believe it was the Northerners, if not Northwest that should have been chosen.
What should we expect during the 2015 election?
There will be multiplicity of mysterious tricks, which we have to prepare for now. As an old and experienced man, I know that all that glitters is not gold. An example is the Ekiti State election.   Mr Fayose is a personal young friend of mine. He has concern for youths and development, but when one wins the entire local governments in an election, I can’t explain. He has been changed from a Paul to Saul. He has been associated with about two murders and also the issue of his impeachment, and I am not so sure he is even qualified to contest an election, but being a politician, it seems everything goes in Nigeria. But, being a gentleman, I think he has pluses and minuses, and I’m not so sure he has the requirement to even qualify.
Apart from raising the issue of qualification, can you identify what you call other mysterious tricks?
Yes, the materials used during elections. Ekiti has what we can refer to as ink history. Earlier, it was red ink versus black ink but it is now allegations about erasable ink, and all sort of papers used as ballot papers during elections. This trouble goes on all over the world – in Malaysia and in various countries. I am not so sure that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is fully up to the task of monitoring all the tricks that politicians can play. I’m not so sure at all; there is some kind of naivety.  Something psychological bothers me. That is the fact that Nigeria might break up by 2015. Somebody has forecast this and it is exactly 50 years after the 1965 election. So, I am altogether pessimistic about the whole election issue. I don’t think people are serious at all. If the attacks of the Boko Haram eventually engulfs the country, then, any election will not be conducted in the country. The Federal Government must improve on leadership. The issue of insurgency like Maitasine  and all sorts of insurgent groups which Lt. General Danjuma will call cowboy insurgency, has now become cowboy coup, a scout coup. Though Boko Haram is not in any way related to scout, it is not a scout issue because of their exponian  system and firework approach. They seem to have better arms, better intelligence, better concentration of mind than the Federal Government. There was a time I thought I heard something like there were members of Boko Haram in the government. And the way Gen. Patrick Aziza perished also worries me. One can never know if it is an enemy action, which is coincidence or something else in this country. What is more important is that, as far as my mind is concerned, it is negative.
Is there a meeting point between what you call mysterious tricks and the APC allegation?
It is not the same thing: one is superficial and the other is deep. What the APC is saying is about improper practices while the other is about the technology of ballot papers, ink and related issues. The APC is absolutely correct, not because I am a member of the APC. There should be members of the opposition party and the Federal Government just hovering around the state whose movements are most annoying. Examples are Mr Andy Uba, who moved about the state under the guise of being the chairman of the senate committee on the INEC and also Jelili Adesiyan, the Minister for Police and also Musiliu Obanikoro, the Minister of State for Defence. They have no business there. they are not members of INEC, and they do not live there. They were just agents of intimidation. The use of the police and other unexplainable security operatives is for intimidation. That intimidation was a major factor used in unprecedented manners during election in Nigeria. Once there is intimidation, election cannot be free, fair and credible. If there is an intimidation with the police and security officers. the election cannot be said to be free, if it is not free, the election cannot be credible. All the policing and arrest of some people who are kingpins of the party are new tricks and I think they should play evil only once. The Yorubas have an adage that says you can only trick a woman to bed only once.
In the Osun election, there are two major candidates; Governor Rauf Aregbesola and Senator Iyiola Omisore. What is your opinion about them?
They are more than two. We have another contestant, Mr. Akinwusi, dyed-in-the wool civil servant. The candidate of the Labour Party, is also one to be reckoned with, Mr Fatai Akinbade, who was an SSG. These SSGs have a way of knowing the entrails, the very innermost part of the government. They have access to information and the likes. So, many of them have become governors in the past. I think the president of the APC now, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun and his Delta State counterpart, Emmanuel Uduaghan, were former SSGs. But, I think far above anyone, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola has carried out some very bold moves. He has done some hard works. He has done more work than politicking. He has been nurtured and trained in Lagos for eight years under Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Aregbesola has done very well. The first time I came across him was in the aspect of education.  If I am to go through the achievement of Aregbesola and all the attempt to isolate and embarrass him, it will take time but, I will make an attempt, to talk about part of it. There was an attempt to stigmatize him as a religious fanatic and that he wanted to Islamise Osun state. That is an absolute and complete nonsense. This gentleman is disciplined and principled. In his family, he has five siblings, two are Christians, one is deceased and he is a devout Muslim and he also has a brother, who does not even care about religion at all like me. Religion is a private thing and is one of the dangerous things in the world used to divide people. I do not see how Christians are better than Muslims. When they have nothing else to do, they start fighting. Aregbesola is not involved in that. They brought up the issue of hijab. Aregbesola’s wife is a Muslim. She does not wear hijab. Likewise his daughter. Aregbesola never made the use of hijab compulsory. He has had two first class appreciative funerals for a learned Judge, Justice Kayode Esho of the Supreme Court,  and Apostle Obadare, who despite that he was blind, influenced people during his life. Aregbesola gave them a fantastic funeral each. Everyone agreed that they are worth it. He did not say there must be Muslim funerals as well. Some people who are making trouble for the governor as regards religion in Osun State are doing so in vain. As a one-time commissioner for education in the Western Region, who still has interest in education, I see a lot of development in education. The people, who have been most critical of him, are the Baptist, and I do not see the point they are making. He decided to restructure the school into lower, middle and senior schools to which they do not agree. But, that is the decision of the government and they also raised the question of hijab in their schools. I do not think they have a point at all. But, one must be polite and gentle in handling them as Aregbesola has been handling them. The governor has not told them to their face in the manner in which could be said that they do not own the schools. The government has taken over the schools and is not running it irresponsibly. In Yorubaland, every family is also like Aregbesola’s family. My father was a church organist, my mother was a Muslim. My mother died as a Muslim and my father as a Christian. Almost every family in Nigeria has Christians and Muslims in their family. What Aregbesola is trying to do is to build high quality schools. If you build just 25 good schools, that is an achievement. How many schools were in existence in those days? He has done very well in education and he has brought Awolowo’s work into fore. Even though Awolowo was not a head of state, he attained the level of GCFR, based on what they have done in education. Aregbesola is a compassionate person. He has shown that, through the fantastic care of the elderly that he embarked upon in Osun, I do not think anything like that has ever been done before in Nigeria. The state will be a beneficiary of his second term, in their education and development, which is better than infrastructural development: building roads and other things, although they are also important. That is what I can say about him from what I have seen in Lagos and Osun states. I also think human development is also his forte in the State of Osun.
What about the other candidate Omisore?
What I can say about it is that he is from an illustrious family. I will not like to say more.
What can you say about the election in Osun state?
I see a clear win for the hardworking incumbent governor because there are many things that go on in Nigeria. The Bible says the race is not for the swift, nor the strongest. A prophet deserves honour at times in his own country and I think he should be honoured.  If you take a statistical review, he has a large number of supporters, a large percentage in the rural areas like the conservative party in England. He also has not less than 50 percent support in not less than seventy-five percent of the state.
Is a free, fair and credible election possible in Osun State on August 9?
The remedy is partly in the hand of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria?  When he came to canvass in Ekiti, there was nothing wrong with it except that the canvassing was very biased. There is, in this country, a national security council and there is also in every state, a state  security committee, but some of the unwritten rules were broken. The governor is the chief security officer of the state. It is very dangerous for the president to move about in a manner that he is accompanied by people who represent wicked force in the communities, even when such forces could be unleashed by the state security committees too. All this little argument about state police, if this country is truly a federal republic and there is a state election, and the governor starts canvassing for votes and the vice president starts talking about insurgency and so on, there will be chaos. There must be give-and take. There must be gentlemanly exchanges. We have to be very careful with all we do in this regard. In Osun, there is some kind of envy of Osun State. some people are very envious of Osun State. Some people are even afraid of Osun State. Why do I say so? In the last election, Osun State came out uniquely as one in which the incumbent president did not get 25 per cent of votes, but he got more than that in Lagos because it is a cosmopolitan city with multi-ethnic groups. You can almost ignore the indigenes there. I think that this time the president must be careful with what he does and what he leaves undone. The Vice-President must be ‘Mutantis Mutandis’ meaning that he must also be careful. I believe that the state security committee has a very important role to play in this election and if they decide to flex their muscle as the Federal Government seems to have flexed his muscle in Ekiti, they will be right to do so on their own peril. This is a federation and everybody knows that. Security is on the concurrent list, and the Attorney General in the 1979 constitution in the federal as well as the state, the Attorney General can only hold two positions though the two positions are separated in England. He is the Minister of Justice, and Attorney General. The Attorney General is the lawyer of the government, the commissioner is the lawyer of the people. The government is a body of cooperate groups who can sue and be sued. Now, under the 1999 constitution, the Attorney General can only be appointed through a political post. The Attorney General is the Attorney General, Commissior for Justice and the Chief Law Officer. Some of these things will be incompatible without having a state police. Even in the colonial days in Ibadan here, we had three kinds of police. We had the Akoda who were in Mapo, we had the local government police in Yemetu, then, we had the Nigeria Police Force at Iyaganku. Each one of them knew their level of jurisdictions. What can spoil an election is the clash between the state and federal security committee. I think the federal are the people to be reminded that there is a certain security apparatus that contains some laws and also which is entitled to oversee the security of the state, and should not just sit down and watch while they are overrun by overzealous federal officials.
Sir, you talked about integrity of ?ballot papers in Ekiti State election. But, the same INEC is going to conduct the election in Osun State. What do you think is the implication of this on the Osun State governorship election?
I think they are making some omissions. I think the representatives of each political party must see same sensitive materials of the INEC. There must be transparency in it. If you think you are smart, somebody can be smarter, if you think you can run, somebody can run faster. In clear terms, the representatives of each political party must have access to some of the so-called sensitive materials that are being used during the election. For example, during the Ekiti election, the Minister of State for Defence, Musiliu Obanikoro was sited at Akure airport with some boxes and so on. What the boxes contained? Don’t ask me because I will not be able to tell you the answer.

Sunday, 20 July 2014

Why Osun people want Aregbesola out —Omisore

Why Osun people want Aregbesola out —Omisore

Former chairman, Senate Committee on Appropriation, Dr Iyiola Omisore and candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the August 9 Osun State governorship election speaks with a select team of journalists on a wide range of issues concerning the poll. Excerpts:
YOUR main opponent, Governor Rauf Aregbesola, has been pulling  large crowds at his campaign rallies and the photographs of these rallies are regularly in the media. Are you not frightened, with the prospect of losing the coming election to him?I won’t lose the election. From what I have seen so far, Aregbesola is gone in Osun. The crowds you see at his rallies posted on Facebook and on the pages of newspapers are make-believe. They (APC) did just that in Ekiti and lost. I am not interested in renting some crowds from Lagos and moving them, including underaged children, from town to town to come and dance skelewu. I campaign where the votes are. The votes are in the polling units, wards, villages and towns, and that is where I have been going and campaigning. On August 9, these are the people who will vote, not Aregbesola’s crowd of dancers.
Aregbesola’s developmental efforts do not go beyond two or three local governments. Twenty seven local governments are virgin areas with no government presence at all. All the roads he claims he is doing are Federal Government roads, and he only wants an opportunity to make money or steal money. Imagine the poor state of the Iwo to Osogbo road, the major road in this state. We passed through it last night when we were coming; it was like a dungeon. How can a governor ignore that road for four years, and he wants to win election in this state? That is the most important road in this state.  Instead, he is digging holes, claiming he has been building a bridge on the Ife-Ibadan expressway, a project which is of no value. So, the government is being driven by profit, not by service. By profit, because it is where they can benefit and steal money, that is their condition for siting projects. A government must be driven by service and necessity. That is why there is mass rejection of this government. 
Look at two instances. Look at school uniform, which is being sold at N2,000 per pair. It is N500 in the market. Be that as it may, on an economic scale, the school uniform being sewn for students has deprived over a million people of jobs and income: tailors, cloth sellers, middlemen and women. The policy of government directly sewing uniforms and selling them to students is adversely affecting the  economy of this state. That is why there is mass rejection of this government all over the state.
Look at his mega school. It collapsed just before commissioning. Look at schools in Iwo. Pupils went to school in hijab, choir dress, masquerade dress. The sanctity of the schools is being destroyed.  And Osun State people are too wise. I learnt they call them Osungo in Lagos.  We are not stupid at all. We will tell them we are not stupid on 9th August.  We will even tell them that we are wiser than Lagosians. APC has been deceiving the people of Lagos for the past 12 years but we reject them in this state. We are not stupid at all in Osun State; we know what we are doing. There is total, mass rejection of this government. The roads are bad everywhere; 95 per cent of those roads are bad. Completely bad.
The picture you have painted is a very bad one. But the government has been saying “We have built roads with tribal marks, roads that will become tourist attraction and so on and so forth.’’ But now, you are painting a different picture entirely. Why the disconnect?The government is just propaganda, that’s all. Aregbesola’s projects  are just on newspapers and TV. How can you have a government which awarded contracts four years ago and up till today, they are not more than 10 per cent completed? When he came in, he awarded Osogbo to Kwara boundary for over twenty-something billion and he has stopped work on it… He awarded Gbongan Junction to Sekona (phase 1); the work has not been completed. The  /Osogbo ring road, the work has stopped on site now. The construction was awarded to a Turkish company. Even the artisans, including the drivers, came from Turkey. The mechanic came from Turkey. So, there is capital flight and poverty in the land.
He has not paid salaries of teachers, civil servants, teachers and pensioners for some time but he is trying to pay them quickly now. If they (Aregbesola and his cabinet) are not investors doing business with workers’ wages, would he just be paying them now? Where is the money coming from now? He is owing O-YES people he kept in bondage six months’ salary arrears but he has paid three months out of it now.  Where is he getting money from, when he has not paid them for so long?
We are aware of their plan to do propaganda and rig election through violence and thuggery. But luckily for us, there is security in this state, so there will be no room for thuggery and violence at all. It’s going to be a very peaceful election: one man, one vote. There is nothing to show that we have government in this state; all you have are the so-called ‘ongoing work.’ I am an engineer. What is the ongoing work? Just excavation. When you are doing construction work, excavation is   less than five per cent of the job. Up till today, not a single tar on the road. All the roads he is doing are “ongoing’ and he has spent up to N100 billion. So, it is for profit basically, not for service. Look at Opon Imo. N8.4 billion has been withdrawn from circulation. If they don’t fine-tune it, they should return our money back to us. 
Withdrawn?O yes, it should be withdrawn because there is no basis for it. One, Mathematics is there but there is no single illustrative diagram, no single table, no single graph. You can’t teach Mathematics without graphs, log tables for geometric analysis. Not a single line in the whole opon imo. That is the first fallacy. Two, the syllabuses of SS1 to SS3 are three. So, you are going to have failures in the next three years now. When you open History in Opon Imo, in Chapter 9, you have History of Mali as topic but the body of the chapter discusses the Songhai empire. That is a major problem we have with opon imo. Opon Imo has 17 subjects with 87 per cent errors. So, it is an albatross, an embarrassment for us. Opon Imo is a scam and this scam should be withdrawn from circulation. 
Look at Fakunle Comprehensive High School  in Osogbo, now demolished. Because you want to build a shopping mall for Bola Tinubu, you now share out students of the school to other schools? After August 9, we will bring back that school. There are lots of dropouts from our school now.  Thugs are now made from schools. Parents who can barely feed now have to spend a lot of money to send their children to school. Students have to trek six or seven kilometres, between Akinlalu and Oyere, before they get to school.
You have been going round the state. What are the specific demands that the people are making?One, they told me that they want the sewing of uniforms to stop. “Omisore, gba aso iya lorun wa; awa o fe mo (Omisore, rid us of the clothes of suffering. We don’t want it),” is the song everywhere. Two, the schools should be returned to their original owners, for those who want them back. We are going to run a people-oriented, people-based government. Workers’ salaries will be paid promptly. Professionals who are useful are going to be brought in to restore pride in the people.
All the tertiary institutions will be reopened; they have been on strike now for over five months. A lecturer handles as much as 12 subjects because Aregbesola did not employ enough hands; no teachers, no bursary, no scholarship. So, the economy of this state has become comatose. They are all foreigners here; they come from Lagos on Tuesday and go back on Thursdays. They come with their soap and drinking water. ..The people of Osun are visibly hungry and very angry.
There’s been some controversy over the debt profile of the state, but the Debt Management Office has said Osun State’s debt is sustainable. What is your take on the issue..?How much is this sustainable debt? The government should come out with the debt portfolio of the state now. Any government can borrow money, but it is the right of the people to know how much has been borrowed and what it has been used for. The point is, what has he used the money for? There is nothing on the ground to show for it. You borrow money to do what? To steal? That is the problem. Even the allocation from Abuja, about N613 billion in the last three and a half years now cannot be accounted for with what is on the ground. The roads that are said to be ‘ongoing,’ the government has not done 60 per cent of those roads. They are not up to N200 billion in totality. So, where is our money? A state which cannot pay salaries can buy helicopters for N4 billion for surveillance. Osun is the second safest state in this country but they now bought helicopters for N4 billion, to be patrolling the state. This is money that can be used to pay pensioners for years. It would pay civil servants for two consecutive years.  Sustainable or not, how much is the debt profile? What have they done with our money?
Why the debt in the first instance? What is the necessity for the debt? The government has done no single rural road, and Osun is an agrarian community. Most farmers ride bicycles to the farms. That is why the hungry cry all over the place. The farmers are poor; they can’t even transfer their goods to town because there are no good roads. I have traversed this state in the last one and a half months. There are bad roads everywhere. When I got to Atakumosa West…my vehicle broke down; I had to board an okada (motorbike) to get to my campaign ground.  That is the kind of thing we have. The roads are so bad. But you see, the beauty is that Osun indigenes know this and they will decide on 9th August.
Some people said your riding okada was to imitate former Governor Ayo FayoseMy vehicles got stuck and I just took okada from that point to my campaign venue. That is all. Fayose takes okada in Ado-Ekiti now and then.  It was the only option available to me to get to my campaign venue. And I took it. I even take okada in Osogbo. They must find fault. I was passing and market people blocked me. I came down from the vehicle and had to address all of them. Even people going to church or coming from the mosque would stop me. It is very common. Some of the women would give me corn. It was their show of love and acceptance. And I always accept such graciously. On a particular occasion, I was passing by Sekona market and the people gave me corn, pepper, tomatoes and what have you. It is what they have. Fayose goes to the market in Ado Ekiti. If I am in Ede on a market day, the people would stop me. I have to stop and address them.
The other time you said “There will be security in Ekiti.” And your major opponent, the sitting governor, a tough man, said that he is a street man. You are also a strong man. Do  we expect war on election day?I’m not from the streets. He is from the streets. I have a good pedigree. I’m from a good home, a comfortable home, and very good parents. I’m not from the street o. I’m just courageous and strong in my will…The governor has said it himself that he controls thugs now, the State Boys. He is saying it everywhere, openly. Look at what happened in Ekiti; all thugs were arrested. Let our votes count. It is too late for him and he must know that he can’t use violence to win election in Osun. The last election we had, they snatched ball boxes from polling units. That is what he is used to, but he will be shocked. Osun people have decided to shock him with this election. In fact, he is going to lose every local government in this state. 
Osun has 30 local governments.  He is going to lose every local government. Go and mark it down today.
Including where he comes from, Ilesa, East and West?He’s a (potentee?…) in Ilesa. Go to Ilesa and find out. He’s from Arigidi Akoko. So, the Ijesas know themselves. I’m an Ife-Ijesha man. We know ourselves very well.
Are you saying that Governor Aregbesola is not from Ilesa?I don’t know. Go to Ilesa and find out. Maybe his parents should answer that question. He may be Ijesa abroad.
From what you have seen now of the ongoing projects, it means that you have a serious work to do if you are eventually elected as governor. Are you not worried that, given the state of the economy of Osun, you may not have the wherewithal to solve the people’s problems? And, what magic are you going to use?
One, the projects that are ‘ongoing’ are Federal Government projects. I’m going  to beg the Federal Government to take on the projects and pay for them. Being  a sitting  governor,  I will have access to them. Two, all other problems are things he (Aregbesola) caused. I would just return the schools to their owners, allow school uniforms to be sewn by those who were sewing them before. Everybody will be free. There will be peace in the state immediately. And any bank that he ‘over borrowed’ money from should go and look for Aregbe where they sacked him.
You won’t stop the ongoing projects?No. They are Federal Government projects, basically, and I think it is easier for us to fund them from the Federal Government purse. Osogbo ring road, Kwara boundary to Osogbo, Sekona to Gbongan are all Federal Government roads.
But the Minister for Works said recently that his ministry is not going to be involved in any urban renewal programme of any government, that what the ministry is going to concern itself with are inter-state roads, which means that the roads linking one part of Osun to another will not be…We have the necessary road documents and their geographical locaions. It is not that the minister that will tell you. I know much more about the roads in the country. I was in the Senate Committee on Appropriation and I know the roads physically. It is not about ministerial discretion. We know the federal roads in every state. They are mostly inter-link state roads. Before state creation, some of them pass through the states. That was long ago when we had 12 states.  Now that we have 36 states, some of them are now inside the states and in the towns. So, that is not a problem at all. We know federal roads everywhere in Nigeria.
How do you see the trend of Yoruba politics between now and 2015?Well, Ekiti has gone to the PDP. Osun is going to the PDP in a few days’ time. Oyo, Ogun and Lagos will follow. That is the trend now.
Why do you think this is happening, because we need to distill it, ..You know, people have been deceived for a long time. These people (APC) are mere hypocrites. Yoruba people are wise people; you can’t fool them for long. They will pretend to look at you. In fact, what is happening in Osun State, I’ve not seen it in my life. A two-year-old, a four-year-old with tell you what is happening  to Aregebesola. “Ole ni o, o ko owo wa lo s’ Eko. A o fe mo! A a ni teacher ni school wa’ (He’s a thief, he carried our money to Lagos, we don’t want him again! We don’t have enough teachers in my school). I’ve never seen this in my life. It is a lifetime experience. My reception by the people has been massive. You have to come and see the massive turn out for yourself. If you are just imagining it, you might just say “O popular ni’’ (He’s just popular) but it is beyond that. Yesterday, I just passed through Iwo by chance and for two minutes, the whole place was in an uproar.
My own worry is this. You have gone through the state and you have seen the massive turn out. Quite so often, all the places you have touched have challenges and people have been talking to you about these challenges, issues that they expect you to begin to address. Are you not scared that, “At the end of the day, will I, Omisore, be able to meet the people’s expectations’? Two, if inside one or two years by reason of bad economy in Abuja, your state is affected, how prepared are you to revamp the economy of this state to the extent that you would not have done your permutations based on whatever you would be getting from Abuja? Again, people would profile Omisore, saying that ever since you came into politics, you had just one ambition, to become governor; that even when you were a deputy to Chief Bisi Akande, you wanted to be governor. Is it just about being credited with  being  the governor of Osun State? What is the driving force?One, going through this state with the myriads of problems can be scary initially.  But with a sense of leadership and purposefulness, the problems are surmountable. A lot of money has been collected in this state in the past three and a half years; it has not solved the problems of the state because of capital flight. Our main problem is capital flight; there is no transparency in governance at all. The last regime of the PDP awarded contracts for roads at less than N93 million per kilometer; they (APC) are doing their own at N1.1 billion per kilometer, so they are stealing  about N1 billion per kilometer. So, about N200 billion is lost. N200 billion is enough for the 30 local governments… If there is no capital flight and you spend Osun State money on Osun State, there won’t be any complaint. These roads are not trunk-A roads; they are rural roads, basically, just to carry farm produce from farms to the villages, and from the villages to the markets. That is all. You also need small water schemes. But because these people take our money to Lagos, we are in trouble.
Then the issue of being a governor or not being a governor, I wanted to be governor in 1999 but I was asked to step down for Chief Akande and I did. That shows the kind of person that I am. If it is the will of God for me to be governor, I will be. This last one, I was persuaded to go and run. Party people came to me and begged me to run. I said “If you want me to run for governor, then you must be ready for it.” I thank God that I didn’t even refuse to run, or the state would have been in a terrible state by now. It’s not about wanting to be a governor. No. It is a call to service, at any level. I am just a tool in the hands of God to help the people. I am not desperate, I am a professional and I have my job and I will..after the governorship.
You mentioned that you were asked to step down for Chief Akande in 1999. Does that mean that you were initially penciled in for the governorship?Chief Bisi Akande was my coordinator before the election. I was running for governorship.
He was the party chairman; he was the one coordinating for me.
When you were asked to step down, was it in the understanding that you would take over from him?That was the understanding. I think when we got to office and he started enjoying the perks of office, he decided to go further. And I told him at the time: “If you had told me that you wanted to run for a second term— I mean, I’m a young man—I would have understood. But you didn’t. You call yourself a progressive, and you went ahead to undermine my integrity and my life,” which led to the crisis.
If, on your way out now, you meet Governor Aregbesola, what would you tell him?I would just greet him now, and tell him to be preparing his handover notes. I would greet him and hug him. He is still the governor of this state. At least, nobody can be governor without the will of God, even if it is a stolen mandate. I would still greet him. By God’s grace, we will meet again.
Finally, some of your co-contestants for the PDP governorship ticket are with you now…We are together
But what is your relationship with former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola like?Very, very cordial. Governor Oyinlola met with the President about two weeks ago to discuss some national issues. He spoke to me that he met with President Jonathan and they are trying to resolve the contentious issues. He said he’s still in PDP.
Have you approached him on a brother-to-brother basis on your ambition? We have talked all this while. Every step he has been taken, I am aware of it and I am part and parcel of it.
What would you say about the people who have just been expelled from your party, for anti-party activities? A number of them are known to be supporters of OyinlolaThey are working in Adeleke’s camp now. I don’t think they are for Governor Oyinlola. Remember that Oyinlola said he is still in the PDP when he was being pressurized by the opposition people.
How strong is the PDP going into this election?We are as strong as ever now. These people you spoke about, who were expelled, have already gone to the APC. During Adeleke’s defection, he mentioned Salaam; he mentioned Teslim Igbalaye. He mentioned them as people defecting with him. We should just give them time; maybe they would come back and repent.

Saturday, 19 July 2014

My problems with ex-gov Adeleke —Bello, Omisore’s running mate

My problems with ex-gov Adeleke —Bello, Omisore’s running mate

Deputy governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the August 9 election in Osun State, Mr Adejare Bello, speaks with MOSES ALAO on his party’s chances at the poll, his relationship with his erstwhile political leader, Senator Isiaka Adeleke, who defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC), among other things. Excerpts:
In the past one month, the PDP has moved from one local government to another, campaigning in even the innermost parts of the state. Are you doing this out of fear that your party might have difficulty winning the election?
I am happy that you said you have seen us go to the hinterlands. Journalists have followed us all this while as we ensure that we touch the nooks and crannies of Osun State. I have been in politics for 20 years. The kinds of campaigns, rallies and attempts to woo the people of Osun State to support the PDP, which we are currently doing, I have never done a quarter of them before. It is not because I have never contested an office that is as high as deputy governor, because I have joined a number of gubernatorial and presidential campaigns. But in this case, Senator Iyiola Omisore directed that the party must organise a campaign that will give us the opportunity to know the yearnings and aspirations of the people of the state. When the itinerary was rolled out by the party, Senator Omisore took it upon himself to go through it and added that we must go to each of the 332 wards. The reason is that we need to see for ourselves. If we want to plan for the people and we don’t know what their problems are, it will be difficult. If we don’t get ourselves intimated with the wishes and aspirations of Osun people, our planning will be as ineffective as that of Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s government, which is filled with people from Lagos, who do not know what our people want. 
Let me give you an example. At Ife North Local Government, from Akinlalu, we entered the road to Famia-Oyere-Aborisade at 7.00 p.m. and came out at 1.05 a.m. We spent over six hours in the bush. It registered in our minds that unless one is a devil incarnate, one must plan for the people in that place. We were in the bush for more than six hours where there is no electricity, potable water, good roads or even telecommunication network. For those of us that fasted on that day, we wanted to break the fast but there was no water to drink. And people there are human beings like us. Some of us broke down after that day and it took the grace of God for us to rise. 
The earliest time we got to the state capital every day is 12 midnight. That demonstrates that we are not only going from ward to ward, we are even going to polling units. For instance, in Ila-Orangun, Ajaba ward has about six units; there are two units at Ejigbo-Orangun, another two units at Edemosi and because of those four units, we were outside Ajaba for more than four hours. That is the kind of campaign we are doing and we mean business. We will not stop and we will not break down until we get our victory. As it was rumoured that Omisore broke down and was flown abroad, I am happy you saw him at Boluwaduro, Osogbo and Olorunda local governments last Tuesday and Wednesday. That is for you to know that we mean business and that we are already on ground in Osun State. I was in the House of Assembly for 12 years, out of which I was Speaker for eight years. I have left government three years and eight months now but I have not stayed out of Osun State for 50 days altogether either out of Nigeria or in Abuja. That is to tell you that the PDP is peopled by politicians who are on ground, who know where the shoes pinch the people and are ready to address those areas.
But the APC recently accused Omisore of lying to the people of the state, especially the rural people, about your party’s plans for them...There is a saying in Yoruba that ‘eekan ni atannido ntan ni mo,’ meaning you can only deceive a woman to sleep with her once. If we tell Osun people that we will do this and that and we say the grassroots people will receive attention in our government and at the end of four years, we fail to do them, our party will have to face the people again. We are not the kinds of people that will make promises to people and let them down, and we are saying boldly that our words are binding. Under former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola, for seven and a half years, there was no strike by the labour for one day, because if the executive could not solve their problems, they would come to the House of Assembly and I know what I did back then and we will do the same thing now. Currently, what is bringing the workers in collision with the government is the issue of contributory pension; 7.5 per cent is deducted from their salaries and the government is supposed to add another 7.5 per cent to make it 15 per cent. But the government did not give its 7.5 per cent, neither can the 7.5 per cent it deducted from the workers’ salary be traced. The money has been stolen and that is the crux of the matter. That is why the tertiary institutions have gone on strike for five months. We will address all of this and we will handle matters the way we did under Oyinlola that there was no strike. We promise the labour and ours are not empty promises. We will do all we have promised the people.
You sound confident as if you are sure of victory at the election. I thank you for noticing the confidence that radiates in me. If you do your job well, you will not envisage any problem. If I campaign to units and wards, what else do I have to be afraid of? If our obas and chiefs and townspeople could be waiting for us up to 1.00 a.m. every day and they would have begun to expect us from 10.00 a.m. - some of them that were fasting would not even break their fast, and not because we were giving them money as the APC has been doing, but because of their love for Omisore, then I should have confidence. I am waiting for the 27th of November, 2014 to hold my Qur’an while Omisore holds the Bible to be sworn in as deputy governor and governor, respectively. Governor Aregbesola has not satisfied Osun people with his best that he has done. He has to leave.
But given the position of former Governor Isiaka Adeleke that everything you achieved in politics was through him, how convinced are you that Ede people will go with you instead of Adeleke whom they have always trusted but is now in the APC?If you go to Adeleke and he wants to be fair to me, he will tell you that I am the first among the people he has used to attain the fame he has politically, dating back to when he was in the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and I was in the National Republican Convention (NRC) as its Public Relations Officer in the state. Back then, when he wanted to be governor, I supported him despite being in the NRC. He will tell you that I am the rallying point of whatever glory he has got from Ede people. Let me give you an example. Why did he make me the Director-General of his campaign organisation when I had not even joined him? I was in the Omisore caucus then. But when he called me and said that was what he wanted, I called Omisore and said he should allow me to work for my townspeople. I make bold to say that I am the one responsible for everything Adeleke has achieved in the last 15 years politically.
But he painted a different picture in a recent interview...He is my oga. When you make use of people under you and they work well, you can go to sleep as an oga. In one of the interviews he granted, he said people came to wake him up at 1.00 p.m; that I was losing one of the elections that took me to the House of Assembly; why would he sleep if not that he believed that with Adejare Bello and his people on ground, there was no problem for him? That could only be the reason a leader would be sleeping by 1.00 p.m., because that is barely three hours to the end of the election. That is for you to know that if it is about Adejare Bello, you can go and rest, because I am always dedicated to my cause and I don’t betray people. So, if Adeleke said that it was because of him that I had political fame, I will say yes, but it is a give-and-take thing. Adeleke assisted me a lot but I assisted him more than he assisted me. Think about it, how is it possible for a single person to win election four times consecutively into the same House of Assembly? 1997, 1999, 2003 and 2007. I read one of his interviews where he said he was imposing me on the people. That is a blatant lie. The people we contested in the primaries together such as Adisa Tajudeen, Ajagbe of the House of Representatives, Kamo Olagoke and others are alive. The only time that was done was in 2007 when Adeleke wanted to change me because he said I was becoming too powerful for him and he went to Oyinlola to say that Ede people were tired of me. But Oyinlola told him that ‘it was not because Ede was qualified to be speaker that it was given the slot but because of Bello, if you don’t want Bello, we will take it to another local government.’ And that was why Adeleke dropped everything on his agenda. I thank God that everything I have done politically, I have not soiled my reputation. If you ask me anything, I refer people to the records in the House of Assembly; that I am in the public court. Go and check my records, as the Minority Leader for four years and Speaker for eight years.

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

PDP HAS TO MARCH ON BLOOD TO WIN OSUN GUBER ELECTION – AREGBESOLA…..

PDP HAS TO MARCH ON BLOOD TO WIN OSUN GUBER ELECTION – AREGBESOLA…..


PDP HAS TO MARCH ON BLOOD TO WIN OSUN GUBER ELECTION – AREGBESOLA…..
Q: What is the centre piece of your government?
A: I tell people that I am yet to see a government either before or now, I don’t know of tomorrow, who has made the people the centre of governance, as much as we are doing. I’m not saying this because I want to sound fulfilled. I am saying this because I want people to know the distinction between people-oriented government and a government as usual. You see, the usual government panders to strict expectation and rules; road must be built, whether it has economic or social significance, it does not matter. Government must build roads and we are building roads. We are not against construction of roads and edifices; we are only saying that if the people are serviced in a way that their potential would be fully developed, at the appropriate time, those things ,in term of infrastructure, would just naturally come.Q: When you came into office three years ago,what did you meet on ground?
A: On assumption of office,we saw the inhuman condition of our youths who in. Their thousands were unemployed. As a matter of fact, when we advertised for our youth empowerment scheme of engaging youth in community,social and public works,we received application in excess of 250,000 for 20,000 volunteers.we advertised what the job is all about;community works such as clearing of gutters, clearing waste, clearing roads ,and so on. We equally stated those who we wanted to engage; school certificate and diploma holders,and graduates. That would tell you the proportion of our youths that simply have nothing to do. That was a graphic exhibition of the seriousness of the issue of unemployment in our land.we recruited the 20,000 without any sentiment. Hardly was there any household without a representative in that scheme.
The second phase of it is on. In all, we are touching the lives of 40,000 people in a way that we are happy and they are happy too. That scheme has positively affected our state that our state today is the most peaceful in Nigeria. Most of what we hear in hear in other states rarely happen in our state. National Bureau of Statistics rates our state as the state with the least unemployment in Nigeria. On the index of NBS,we rate three percent unemployment.on social and human capacity index,we are the best.on the poverty reduction index, we came second. They claimed we are next to Niger state. When they combined all the parameters for assessing human development index,we came first because the state that came first in poverty reduction index was eighth in unemployment index. By the time you do a summary of the various social and economic indices for assessing states,we are just simply the best.
After that,we went to education. By the time we assumed office ,we found out that education was not just there. We showed concern and my presentation at the education summit was that the summit participants must look at the possibilities of closing schools for two years, for us to effectively do something about the situation,the capacity of the teachers and others. But my view was not popular in that summit.the summit concluded with some action plans.heading that summit on education was Prof.Wole Soyinka.so,the reforms we are implementing on education,was the directive of the summit which we convened less than two months into office.
So, for anybody to now impugn that our reform which is a direct offshoot of that summit on education, in which we had the best brains both within and outside, is to us very strange. Those who participated in the summit had no religious bias; they simply told us that if we are serious about what we told them we wanted to do, follow this course. The process given by them is that we must rebuild our schools, we must feed pupils at the lowest level of education very well to sufficiently attract and retain them in school; we must look at how to indigenise the uniform they wear, train and re-train the teachers as well as encourage them. hey told us how that could be done by setting aside a school for primary education and others.these recommendation,we adopted and started aggressive implementation. Today in Osun, we feed close to 300,000 pupils in the whole primaries 1- 4. No state in Nigeria has ever attempted that scale of engagement of students. We have been doing it for over a year now at an annual cost of N3.6 billion. We are proud to say that whoever likes should come and see what they feed these pupils with.
I challenge any government in Nigeria to come and say they have done close to this, even for one day, we have been doing this since April 2012. It is unprecedented.
We are the first government in the history of Nigeria that will give 750,000 pupils in public schools uniform.The uniforms are in three categories. There is a set of uniform for the elementary schools, uniform for the middle school and for the high school as well. We restructured basic education into elementary,middle,and high school .
Again, we are providing all the students, 150,000 of them in high school, with an electronic education device in which you have all textbooks for learning, practice questions, compiled 10 years of WAEC and JAMB past questions, and tutorials for all lesson in high school. We give them this bit to ensure that nobody lacks anything that is required for successful completion of high school. No matter your background or who your parents are, you have access to the best learning tools in the state. So, we tell the students and the parents that whoever fails, either internal or external examinations, has nobody to blame but themselves. That is why Tablet of Knowledge (Opon Imo) is all about. We did not plagiarise any material; we are paying royalties.
We pay per copy of the set we use. It’s like 26 per book. When you look at per cost per book that we pay to the various contributors, you will see that it is incomparable to the hard copy. Government is to reduce the burden of care on citizens. What we have achieved with this is to provide a core need at the cheapest price to everybody. It is cheap to government, it’s free to our citizens.
 We also avoid the mystery of flooding by continuously dredging and clearing the waterway and this paid off when in 2012 the entire nation experienced terrible flooding, Osun was the only state that was never adversely affected. So, channelization and dredging of our waterways continually totally eliminated the pain and stress of flooding some states in Nigeria experienced.
We take care of the elderly. We selected 1,000 of them and we ensure we give them N10,000 monthly. It was not based on any sentiment. We also do home based medical care for the elderly state-wide. I only want to paint to you our human-angle approach to governance. There is no class of people that we do not touch. Our administration is the first that can say that no household in Osun exist without an impact from our administration.

We support farmers to increase productivity. Our school feeding has positively impacted the agriculture sector. We have a 25 percent increase in enrollment today, Osun has the highest primary school enrollment in Nigeria, according to NBS data.
Q: Several criticisms have trailed the state’s education sector, especially the perceived Islamisation which has affected your administration negatively.
A: Let me talk about two things that gained some currency in the media. The first is that our school reform is an Islamisation agenda. When they say so, I just laugh. The poorest of the poor are those who send their wards to public schools, not only in Osun but all over Nigeria. People with very limited resources, consider public schools as the only alternative. So, with the recommendations of the summit, came the need to critically examine all aspects of it. In our examination, we discovered that there are students without teachers, whereas there are teachers without student in others. What was left to us was to restructure in such a way that we will have students as well as adequate or near-adequate number of teachers.
Two, we change the structure of education from the popular 6-3-3-4 to 4-5-3. This does not change the curriculum but the age bracket in each level of education. Before our intervention, we had six years of primary school. With our new structure, we now have elementary for pupils between six and nine, middle school for between nine and 14 and high school for student between 15 and 17. For us to now have this, we must relocate pupils. For the elementary schools, you mustn’t move beyond 500 metres to where your parent either live or work, depending on the choice of your mother. For the middle, it may be one kilometer or two. For the high level, there is no limit where the distance of your school can be because that is the adventurous age.
We never thought of any sentiment in all of this. But even at that, we are not unmindful of sentiments. In the re-classification and consolidation, we never moved pupils from Christian named schools to Muslim named schools. I never said Christian schools or Muslim schools. Since 1975, except for states that have done something about reversal, the law is still extant that there is no exclusively public Christian or Muslim school. All the public schools before 1975 were partially owned but after 1975, they were absolutely owned by the public, which is government. It, therefore, surprised us when people say we moved Muslims pupils to Christian schools. That was never done. We ensured that students were moved from Christian named schools.
Let me give you an example. In Iwo, we chose Baptist High School as the consolidation centre for Iwo area. We therefore moved pupils because it is named Baptist but not owned by Baptist and that name is retained. We moved pupils from United Methodist High school and St. Mary Catholic School to make up the required number of students of 3,000 in Baptist High School. But because of the report against our reform, the fact that 19 female students from United Methodist High School were Hijab wearers, which the school had hitherto allowed. Six female students from St Mary Catholic School had been allowed to wear Hijab, long before our consolidation came. We moved all of them to Baptist High School. There are, therefore, 25 female students among 3000 students in Baptist High School wearing Hijab as they were wearing in their previous schools. That was what a section of the parents in Baptist High School resisted that their school was a Christian school that nobody must wear Hijab.
Anybody can still go to inquire about what I have said because the story is still fresh. Is there anywhere in Nigeria where students are admitted to public schools on religious basis? The answer is no. Segregation on the basis of religion is never allowed in any school in Nigeria, public or private. If admission into school is not faith based, where would I now get exclusive Muslim that I will take to exclusive Christian schools? There was nothing like that but it was taken as the truth. Let us ask ourselves, who is at risk, the minority or the majority? There are 25 student wearing Hijab in a school with 3000 students not wearing, who is at risk? This issue happened only in one school. For Baptist High School, Ede, the problem is that its name must not be changed from Baptist High school to Baptist Middle School. Baptist Girls High School. Osogbo its own grouse with us is that it should remain a Girls High School, when the reality on ground does not support a single sex school. Let us assume that there are 10 schools that have hitches in our re-classification programme out of 2000 schools. How could that constitute a threat to that reform? There are actually five and they all belong to one denomination of Christianity, Baptist. Whatever you read about it, just know that those who write about it have their reasons for such campaigns against us. We see it as a campaign of calumny and we leave them to their conscience.
Q: Why haven’t you considered returning school back to missionaries?
A: Have you considered or studied why the schools were taken over from the missionaries in the first place? The schools were taken over because several years before the complete take over, government was actually running the school especially in Western Nigeria. I attended a catholic primary school and government was responsible for the teachers, the grants for running the schools. It was the year I was leaving school that government finally announced the takeover. The missionaries protested that they must be compensated; governments agreed but let us do a balance of how much we have spent overtime for teachers, infrastructure and other investment. That was how they bowed out.
In my broadcast to the state early this year, I said as we are progressing the new school structure, spaces will be created and there will be no question of returning schools or not.  It is not as if I am against return of schools, but it is the practical impossibility of it now, until I have alternatives for the pupils, declaring that I am returning schools to the original owners would simply mean irresponsibility.
Q; So there is no Islamisation agenda?
A: Not at all. In the composition of my cabinet, over two-thirds of members of my cabinet  are  Christians. I chose them myself.
More than three-quarters of permanent secretary are Christian. All the  judges  in Osun over  90 per cent are Christians I didn’t appoint those ones.
Sixteen House of Assembly member are Christians. So, where would anyone sustain this argument of Islamisation. I struggle to be devout Muslim.
The charge is more of the charge is more of my appearance and being than any reality. Rather than come out to say why we labeled  you as an Islamic  is because how you appear, you  wear beard, you put on this cap and others. They know  they can’t say that because it is uncivilized, they now tell  lies.
Q: Would you really say that these  all allegations emanate out of mischief?
A: You’ve hit the nail on the head. Mischief, biased and reckless affiliation to a tendency used to judge every issue.
No government in Nigeria has ever  done  what I initiated  in religious  balancing in Osun state. The day I was sworn  in, I decreed that all major religion in Osun must  have equal official treatment. In official function in Osun, traditionalist, Christian and Muslim prayed together.
From that alone, there should not be any basis for religious affiliation allegation against me.
Muslim  where enraged on that decision.  Christian fired the first salvo on  me that I was  encouraging  traditional religion, that I am taking society back. I told them that the oath I took was to be  fair to all.
Till today, no other government has joined me on this. When I recognized the Muslim New Year, that further fuelled the allegation of fundamentalism. The Muslim New Year has always been part and parcel of Islamic celebration long before Christianity and the modern trends. To causal observers, it doesn’t matter.
Q: Are you nursing any fear about the August 9 governorship election, especially when the opposition said what brought you into the office was judicial coup? And maybe all these baggages  would affect your electoral chances.

A: There is no baggage  at  all. I always  want the critical minds to visit Osun and assess the impact of administration on the  people.
I am confident because I have the support of a majority of our people for my re-election. Why, we have serve them with the way  they have never been serve in their history.
If election is about recompense to the administration, I told you that there is no household that we have not impacted positively in this state.
Let me tell you this, a man met me in mosque and struggled to let the Imam of the mosque to engage me.
He said he came to thank me that his son, an NCE holder, had been at home for 10 years without any form of employment.
He said the day that boy came to give him something as his own share of the first salary he receive as an O’ YES candidate. He ask him, where he got the money , he said the new governor gave him the employment as an O’ YES candidate , and that is his own share of the salary, he said he has assumed that he will serve the boy till he die; but I change that.
See, we are affecting life. When you enter Osun from anywhere, you will see  changes  in the environment.
No tension, no harassment, people now sleep well.
For anybody to aim at  disrupting  that system,  that person must be super- powerful. It can not be those who have had the opportunities for 90 month but fail to do anything for our people.
As we speak, we are working on a minimum of 210 kilometer of road in all the local government; we have done close to 500 kilometer of road and doing landmark road work.
I tell people that the only way   the  Peoples’  Democratic Party (PDP) can win is to kill a lot of people. They have to march on the blood of the people to displace us. Again, God is a God of justice not injustice. You cannot reward good with bad and vise versa. We started campaigning for this election since the day we were sworn in. I do community work with our people every month, through physical exercise-Walk to Live. You see how popular this initiative is among our people; it’s a momentous carnival. I also engage them on a quarterly basis on Ogbeni  Till Daybreak, close to ten hours of critical engagement. Lately, we have introduced another one called ‘Gbangba Dekun’, where we are in each federal constituencies to take questions, comments and opinions from people. If you add our people-oriented approach to governance, God be with us, I am looking at how they will do it. Jimmy Cliff had a lyric, ”the harder  they come the harder they fall’.
 Q: What is the financial state of Osun against the insinuation that the state is in huge debt?
A:During the campaign in 2007, I wrote it that we are going to run government unusual.I have increased the revenue base of Osun from N300 million to N1.6 billion. I have been very prudent in the way I handle small-small surpluses I had that still use it to augment whatever inadequacies I have. I had the best experience of governance particularly learning from the person I believe is the best public fund manager in Nigeria, Asiwaju Bola Tiunbu. The combination of  my background and the experience I garnered from him, made it possible for me to manage the resources of the state in such a way that before we can be said to be insolvent, the entire nation must be down.
The debt we have is within the capacity of the state to cope. That is why we never appeared in any of the report of those mentioned as insolvent by concerned institutions. I want to assure that we are operating within the limit of the law of Nigeria. We are not insolvent, we are not indebted. We run project that are un-burdensome. Our projects are done on flexible financing scheme and its paying off. We have not exceeded the threshold. The financial institution can not be manipulated. We must be commended for taking Osun from its financial rot to even start having financial relationship with institution. We are in the Capital Market. Our first appearance at the market for bond fetched us by far what we sought. Our second attempt, we were oversubscribed. These people criticizing my government are bad in their relationship. They are not honourable.
Q: What is your take on the Rivers State crisis and 2015 elections timetable released by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)?
A: On the Rivers crisis, the best answer is to use Obasanjo’s word paradoxically, I dey cry o. why I may not laugh is that the situation is gory.
On the timetable ,when you are in the situation we found ourselves in Nigeria, the less you say about something, the better for you . Well, my concern is for us to have credible, free and transparent elections. The best thing would have been to have all the elections in one day .But whichever way it is, what is very germane is the need to give democracy full, genuine and unadulterated expression in
Nigeria .Because if we can give democracy genuine expression in Nigeria, there won’t be any problem. But because we know that under a free and fair process, some people cannot even smell public office, the best is to complete the process in a single day. Nigerians have demonstrated the resilience and capacity that handing five ballot cannot be a problem. They know what they want to do with the ballots .If you want it to be easy provide different boxes for the offices.This will. eliminate all collateral effects.What I am concerned with is the fairness and transparency process.
Look at Ghana;they were able to do a fairly free election .Nigeria has no business not to replicate the same. That is why some of us are waiting for biometric. Let it be impossible for anyone who didn’t register to vote. The day we can eliminate proxy voting, ensuring that the votes that are cast are counted and announced, that is the end of all shenanigans in all elections. We believe we will get there,and we will struggle to get there.
SOURCE: NEW TELEGRAPH