Tuesday, 12 February 2013

Ogun 2015 Governorship Race: THE CONTENDERS AND THE PRETENDERS. By Kayode Ajala


The race for the Oke-Mosan Governor’s seat in Abeokuta, Ogun state, is on. Do not be deceived by the seemingly calm surface and the business as usual ambience that pervades the political firmament of the Gateway State. Beneath that deceptively calm surface, political gladiators in the state are busy oiling their political machinery and servicing existing political structures in preparation for the 2015 governorship elections in the state. The plot is to unseat the incumbent governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun. The chant is “Amosun Must Go!” 
The heat is particularly intense as a result of the belief in political circles in the state that the next elections would be holding next year, 2014, and not in the year 2015 as widely believed. Since the INEC rule stipulates that there must be a six month period between the election date and the date of swearing in; and since a new government must be sworn in come May 2015, political analysts are of the opinion that elections into political offices would hold in the last quarter of 2014 and not in 2015.
And so, the race is on and it promises to be very fierce and competitive. Ogun State is a hot bed of Nigerian politics, having produced such political giants as the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the late Chief M.K.O. Abiola, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, former Head of Interim Government Chief Earnest Sonekan, former Governor Olusegun Osoba, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, to mention just a few.
The state, which was created 37 years ago is made up of three senatorial districts and. twenty local government area : the Ogun Central Senatorial District, the Ogun East Senatorial District and The Ogun West Senatorial District,
.The Ogun Central Senatorial District is made up of six local government areas largely populated by the Egba people, the Ogun East Senatorial District is made up of nine local government areas largely populated by the Ijebu and Remo people of Ogun State, while the Ogun West Senatorial District is made up of five local government areas largely populared by the Yewa/ Awori people. It is however interesting to note that in the close to four decades of the state’s existence all the other zones, except Ogun West have occupied the governorship position of the state at one time or the other. 
The first civilian Governor of the state, Chief Olabisi Onabanjo was an Ijebu man from Ogun East, former Governor Olusegun Osoba was an Egba man from Ogun Central, former Governor Otunba Gbenga Daniel was a Remo indigene from Ogun East, while the incumbent Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, is also an Owu man from Ogun Central, leaving the Ogun West zone to continue the clamour for an Ogun State Governor of Yewa/Awori extraction. The Yewa/Awori people of Ogun West believe very strongly that for equity, justice and fair play to reign, the zone must be allowed to produce the next Governor of the state, come 2015.
Political gladiators from the two other zones tend to disagree with this. They accuse the Yewa/Awori people of not being sincere and united in the pursuit of their ambition to produce the next Governor of the state. In the words of a prominent politician from Ogun Central, “Ogun West is not sincere. They are not united and a house that is divided against itself will fall. The Yewa/Awori people are their own biggest problem. Every house in the zone wants to produce the next Governor. Why can’t they all unite and line up behind one consensus candidate from their zone, if they are really serious about producing the next Governor of Ogun State?”
Besides this, the present configuration of the state might make it impossible for the Ogun West Senatorial District to ever produce a Governor in Ogun State. This is so because the five local governments in that district are peopled by the Yewa and the Awori people. The Ado-Odo/Ota local government for instance, which is just one out of the five local government areas in the Ogun East Senatorial District, is largely dominated by the Awori people with a population of about 472,000 (four hundred and seventy two thousand) people. And it wouldn’t be wrong to say that a large percentage of the people that make up the population of this local government are not Awori indigenes but settlers from other parts of the state. Interestingly, the other four local governments largely populated by the Yewa people have a population of about 550,000 (five hundred and fifty thousand) people. Note that the overall population of Ogun State is well over three million people. So, even if the Yewa/Awori come together to line up behind a candidate and vote en-masse for that candidadte in their bid to actualize their dream to produce a Governor from their zone, they would still need the support of the other two zones for this dream to be realized. Sadly, the Yewa/Awori do not seem to be united in their cry for an Ogun State Governor to emerge from that zone. 
Just recently, the Olu of Ilaro, who is also the paramount ruler of Yewa land, publicly endorsed the incumbent Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, an Ogun Central indigene, for a second term. That apart, a quick look at the statistics of the 2011 governorship election in the state would reveal that the incumbent Governor of the state, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, an Owu man from the Ogun Central Senatorial District garnered more votes in the Ogun West Senatorial District than Chief Tunji Olurin and Alhaji Gboyega Nasiru Isiaka, and to think that the latter and the former are indigenes of the Ogun West Senatorial District! What more evidence does one need to confirm that the Ogun West Senatorial District is indeed not ready to produce a Governor for the Gateway State?
The Ogun West (Yewa/Awori) zone are certainly isolated in their belief that it is their turn to produce a Governor for the Gateway State. The rate at which contenders are springing up across the three senatorial districts in the state and the number of aspirants that are silently working towards unseating the incumbent Governor is a confirmation that there are very few subscribers to the theory that the Governorship seat of Ogun State should be zoned to a particular section of the state. Let us take a look at the long list of pretenders and contenders for the Governorship seat at Oke-Mosan in 2015.
Gboyega Nasir Isiaka (G.N.I): A seasoned investment banker, Gboyega Nasir Isiaka came into the limelight of Ogun State politics when he was appointed as Group Managing Director of Gateway Holdings Limited, the investment arm of the Ogun State government under the Otunba Gbenga Daniel administration. His meritorious achievements at Gateway Holdings coupled with his outstanding academic laurels which include a first class degree in Accounting from the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, placed him in good stead to aspire to succeed Otunba Gbenga Daniel as the Governor of Ogun State. Isiaka rode on the back of Daniel’s determination to hand over to a successor from the Yewa/Awori zone and contested for the number one position in the state on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), but the party was badly factionalised.
G.N.I., as he is fondly called, won the party primaries conducted by the Otunba Gbenga Daniel faction of the party but his victory was short lived as a High Court in Abuja nullified the said primaries and instead recognized the primaries conducted by the Obasanjo faction of the party, which threw up his fellow Yewa man, Chief Tunji Olurin, as the party’s Governorship candidate. Determined to actualize his ambition of mounting the saddle as the Governor of Ogun State, Gboyega Isiaka left the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) with his supporters and pitched tent with the Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN), where he became the party’s flagbearer for the 2011 elections. He contested that election as the Governorship candidate of the Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN) and lost, thus joining the long list of former Governorship aspirants in the Gateway State.
However, as 2015 approaches, this politician who hails from Imeko in Imeko Afon Local Government, is back in the trenches with his supporters. But while political watchers agree that Isiaka is at an advantage, as a result of the fact that he is not an entirely newcomer and is already a household name in Ogun state, many express the fear that his ambition might not go far if he pitches tent with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state. They fear that the crisis within the party would truncate Isiaka’s ambition. Others express the fear that Isiaka does not have a political structure of his own and would have to depend largely on the political structure of his former principal, Otunba Gbenga Daniel (OGD). The fear becomes even more palpable when it is understood that the OGD political structure is not likely to present an Ogun West indigene for the 2015 elections. And if Isiaka does not have the backing of the OGD group, it automatically follows that he would not benefit from the funding that the group can provide. For Isiaka, the journey to Oke-Mosan appears to be a very long, dark and uncertain one.
Isiaq Abiodun Akinlade: Isiaq Abiodun Akinlade is a three term member of the House of Representatives. He won his first two terms on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and won his third term bid into the lower chamber on the platform of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). Akinlade represents the Yewa South/Ipokia Federal constituency in the Federal House of Representatives. While in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), he was known to have teamed up with the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Dimeji Bankole to fight Otunba Gbenga Daniel, who was at that time the Governor of Ogun State. Today, as an Action Congress of Nigeria(ACN) member in the lower house, Akinlade is known to be a rabid critic of the Action Congress administration of Governor Ibikunle Amosun in Ogun State. Close watchers of Ogun State politics cannot but wonder how this candidate intends to win the election for the number one position in the state in 2015. On which party platform would he contest? He is not known to have a stronghold in his base of Yewa South, Yewa North, Ipokia, Imeko Afon and Ado-Odo/Ota. The biggest obstacle to his ambition might be the emergence of his fellow Yewa man, Gboyega Nasir Isiaka, as a governorship candidate in the 2015 election in Ogun State This would clearly divide Yewa votes. But there’s a possible solution; would Gboyega Nasir Isiaka step down for IsiaqAbiodun Akinlade or would it be the other way round? Only time would tell.
Asiwaju Olajide Awosedo: Prominent and successful real estate developer, Asiwaju Olajide Awosedo has never minced words when it comes to the issue of zoning political positions to particular sections of a state or particular sections of the country. A respected Ogun State indigene of Ijebu extraction, he was once quoted as saying, “Zoning is not an intelligent thing. If an Egba man wants to contest, I don’t know why a Remo man or woman cannot…”
Before the 2011 elections, Awosedo was an aspirant to the Governorship position of the state on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) but as the election got closer and it became increasingly clear that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun State had zoned the Governorship slot to the Ogun West District, Asiwaju Olajide Awosedo cross carpeted with his supporters to the Labour Party (LP), where he became the party’s flagbearer for the 2011 elections. 
The Labour Party (LP) lost that election but Awosedo did not lose the hope of becoming the Governor of Ogun State sometime in the future. That future is fast approaching as the election year, 2015, gets closer. And the Awosedo camp is quietly working round the clock to actualize the dream of its symbol. Close watchers say Asiwaju Olajide Awosedo has discreetly returned to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The thinking in the Awosedo camp is that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is the party to beat in Ogun State in 2015. The objective therefore is that Awosedo must clinch the PDP gubernatorial ticket to ensure a smooth ride into Oke-Mosan in 2015.
The disturbing questions however are, would the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun State consider Awosedo, who is just returning to the party, worthy enough to be given the party’s governorship ticket in the next election? Would the different factions of the party in Ogun State unite to give the party’s gubernatorial ticket to this candidate? Or would Asiwaju Awosedo emerge as a factional governorship candidate whose emergence would be shortlived like that of Gboyega Isiaka in the political drama that played out just before the 2011 elections in Ogun State? 
These are just some of the questions that Asiwaju Olajide Awosedo and his supporters must answer as the march towards the 2015 elections continues.
Hon. Dimeji Sabur Bankole: The former Speaker of the House of Representatives needs little or no introduction. Dimeji, who bestrode the country’s political scene like a colossus after his emergence as the Speaker of the House of Representatives suffered a massive setback in his political career when he lost the bid to return to the House as the representative of the Abeokuta South Federal Constituency, in the 2011 elections. No sooner did he become Speaker than Dimeji Bankole entered into a political duel with his benefactor and former Governor of Ogun State, Otunba Gbenga Daniel. But at the approach of the 2011 elections, Dimeji retraced his steps and made peace with OGD, all in the bid to get the party ticket to contest the elections. 
It is however noteworthy that Abeokuta South Federal Constituency is made up of just one local government, yet Dimeji lost that election by a wide margin. He appeared to have gone on sabbatical leave after his massive defeat at the polls, only for him to re-surface not too long ago, setting the rumour mills agog with stories that he has an aspiration to become the next Governor of Ogun State in 2015.
Very reliable sources confirm that the former Speaker is putting structures in place to contest and win the next Governorship elections in Ogun State, come 2015. After his come back, he has been meeting with stakeholders across the state and in the nation’s seat of power, Abuja, in preparation for the fierce contest ahead. He hopes to leverage on the experience and contacts of his father, Chief Alani Bankole, an old war horse who used to be the National Vice Chairman of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP). Those in the know also confirm that Dimeji is still very close to the powers that be, especially in the House of Representatives. His advantage also lies in his experience as a former Speaker of the House of Representatives. Close watchers believe that Dimeji would have access to limitless personal funds as well as financial support from his many contacts in government who have promised to open the vaults to support his ambition. But many also argue that in spite of all the money he had access to during the 2007 elections, he could not win his Federal Constituency which is just one local government out of the twenty local governments in the state. Money failed him then and they ask if money would not fail him again. 
It is also to his disadvantage that the tide of public opinion does not favour him. He is neither known to be an ally of the OGD group nor the OBJ group. It would be recalled that before the 2007 elections, Dimeji Bankole shuttled like a crazy yoyo between the OGD group and the OBJ group, First, he got the ticket to contest on the platform of the OGD faction of the PDP, which denied former Speaker of the Ogun State House of Assembly, Titi Oseni, the ticket. The story made the rounds of how Titi Oseni wept like a baby upon being denied the ticket for Dimeji. 
As soon as the OBJ faction obtained judicial victory over the OGD faction of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dimeji Bankole abandoned the OGD faction and was on his knees at Obasanjo’s hilltop villa begging for a ticket to contest the election on the platform of the Obasanjo faction of the Peoples Democratic Party. He got the ticket but he lost the election woefully.
Presently, Dimeji is not known with any of the major political structures in the state. Many in his Abeokuta homestead complain that Dimeji is too far removed from the grassroots, they complain about his arrogant and high handed nature. Dimeji would also have to contend with the opposition that would arise as a result of the fact that the incumbent Governor, who would also be seeking re-election, is also from Ogun Central like him.
Chief (Dr) Abayomi Majekodunmi: Abayomi Majekodunmi was the Chief of Staff to the immediate past Governor of Ogun State, Otunba Gbenga Daniel (OGD). Before then, he had served as the Vice Chairman of the Gateway Games. Prior to his foray into politics, Majekodunmi was an accomplished banker who had risen to become the Managing Director of the defunct Reliance bank. An Egba man from the Abeokuta North Local Government Area, Majekodunmi wielded enormous influence in the OGD administration and was one of the most trusted aides of Governor Gbenga Daniel. However, shortly after the expiration of the tenure of the OGD administration, Dr Majekodunmi disappeared off the political radar of the state. While some said he had re-located to the United Kingdom, others speculated that the former Chief of Staff had moved to Abuja. And nothing was heard of him until he recently appeared at the thanksgiving service held at the by Otunba Gbenga Daniel to celebrate the new year, 2013.
Those in the know claim that Abayomi Majekodunmi’s appearance at the thanksgiving service is not unconnected with his ambition to become the next Governor of Ogun State. His ploy, they say, is to gradually warm his way back into the OGD political family and eventually win the support of the group in the bid to actualize his governorship ambition in 2015. But prominent members of the OGD family state that Abayomi Majekodunmi cannot be trusted and would therefore not be supported by the OGD family. They claim that he is unreliable and that he abandoned his former principal after they left government and in the heat of Otunba Gbenga Daniel’s arrest, detention and arraignment by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). They further allege that Abayomi Majekodunmi has a record of speaking from both sides of the mouth. A record that dates back to his days as a banker. “We would not support him. If we do, he would eventually betray us. Let him look for support elsewhere,” concluded a prominent voice in the OGD political family.
Dr Doyin Okupe: Medical Doctor and scion of the “Agbonmagbe” moneyed dynasty, Dr Doyin Okupe is a man that millions of Nigerians love to hate. This Ijebu man from the Ogun East senatorial district of Ogun State bounced back into reckoning in the middle of 2012, when he was appointed as the Senior Special Assistant on Public Affairs to President Goodluck Jonathan. Long before then, Dr Doyin Okupe had served in the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo in a similar position. He fell out of favour with OBJ and was ignonimously thrown out of the Presidential Villa at that time. Doyin Okupe’s reputation precedes him as the man who is in charge of hurling insults and or vituperations on the President’s real or imaginary enemies. The President’s “attack dog” or “attack lion” (whichever you prefer) is also eyeing the number one position in Ogun State in 2015.
To actualize his ambition, Doyin Okupe plans to exploit his present position and his closeness to the seat of power to garner the needed support to quash all obstacles on his way to becoming the next Governor of Ogun State. He plans to contest on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). And this, of course, could be his greatest undoing. After serving as spokesman to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Okupe is known to have condemned and berated his former principal, saying that Obasanjo was incapable of leading the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to victory in the South West. Today, the former President’s influence in the Ogun State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) cannot be wished away. It may just be payback time for OBJ, a man who is not known to forgive easily. Close watchers of Ogun State politics postulate that the former President might be the biggest clog in the wheel of Doyin Okupe’s governorship ambition.
Add that to the fact that in his over thirty years stint in Nigerian politics, Doyin Okupe can hardly point to any individual contribution to the improvement of the Nigerian state, and you would get a clear picture of the obstacles that the Senior Special Assistant (SSA) Public Affairs to President Goodluck Jonathan, needs to surmount before he becomes the Governor of the Gateway State.
Sina Kawonise (SK): Former university teacher, author, journalist, public commentator, politician, former Commissioner of Information in Ogun State and present Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief of the Compass newspaper, Sina Kawonise is a man to watch as the 2015 governorship elections approaches in Ogun State.
He was appointed Commisioner of Information fifteen months to the end of the Otunba Gbenga Daniel (OGD) administration in Ogun State and in those fifteen months, Sina Kawonise gave such a good account of himself on the job that he became a folk hero of some sort. This was at a time when the image of the government was at its lowest ebb. Kawonise assumed his new position shooting from both hips. Those who know him say that “Kawonise would never have joined the OGD government if he was not convinced that the government meant well for the state and that he was in a position to contribute positively to the growth and development of the state through the commisionership position.”
Not one to join government for the perks of office, Kawonise gave his all in the fifteen months that he served as Commisioner of Information and to further show that his acceptance of the offer to serve in government was based on strong personal convictions and principles, Sina Kawonise continued to defend the legacies of the government he served in, long after he left office. Driven by the urge to defend the truth at all times, Kawonise has this to say, “When I was in government, I came out powerfully to say the truth which some people did not want to hear, truth that some people were not courageous to say or to declare. When I left government, I still come out because we have a government in Ogun State now that is very vindictive, a government that just does not have any clue. I’m constrained to continue to challenge the lies and shenanigans of Governor Ibikunle Amosun who has elevated deceits and lies to the level of the directive principle of state policy.” Those who know Kawonise describe him as loyal, principled, reliable and dependable.
Sina Kawonise’s non compromising position and utterances must have ruffled not a few feathers as he began to receive threat messages for his comments against the government of the day in Ogun State and on November 5th, 2012, on his way back from Awka, where he had gone to deliver a lecture, he was attacked by unknown gunmen at Ikeji-Arakeji in Osun State. He was shot alongside his police orderly but he survived after a six hour surgery at the University College Hospital, Ibadan. Undaunted, Kawonise is as determined as ever to wrest power from the present occupant of the Oke-Mosan Governor’s Office in 2015. Consultations are at an advanced stage concerning the platform on which this contender would contest.
Given the crisis bedeviling the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun State, SK as he is fondly called by admirers, is likely to pitch his tent elsewhere. While some speculate that Kawonise might pick up the gubernatorial ticket of the Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN), others say that Kawonise might end up as the governorship candidate of either the Social Democratic Mega Party (SDMP) or the Labour Party (LP) in Ogun State.
Seen as OGD’s alter ego, this new kid on the block would most likely enjoy the backing of the OGD political family and would take advantage of the former Governor’s political structure. Kawonise, who does not see himself as representing Ijebu interest alone has a number of serving Governors as friends and also enjoys very cordial relationship with many prominent Nigerians. If he harnesses his enormous goodwill properly and deploys all the ammunition in his arsenal, SK would surely be okay for the governorship seat of Ogun State in 2015.
At his fiftieth birthday celebration held at the Conference Hotel, Ijebu-Ode in 2012, Kawonise received OGD’s tacit endorsement when the former Governor said ‘If we have two or three Kawonise’s in our state, Ogun State would be a better place to live in,’
Sarafa Tunji Isola: Former Federal Minister of Mines and Steel Development is also in the race for the number one seat in Ogun State in 2015 Sarafa, who had at various times served as Chairman of the Abeokuta North Local Government, Special Assistant to the Minister of State, Finance (1999-2003) and Secretary to the Ogun State Government (2003-2007) is also from the Ogun Central Senatorial District.
He became Minister of Mines and Steel Development on the recommendation of Otunba Gbenga Daniel but no sooner had he assumed this ministerial position did he fall out with OGD. The reason for their disagreement was quite simple. OGD was commited to handing over to a successor from the Yewa/Awori zone. Sarafa wanted to be Governor and he was not from Yewa/Awori. His feud with OGD turned out to be his greatest undoing as he was dropped as Minister by the late President Umaru Yar’Adua. Even in the build up to the 2007 elections, Sarafa continued to be pitched against his former boss, OGD, as he was a prominent member of the Obasanjo faction of the party and was even appointed as the Director General of the Olurin Campaign Organisation.
Sarafa Tunji Isola continued to fight the political structure that produced him. His disagreement stemming from the fact that he didn’t want OGD to hand over to a Yewa/Awori successor. Till date, Sarafa is rabidly anti- Yewa/Awori and he doesn’t hide this position. Political analysts were however thrown off-balance when Sarafa made a U-turn after OGD left government and went to reconcile with his former boss and benefactor. His intention is to be able to take advantage of the OGD political structure to become Governor of Ogun State in 2015. 
Isola however has to contend with the following challenges. Some prominent members of the OGD political family believe that Sarafa is a spy who has been planted in the OGD group by the Obasanjo group. He therefore cannot be trusted. He is looked upon as a traitor. Others are of the opinion that Sarafa has little or no political influence beyond his Egba enclave. Add that to the fact that he is from the same local government with the incumbent Governor, who has concentrated so many developmental projects in the local government and your conclusion might be that Sarafa should just wait for some other time.
Hon Kayode Amusan: This former honorable member of the House of Representatives is also in the race for the Ogun governorship seat in 2015. Amusan, who represented Abeokuta North/Odeda/Obafemi Owode Federal Constituency from 2003 to 2011 has been holding meetings with stakeholders across the state.

Thursday, 7 February 2013

OGD’s eight-year revolution in Ogun State


Every epoch has its defining moments and the men and women  who shape the course of history for good or for bad. No doubt,  Ogun State was at such a defining moment in its history on May  29, 2003 when a new governor was sworn in as the State’s  helmsman. Of course, given their experience with past leaders, not  many believed Otunba Gbenga Daniel when he promised  to do things differently and give governance a new positive face  and make the people the central focus of his administration. To  the skeptics, the new governor was merely grandstanding as his  predecessors had done. . However, eight years after, the skeptics  have become believers while the gospel of Governor Daniel’s extra  ordinary performance continues to spread far and wide.

Governor Daniel who has the singular honour of being the State’s  longest serving helmsman so far  has also been pitched against  the establishment which has ranged many of their own against  his business unusual approach to doing things. Those who believe  in the status quo and who accuse Daniel of upsetting the apple  cart have nearly succeeded in drowning out the genuine voice of  the people who are in a better position to give the verdict on his  stewardship.

And nobody can fault the  giant development strides of the last 8 years. In Egbaland, there is  an emerging new business district accentuated by the  domineering presence of the OPIC Twin Tower which was  commissioned on May 12, 2011.  With its commissioning,  Abeokuta, the   Ogun State capital joins the big league of state  capitals with a befitting City Centre. The 12 storey edifice with a  concrete reinforced basement and a penthouse is the tallest  building in Ogun State. And it synchronizes with the deliberate  attempt to create a new city centre in Abeokuta and jumpstart  the Abeokuta Central Business District Development Project.

The Lalubu Road, hitherto a centre of gridlock, now  compares favorably with Lagos Allen Avenue. However, it has  six macadamized lanes with banks and top of the range  boutiques dotting its entire stretch. Indeed when this Daniel came  to town there were just about six banks with branches in  Abeokuta, now all the banks in Nigeria have their offices in  different parts of the state. The same can be said for eateries and  communication outfits. The Abeokuta—Siun Expressway, houses  built for and given out to villagers whose mud abodes were  demolished to make way for the expressway, the refurbished  Olumo Rock, the new Housing Estates in Asero, the refurbished  MKO Abiola International Stadium, the complete turnaround at  the State Hospital Ijaiye, the best purposely built State Secretariat  in the South West, the Olusegun Obasanjo  Presidential Hilltop  Estate, a campus of Olabisi Onabanjo University of Technology at  Ibogun, the homestead of  former President Olusegun Obasanjo,  the Laderin Workers Estate, a new Gateway ICT Polytechnic in  Itori are some of the legacies that have become signposts of the  Daniel era in Egbaland , the home town of the legendary Chief  Moshood Kashimawo Olawale  Abiola the man who paid the  supreme price for our democracy.

Indeed for Prince Bola Ajibola,  former attorney General of the Federation and Dr Onaolapo  Soleye Egbaland under the watch of Daniel has soared and  enjoyed unprecedented development. The two prominent Egba  sons returned a verdict of excellent performance on the  administration of Otunba Gbenga Daniel. Two major projects, the  7 megawatts power plant that would power the State secretariat  and the reconstructed Isale Igbehin Bridge join the imperishable  legacies of the Daniel era in Egbaland.

The  Yewas for the first time are no longer crying of marginalization  simply because of the equitable distribution of projects under  Governor Daniel. They now have a brand new School of Nursing,  a glittering new stadium of international standard and the most  functional Free Trade Zone in the South West. At the last count,  over 5000 employment has been created in the fledging business  enclave called Ogun Guangdong FTZ, Igbesa. The Yewas also  have a campus of OOU, a new ICT Polytechnic, among others.

The  Gateway International Stadium in Ijebu—Ode which has played  host to many international competitions ranks among the best in  the country. There is also the country’s first University of  Education, an ICT based Polytechnic in Ijebu Igbo, completely  turned around water works, several kilometers of road and, of  course, the multi—billion naira LNG Project at the Olokola Free  Trade Zone, which is still in the making. The Remos also have a  stadium of their own and, the best NYSC Permanent  Orientation Camp in the country. They also have their own ICT  based Polytechnic at Saapade.

Under the administration of Otunba Gbenga Daniel the tradition  of excellence that  the Ogun State Public Service is noted for has  not only been maintained but verifiable improvement has been  achieved to the end that the service  has risen to become the best  in the  country.  Ogun State Government has  further enhanced the capacity of the service that has seen more  recruitments in the last eight years  than at any other time in the  history of the state.

Just some days to its departure, the people of Ogun State rated  the Daniel era through their traditional rulers. Oba Michael  Sonariwo, Akarigbo of Remo and the current Chairman of the  Ogun State Council of Obas set the ball rolling inside the  glittering new Conference hall built for the natural rulers  adjacent the sprawling Obas Complex, Oke Mosan, Abeokuta  shortly after the Ogun State Governor had commissioned the  edifice on Thursday March 31, 2011. Oba Sonariwo said the  consensus verdict of traditional rulers in Ogun State is that the  OGD administration had recorded giant developmental strides in  all facets of human endeavor. Oba Sonariwo said the governor’s  laudable achievements have been written with indelible ink and  would remain a source of inspirations to generations yet unborn.

Oba Gbadebo Oni, the Olu of Imashai and acting Chairman of  the YEWA Council of Obas said Governor Daniel has changed  the status of the state from a sleepy civil service enclave to a  commercially vibrant entity   . He said the YEWAS have double  reasons to be grateful for the contributions of the governor to the  development of the Ogun West Senatorial District and for  supporting the aspirations of the YEWAS to produce a governor  for the first time in the history of the state. He said the many  criticisms that have come the way of the governor were because  of his intimidating achievements. He said in spite of criticisms  from some quarters   nobody can deny the fact that the governor  has turned Ogun into a model state.

Oba Adedotun Aremu Gbadebo, the Alake of Egbaland said  Governor Daniel was able to record remarkable achievements  and make the difference because he is not a typical politician but  a professional in politics. For the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikiru  Adetona, the Daniel administration would score first class were it  to be graded. Said the paramount ruler, “You have done very  well, I can assure you that after you leave office even your  detractors will praise you. All the bickering and hecklings are all  about politics, it does not represent the genuine verdict of the  people of the state about your stewardship. The genuine verdict  of the people of Ogun State is that you have done excellently  well,” Oba Adetona said to thunderous ovation from the  traditional rulers present.

Before the traditional rulers   , the Directing staff and members of  the Senior Executive Course 31 of the National Institute for Policy  and Strategic Studies ,NIPPS, Kuru who came on a study tour of  Ogun State  returned the following verdict on the stewardship of  Governor Gbenga Daniel,  “In coming to Ogun State we found  out that the state through the executive governor is doing a  number of things worthy of emulation which has to do with  utilization of indigenous human and natural resources to grow  the economy. These transformations coming from visionary  leadership are what we have seen in Ogun State and we think it  should be encouraged in the country.”

From all indications, history, which is the chronicler of the  ultimate verdict, would be kind to Otunba Gbenga Daniel, a man  of vision, apostle of good governance and a statesman par  excellence.This Daniel is leaving behind a new Ogun State which  has now become the country’s leading investment destination of  choice and the first point of call for national and international  sporting events organisers.

Adebanjo is Chief Press Secretary to Governor Daniel

Friday, 1 February 2013

A summary of NEITI 2009 – 2011 Oil and Gas Audit Report. Another monumental fraud in Nigeria’s Oil and Gas Sector.


  A summary of NEITI 2009 – 2011 Oil and Gas Audit Report. Another monumental fraud in Nigeria’s Oil and Gas Sector.
·         Nigeria’s oil earnings (between 2009 and 2011) stood at $143.5Billion, which is equivalent of N21.525 Trillion; an amount far more than five times the entire budget for 2013.
·         Curious rise by 110% of fuel subsidy payment from N198 Billion in 2009 to N416 Billion in 2010.
·         Fuel subsidy Payment rose from N198Billion in 2009 to N786Billion in 2011 representing a colossal 297% jump!
·         NNPC removed subsidy payment directly from money earned (from crude sales) before remittance to the Federation account, a dubious practice that sought to distort proper accounting and further accentuating the opaque dealings in the oil industry under the Jonathan regime.
·         NNPC owed the Federation account N1.305 Trillion from crude oil sales in the 3-year period as at December 2011.
·         NNPC owed $4.84 Billion (N726 Billion) in dividends and loan payments from NNLG export business (between 2009 and 2011) and another $3.99 (N549 Billion) in NNLG funds from previous years going back to 1999.
·         NNPC received 445,000 Barrels per day for refining locally but only uses 20% because of the parlous state of Nigeria’s refineries; the remaining 80% sold as crude.
Undoubtedly, the implication of this report, aside revealing the NNPC (under the Jonathan regime) as a citadel of institutionaliz­ed corruption, there are other salient issues that leave soul grapes in the mouth!

·         Would the curious N318 Billion increment of the 2010 fuel subsidy payment over the 2009 figure explain the source of the hitherto unexplained huge campaign expenditure of President Goodluck Jonathan in the 2011 Presidential election?

·         How and where did the NNPC get the authorization to deduct fuel subsidy payments from crude oil sales before remittance into the Federation account? This, obviously, is in breach of the policy of the constitutional provision of remittance of all earnings to the Federation account!

·         Why did NNPC withhold the N1.305Trillion meant to be remitted to the Federation account over a three-year period? Where and who is still keeping the money?

·         Why did NNPC refuse to remit the $4.73 Billion collected from NNLG over the two-year period (2009-2011)?

·         Is it not capricious that, out of the 445,000 barrels per day meant for local consumption, NNPC sells 356,000 barrels per day thereby making revenue amounting to about $35.6 million daily, despite the Nigerian people’s continued suffering from prohibitive fuel sales without any reasonable palliative or safety nest?

·         Is there any reasonable juxtaposition of the N21.525 Trillion made from crude oil sales in the two-year period and the infrastructural­ development within the polity in the same dispensation?

·         Is it not despicable that Nigeria, being a mono-economy, is being short-changed from reaping fully from the resources from oil?


As a Party, we share the anguish of all Nigerians that the NNPC, in the last three years, has become a cesspool of audacious corruptive tendencies! The putrefaction of this disheveling perturbation has brought much disorder in the Nigerian polity. The burgeoning army of unemployed youths and the attendant socio-economic implications arising from the legendary heist in the NNPC also portend grave danger for the Nigerian state. It is our strong belief that the President of the Nation, as the ultimate executive authority, bears responsibility for this infra-dig. We hereby call on the National Assembly to restore order through the constitutional provision for bringing errant executive authority to path of straightness! It is the irreducible minimum that can be done for ensuring the enduring legacy of constitutional democracy.
God bless Nigeria.

Rotimi Fashakin (Engr.)
National Publicity Secretary, CPC
Friday, February 01, 2013.

I Am Being Persecuted...OGD.


Former governor of Nigeria’s western state of  Ogun, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, has, in a rare appearance before the media and civil society, described his prosecution by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, as persecution, claiming that he was “a victim of the environment.”
EFCC had alleged that the former governor stole N211.3 million between 2004 and 29 May, 2011 and also converted government’s land in various parts of the state to his family’s use. 
The former governor, who held an interactive meeting with journalists in Lagos yesterday, denied most of the allegations contained in the 38 counts under which he was charged by the anti-graft agency for allegedly stealing public funds, bribery, fraudulent conversion of public property and false declaration of assets.
But Daniel, who spent over two hours explaining how he ran Ogun state for eight years as governor, absolved himself of all the allegations, saying the state had no money he could steal at the point he was at the helm of affairs.
He said the way he ran the state made it very difficult for either him or any member of his cabinet to steal.
According to him, his persecution was the result of a well researched and orchestrated ploy by the opposition to bring him down. “And they won,” he declared.
On the allegation of false declaration of assets, the former governor said he was the first governor to declare his assets after the President and the Vice President.
“I would have been the first political office holder to publicly declare his assets but I didn’t want it to look like I’m proud. So I waited for President Umaru Yar’Adua, followed by then Vice President Goodluck Jonathan, then I publicly declared mine,” he said.
Daniel said he had looked back at his administration and had told himself that he did his best to put the state on a sound footing even in the face of heavy public condemnation cooked up by the opposition in their desperation to take over the state and executed by the media which often refused to take his own side of issues.
Declaring that as governor, he never borrowed any money on behalf of the state, but decided to run the state with what the state could afford, lamented that the current administration of Senator Ibikunle Amosun had continued to feed the people with lies that it inherited debts off between N59 billion and N100 billion.
Giving details, he said he only left a liability of N49.2 billion and not debt as the current government had claimed.
He displayed the statement of account which he handed over to Governor Amosun, saying “we were magnanimous enough to have a liability of N49.2 billion, out of which N13.9 billion was outstanding money owed banks that was the result of short-term overdraft.
“What made up the liability, which you cannot regard as debts were arrears of tertiary institutions’ subvention, arrears of running cost, money you give to schools for routine maintenance, arrears of pension, which all sum up to the total N49.2 billion liability.
“We were determined not to leave arrears of pension but around 2008, and 2009 there was downturn in world’s economy. Nigeria was not an exception. Our situation was made worse because of our local politics.
“Therefore, the cash liability which we left behind was N13.9 billion. God has helped us and the truth is now coming out.”
He said after a forensic evaluation by the current government, the overdraft was again reduced to N3.75 billion wondering why the state government had decided to engage in propaganda against him instead of to allow him enjoy his retirement.
He also recalled that his own predecessor, Aremo Segun Osoba, left a liability of over N36 billion and hurriedly employed 2,000 people at the twilight of his administration with the hope of pitching him against his people.
“But I didn’t sack anybody. In the whole of my eight years, no one person was retrenched,” he added.
He also recalled that he completed the dualisation of the 48-kilometre Sagamu-Abeokuta road, built an estate for those whose houses were demolished on the corridor, fixed 999 street lights on the road and built power substations for communities on the corridor at a paltry sum of N1.9 billion, saying he was shocked to discover that the current government built a kilometre of road at the cost of N500 million.
He confirmed that he had traitors in his government who were being used by the opposition.
One of such traitors, he said, had claimed that he escaped assassination by people sent by the governor and that he ended up killing two of them with his pump action rifle while driving. He wondered how that could be possible and asked where the corpses of those killed were dumped.
He also denied that he prevented members of his state House of Assembly from sitting for eight months even though he said the crisis was beneficial to his government as some of the lawmakers made frantic efforts to get him impeached for not making more money available to them against due process.
Daniel said he wished the government of Ogun state well, but added: “I don’t want to discredit them. If they have left me alone and allowed me to have my retirement, I wouldn’t have said anything.”
He also urged the media to investigate his activities and help come out with the true story, saying he is no longer interested in any political office, but only wanted to redeem his image which he considered battered.