By Doyin
Odebowale
![]() |
|
Gov
of Osun State, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola
|
The growing audacity of the members of
the ruling party in Nigeria, the People’s Democratic Party, PDP, which
continually finds expression in the subversion of the people’s wish, in an
unabashed display of moral bankruptcy, must be confronted headlong.
Beyond the security challenges
currently faced by the people of this country and the crass ineptitude of the
main functionaries of government in tackling the socio-economic problems
bedeviling the country, the obdurate determination of the current impostors to
rule in perpetuity, using all vile means, must be challenged.
This is, perhaps, a convenient point
when all those who still believe in the project called Nigeria must cast aside
all pretensions to neutrality and eschew petty and puerile comparisons between
political office holders and some prominent politicians in the opposition who
have exhibited traits of uncommon avarice and unwillingness to adhere strictly
to the tenets of neo-liberal democracy.
While all decent people must readily
agree that there is virtually no difference between six and half a dozen,
talking about the patent lack of ideology and the predilection of politicians
in the political platforms, erroneously dubbed parties, to espouse policies of
alienation from the mass of the people, the pretence that there is no marked
difference between a band of unscrupulous hustlers and those who put in place
some tokenistic palliatives, which permit us to have a glimpse at the larger
picture possible in a society in transition, requires closer scrutiny.
I have been watching events closely in
my own immediate space of the agglomeration in these disparate socio-political
entities corralled together by colonial fiat. I have lived in this part for
almost five decades of my life and I am not going to be apologetic about
deciding on the itinerary which best approximates my desire to live the same
way as those considered as human beings do elsewhere. Consequently, I believe I
have an insurable interest in the way my region, nay the country, is run.
Let me hasten to make certain
disclaimers before my position is misconstrued as that of a paid hack, who aims
at buoying the dwindling fortunes of perceived opponents of the marauding band
of confirmed misanthropists in our clime. I do not belong to any of these so
called parties. I find them beneath the level of my social consciousness. I am
not a contractor. I do not hope to become one. I do not crave any political
appointment.
I teach in the university and I am a lawyer of modest means. I am
satisfied with my state in life. I shall, however, not hesitate to throw my hat
in the ring to join issues with anyone who argues in favour of certain
obnoxious tendencies as represented by some notorious individuals who enjoy
undisguised and unqualified support of the federal government.
I had written in support of Dr. Kayode
Fayemi as the gubernatorial candidate in the just concluded election in Ekiti
state. I predicated my position on ocular evidence; what my eyes saw while I
visited that place in 2008 and the marked difference I witnessed, first hand, on
another visit late last year. Ekiti electorate had some other ideas. You need
not be decent and focused to deserve a second term! It was also not difficult
to notice some inexplicable complacency on the part of the incumbent. The
unscrupulous characters in the other parties had devised means of subverting
the people’s will without making it look so.
INEC, an electoral body erroneously
referred to as independent, was apparently a willing collaborator in this
subterfuge. The politics of using the so called permanent voter’s card, as
against the current one, to disenfranchise as many as over two hundred thousand
registered voters, came in handy. A little above eight hundred thousand were
registered to vote. About four hundred thousand were accredited to vote.
INEC released a final figure of less
than that number of those who actually in a gubernatorial election! Yet some so
called analysts returned the curious verdict of “free and fair”, “landslide”,
“clean sweep” among other hyperbolic descriptions of the grandiose charade.
INEC has promised to” improve” on this magic in the forthcoming election in the
state of Osun.
The candidates in the August election
in Osun have been moving around the state to campaign. There appears to be two
major contenders, Iyiola Omisore, a former Deputy Governor of the state and the
incumbent governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, who has simplified the art of
governance in the last four years.
While the former is of notorious
pedigree, the latter cannot be easily accused of being “elitist” in the backward
Nigerian sense, which denigrates proper upbringing and celebrates vacuity and
idiocy as exhibited by those who have reduced serious issues concerning acts of
governance to patronage at motor parks and “paraga” joints. Aregbesola started
his interaction with the people from his very first month in the saddle. The
other candidate, Omisore, has been battling very hard to sell himself to the
people of Osun. The fact that he depends solely on federal might is not hidden
at all.
I am not going to dwell on the
notorious case of the gruesome murder of Chief Bola Ige, SAN, the arraignment
of suspects considered responsible for the horrendous crime of hacking to death
the then Attorney General and Minister of Justice of the country at his Ibadan
home, the barely disguised intention of the ruling party, Peoples Democratic Party,
PDP, headed by General Olusegun Obasanjo, to ensure that some of the suspects,
especially Omisore and the current Minister for Police Affairs, Jelili
Adesiyan, did not go through the crucible of rigorous trial and the eventual
discharge and acquittal of these special people by the trial court.
Chroniclers of political events should
spend some time analysing the propriety of having the murder trial of a serving
minister, the Chief Law Officer, slaughtered like a miserable ram, conducted in
a sloppy manner. Perhaps, moralists may still want to dwell on matters of
scruples regarding the insensitive and indecent choice of Omisore as the senatorial
candidate representing the very district, Esa Oke, where Chief Bola Ige hailed
from.
What was considered a novelty was the
fact that the anointed candidate “contested” from Agodi prison and “won”.
Nobody has been able to explain how Omisore deposed to an affidavit of intent
in detention. So odious was the personality of Chief Ige among his people, one
would conclude, that one of the suspected killers was “voted” for, “overwhelmingly”,
to represent them while his trial was on. The same man was to lose an election
against a relatively unknown candidate after Obasanjo stepped aside, having
failed to secure a “third term”. He wants to “rule” Osun state now.
As the political road-shows continue,
the two candidates have been trying to convince the electorate of the appropriateness
of choosing either of them as the only route to socio-economic redemption for
the state. While Omisore intends to discontinue and cancel most of the
programmes of the current government, if (s)elected, Aregbesola promises the
people that the best is yet to come. Top functionaries of the ruling party have
confirmed that the “Ekiti formula” will be used in Osun.
From the president and his vice, to
the appointed goons specially deployed to disturb the peace of that state, the
confidence exuded should not be dismissed as misplaced. Mr. Ayo Arise boasted
on Channels TV that they were ready to capture Ekiti state. I had taken this
effusion as the rants of a deluded man. He was dead right. The incumbent “lost”
in all local governments! Even his hometown “rejected” him for being too
“elitist”! Fayose, the impeached governor who was later arraigned for stealing
billions of naira in the infamous poultry project, is PDP’s choice. Dr.
Jonathan celebrated his victory wildly!
As has been stated earlier, it is
difficult for me to pretend that I do not have a preference. I have some
personal experiences to share in this respect and I sincerely hope that all
those who feel sufficiently concerned will also take a position. I had practised
law on a low scale before my return to the university where I currently teach.
My hustling had taken me to the state High Court in Osogbo on several occasions
during the reign of PDP in that state.
On more than two occasions, I had been driven
off the road by the unruly convoy of Omisore when he was a senator. I had
equally witnessed, twice, the tragic aftermath of torrential down pour and the
attendant deaths which ensued near Oke fia and the road to the High Court. I
saw the corpses of little children who died having been washed off in their
sleep by the rampaging flood. Those places now wear different looks now.
I visited Iragbiji recently to attend
the wedding ceremony of the son of a good friend. I passed through Ikirun. I
drove on tarred roads all through the town. I even joked with some of my
friends that the APC stalwarts must be patronizing the Babalawos in that
village to have warranted this pervasive attention in a place with a modest
electoral value. My friends, who are indigenes of the state, have since
confirmed that virtually every part of the state has witnessed the aggressive
but positive intervention of this administration.
The opponents of Aregbesola’s
government have leveled all manner of accusations against him in their bid to
portray him as undeserving of the people’s trust. They criticised him for
feeding pupils. They accused him of extortion concerning the sale of school
uniform to them. They accused him of using Osun indigenes who stay “abroad” to
govern the state without asking those who have been staying at home to mention
their special contributions apart from participating in prebendal politics to
fleece the people of the state.
The criminal elements who have been
put out of job since this inception of this government, are now gainfully
employed by these unscrupulous politicians. There is the creeping feeling that
the re-introduction of violence into the state is a prelude that will be used
to justify the imminent militarization of the state for the forthcoming election.
Our people must be ready to resist this savage incursion. Yorubaland must not
be overrun by the descendants of those whose ancestors were still steeped in
barbarism long after this part of the world had showcased its sophistication.
I had witnessed, first hand, the
attacks on the office of my client by hoodlums who demanded to be paid N500,
000 “protection” money when PDP held sway. I had joined the manager of the
company at the Osun State Police Command to lodge a formal complaint, but we
were advised to “cooperate” with the criminals as the police could not do
anything. One of the thugs had even bragged that the Divisional Police Officer,
under whose jurisdiction my client’s office fell, was with him shortly before
the invasion and vicious attack.
My client’s workers were beaten and
stabbed. I was horrified! One of the invaders even offered to lend me his
camera as he was also taking pictures of the scene to show his “boss” how they
dealt with the recalcitrant. That was under Oyinlola PDP. Adesiyan, the current Minister for Police Affairs, was the Commissioner
for “Special Duties” in that cabinet. Omisore hovered around the state as the
patron of the tough boys.
Attempting a rehash of the old
heart-wrenching stories of those dark days is not as important as reminding
those who may choose a path of indifference of the danger which lies ahead if
PDP is allowed to overrun the South West as they appear determined to do. We
are confronted with the grim reality of having the panoply of the scum of the
society as the anchor persons for those who do not put any premium on our
values as a people.
You cannot miss the message; this
president wants to remain in the Villa. It does not matter if a character is
accused of running a drug cartel. The wife of Commodore Bode George (Rtd) is
competent enough to handle drug issues. None of them should worry about charges
preferred against them in court. The EFCC is in control. From Muazu, the PDP
National Chairman, Femi Fani-Kayode, ex-con “Alams”, a delegate to the jamboree
which just ended as predicted, to Fayose, the in-coming “people’s governor”,
Boni Haruna and a host of others, the president has enriched our jurisprudence
with a new dictum. Corruption is not stealing! Join the thieving band wagon and
be beatified. Cross to the other side and jolt the somnolent EFCC, ICPC and DSS
come after you with uncommon ferocity.
I just listened to Chief Ebenezer
Babatope, the renegade “progressive” and a converted and committed apostle of
“mainstream” politics, a euphemism for lack of principle and foresight for
which some politicians of south west extraction, unrepentant nation wreckers,
are reputed. He said the people of Ilesa were ready to join the mainstream.
That is the only campaign promise.
“Power” is the mantra. There is
nothing on education other than a vow to revert to the old 6-3-3-4 system.
Babatope could not have failed to see the new school buildings being
constructed in the state. If he will, for once, forget the groveling and
cavalier histrionics designed to impress the current dispensers of largesse; it
will be easy for him to acknowledge the marked difference between the immediate
past era, when it was more important to promote the game of golf at Ada than
the provision of social infrastructure for the people, and now.
Aregbesola has availed himself of the
benefit of his vast experience as an activist of note before joining this
current democratic experiment. He has approached governance from the standpoint
of making the masses the focal point of his administration. He has been
erecting structures that hold promises of abiding for a long time to come. You
will not find shoddy jobs in any of the public works undertaken by the
government. The practice in the past was well known to the likes of Babatope
and his fellow travellers.
Most contracts were abandoned by PDP
contractors in that land-locked state. If the almost seven years of their rule
in the state could still have left it largely in its patent provincial state
before the assumption of office of Aregbesola, then it is only decent for them
to praise him for contributing, significantly, to the development of the state.
Omisore referred to the Opon Imo, the
electronic tablet distributed to the students in public schools in the state,
at no cost, as a scam. He may, perhaps, be in possession of another version of
this ingenious innovation. I have seen a copy. I was fascinated by the
possibility of training our children in the best way possible.
I read a chapter on Odu Ifa and was
greatly impressed with the audacious inclusion of an issue ignorantly despised
and demonised by adherents of the two imported self-civilising religions. I
remember the idiotic statements made by some intolerant and ignorant
politicians who sought to confuse the people on the symbolic content of the
state flag adopted by the government. I cannot also forget the initial noise
made on the refusal of Aregbesola to appoint commissioners and special advisers
for eight months.
All the hypocritical protestations
concerning the so called phenomenon of capital flight has to do with the
exclusion of the ruling party’s contractors who were accustomed to collecting
huge sums of money as mobilisation fees with a clear intention of not executing
the project.
To imagine that anyone will
contemplate a situation where the state will regress into savagery once more is
shocking to say the least. There are outstanding cases of murder of political
opponents during and immediately after the gubernatorial election which was
massively rigged by the PDP. The Court of Appeal returned the stolen mandate of
the people to Aregbesola after a long-drawn battle to reclaim it.
The reckless
statement credited to the Vice President, Mr. Sambo, that his party lost, due
to “judicial rascality”, is irresponsible. All honest lawyers know that Justice
Ayo Salami was one of the few beautiful ones in the judiciary before his forced
exit. The hint that they now control even the judiciary should be taken
seriously. When they rig elections, they advise the dispossessed and cheated to
go to court. It is simply not going to work in Osun.
There have been signs of violence
bordering on intimidation, attacks occasioning harm and even death. There was
an explosion in Ife and the curious incident of the collapse of a school
building under construction. There was a reported case of an APC member shot to
death by thugs on the campaign train of Omisore.
Aregbesola has been going round all
the local governments in the state and not one remote violent incident has been
linked to him and his team. He has been in the saddle for almost four years.
Nobody has been attacked and no opponent has been banished. The re-introduction
of violence and attitudes which stand at variance with the Omoluabi principle
with which anyone properly bred is nurtured must not be allowed.
It is sad indeed that our children are
no longer taught history in schools. The PDP government at the national level
has cancelled the subject. Those who claim to be teaching history even at the
tertiary level of education are so much in a hurry to discard that sobriquet
which they, ignorantly, equate with mere obsolescent narratives of the rise and
fall of kingdoms and empires. It takes a functioning mind to see the direct
linkage between the past and the present.
Any Yoruba man or woman, who fails to
recognize the state of Osun as his root, readily exposes his/her ignorance and
will compel an inquiry into his/her claim to Yoruba ancestry. It is our
collective responsibility to safeguard this rich heritage, our common ancestry.
No amount of intimidation and criminal connivance by INEC will stand in the way
of a willing people. We must not allow these morally bankrupt elements, who
have nothing to offer, destabilize our source. The PDP government has made it
clear that only the scumbags in our midst are its pearls. We have a moral duty
to reject this misrepresentation of our values as a people.
Aregbesola has been going round all
the local governments in the state and not one remote violent incident has been
linked to him and his team. He has been in the saddle for almost four years.
Nobody has been attacked and no opponent has been banished. The re-introduction
of violence and attitudes which stand at variance with the Omoluabi principle
with which anyone properly bred is nurtured must not be allowed.

No comments:
Post a Comment