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Road contracts: Why Osun Govt must bow to public scrutiny

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By Waheed Adekunle

Nothing is as hilarious, and at the same time disturbing as the way and manner the affairs of the State of the Living Spring is being administered under the watch of the incumbent governor, Senator Ademola Adeleke. This is so, when one takes into account, the myriad of socio-economic and political infractions bedeviling the 15-month old government.

However, as discerning citizens, we must continue to be reminded that public scrutiny of government activities will indeed strengthen our democracy and promote efficiency and effectiveness in government, only if we collectively work in unison to hold government accountable, especially this very one that appears too careless about our collective feelings and aspirations.

Empirically speaking, the loss of fundamental principles of governance – etiquette, accountability, openness, transparency, integrity, honesty, probity is too glaring in the current administration.

No doubt, the current government has clearly created a sense of doubt in the public minds from the very first day of Governor Adeleke in office, as manifested in the monumental failure recorded so far due to the inability of Adeleke’s government to fulfill many of its electoral promises, and as well champion the core value of stewardship in running the affairs of the state.

An American-Russian Technology Specialist, Edward Snowden once said: “There can be no faith in government if our highest offices are exempted from scrutiny – they should be setting the example of transparency.” In other words, the performance of any government can only be judged by its adherence to the principles of openness, transparency, accountability and social justice.

Borrowing a leaf from the aphoristic-philosophical assertions of the noble minds, it is crystal clear that the present administration has lost the grips of governance to frivolities, greed and selfishness not minding the hues and cries from the governed.

Recall that Governor Adeleke’s administration was reprimanded by the members of the public for lack of transparency when it reeled out its failed borehole projects, as people, particularly journalists; members of the Civil Society Organisations and major stakeholders in the state, bashed and queried the rationale behind the project which many described as a misplaced priority coming in the 21st century, where virtually every neighbourhood except the ruralites has alternative sources for water supply system.

Taking inference from the incidence vis-a-vis the myriad of the unanswered questions posed by the discerning citizens to elicit meaningful responses from government officials on the controversial borehole projects then, it is disheartening that the government, up till this moment, turned a deaf ear to public yearnings.

While it is imperative for the citizens to be obedient, faithful and diligent to the laws governing the affairs of the state, in the same measure, the government is also expected to demonstrate a high sense of transparency and accountability in the management of public treasury since it owes them a duty to letting the public know how they have been governed and how the common patrimony is being used to advance general aspirations of all and sundry.

But rather than sticking to the path of trustworthiness, the government has chosen to be distorting facts, rolling out sentiments to cover up; coining lies to deceive unsuspecting members of the public, and promoting all manner of propaganda in contents and in actions just to bully the public, cow the roarimg voices, silent policy challengers and divert public attention whenever the issue of transparency and accountability is raised and subjected to public debate and scrutiny.

It is laughable that it took Governor Adeleke’s administration several months before it came out to publicly announce the contract cost of some of the self-acclaimed and self-glorified borehole projects that was claimed to have been dug and completed in all the 332 wards in the state. We should not forget that this was coming after it was alleged by the opposition that each of the borehole was awarded at the rate of 14 million naira before the government later claimed that it only expended 1.5 million naira on each of the alleged ‘audio boreholes’, several months later. But even at that, till date, government officials still give conflicting figures on the actual cost.

Despite the terse comments from the citizens demanding the cost of Akoda-Oke-Gada-Ede-Prime dual carriage road when it was commenced around February 2023 by the Adeleke government, no meaningful response was given until late February 2024 when the government came up with humongous, inexplicable and very outrageous costs approved by the Governor to execute some of the road projects being awarded, and this came to the limelight after it has been seriously criticized by the public for lack of sincerity and probity in the management of the public resources.

This scenario, overtime, had made many Osun citizens and residents to lose confidence in government, believing that the entire system has been compromised, manipulated and parochially skewed to favour a few loyalists of the PDP and its government.  The backlash that trailed the figures reeled out by the Adeleke government recently on the ongoing road projects in the state was enough to form an opinion as to whether the government is truly transparent or not.

Recently, the opposition party constructively criticized the state government for running the affairs of the state in secrecy and challenged the Governor Adeleke led-PDP government to make public all the costs of the infrastructural projects claimed to have been executed so far, as this was re-echoed in some of my past write-ups to hold the government accountable no matter ‘whose ox is gored.’ But it was quite unfortunate that nothing meaningful has been done in this regard.

However, the Information Commissioner, Kolapo Alimi, while responding to some of the claims, said the dualization of the Old Garage-Okefia-Lameco Junction (2.24km) had been awarded to Acumen Forte Construction Company Limited at a total sum of N5,822,105,829 while the construction of 7 span bridge at Okefia intersection, Osogbo was awarded to Askorj International Nigeria Limited at a total sum of N10,764,206,257,58. Similarly, he affirmed that the construction of 4 span bridge at Lameco intersection, Osogbo had been awarded to Kimzee Global Investment at a total cost of N8,521,632,257,28.

According to him, the dualisation of Akoda- Baptist High School, Ede (5.50km) road was awarded to Great Enyork Tech Limited at a total sum of N12,200,512,000 while the dualisation of Baptist High School-Oke-Gada, Ede (3.86km) road was awarded to Enginec International Engineering Limited at a contract sum of N11,090,838,764 just as the construction of 4 span bridge across Osun River and dual 2-span bridge across Erinle River was given to Raregeode Company Limited at a contract sum of N3,937,072,827,00.

But the questions agitating the minds of the discerning citizens are: why did it take the government so long before unveiling the costs and the identities of the contractors handling the public projects? What are the criteria used to determine competence in the selection of the construction companies that bided for the contracts as there were insinuations that some of the benefitting companies do not have clear-cut construction details and impeccable track record on the Corporate Affairs Commission’s (C. A.C) websites to be awarded road contracts or handled road projects?

Why must the government award contracts worth billions of naira to companies that have no construction history? Has the government forgotten that its action is contrary to the principles of accountability, amounting to gross violation of the Osun State 2015 Procurement Laws? Why is the government still keeping mute in revealing the true identity of the so-called contractors it had awarded contracts, at least, to clear the air and dispel whatever speculations about the issues?

Why did the state government award about 10 billion naira road project to two companies traceable to the sitting Osun Deputy Speaker, Hon. Akinyode Abidemi Oyewusi? Is the government not aware of the implications of such?Assuming without conceding that truly the Deputy Speaker had resigned his position before contesting house of assembly election, why the choice of his companies out of hundred of competent road construction companies owned by the citizens of the state?

These and many other questions must be answered satisfactorily if truly the current government really know what it is doing and mean well for the state and her people.

As citizens, we must not forget that accountability is one of the steps that must be taken to maintain and increase public confidence in any government performance, hence the Governor Adeleke’s administration must to take cognisance of the fact that accountability in terms of ethics and governance, is equated with answerability, culpability and liability to succeed.

The time is now for the incumbent government to submit itself for public scrutiny by unveiling the true identities of the contractors handling the so called public projects most especially some of the ongoing roads in Ede, Osogbo respectively.

Like I said at the beginning, let me reiterate here that, as discerning citizens, we should continue to be reminded that openness will indeed strengthen our democracy and promote efficiency and effectiveness in government only if we collectively work in unison to hold government accountable.

May God heal our land!

Opinion

Mr Olabode Gabriel Omowayeola: A cut above the rest

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Mr Olabode is a cut above the rest, and so is the University of Ibadan where our path first crossed.

He was doing a Master’s degree programme at the time. His focus level while reading a huge book in the library reminded me of a scientist investigating a piece of matter under a microscope. That was the first point of attraction.

Mr Olabode is a different breed of Philomath who loves cross-border education even more than a monkey loves banana. From the University of Ibadan, he proceeded to Uskudar University Turkey where he studied Turkish language and Literature.

I relied on the far-reaching, long arm of coincidence to cross our paths for the second stint, and Oh Sweet Goodness, we crossed paths again at Uskudar University Turkey – sumptuous camaraderie! We spoke Turkish language; ‘Merhaba, seninle tekrar tanýþtýðýma memnun oldum’ meaning ‘Hello, nice to meet you again.’

Again, at Istanbul Kultur University Turkey, it was a ray of sunshine as we crossed our paths for the third stinct. This time, it was for a Master’s degree programme in International Relations and Government.

Like a piece of iron on a magnet, we not only went in the same direction, but shared the spoils as the overall best students.

As yearning as the deer for running streams, Mr Olabode’s yearning for knowledge and career advancement is in the zone – he proceeded to Memorial University of Newfoundland Canada as a research student of Political Science.

He stands tall amidst the massive collection of researchers of International Relations and Political Science in terms of contribution to new knowledge.

On the humanitarian side, Mr Olabode is as satisfying as a glass of chill water after a marathon.

He reminds me of the biblical seed that fell on a rich soil. Blind people who encounter him are able to climb the Iroko tree with their hands in pocket – a practically inspirational genius of the 21st century.

Cheers on your annibirthsary!

Jamesleo Oche, Researcher, Cranfield University, British Defence Academy, England, United Kingdom

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Dapo Abiodun: After five phenomenal years, three glorious years beckon

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By Kayode Akinmade

He came into office amid ceaseless assaults by a violent Establishment. He had no handover notes. But he had an agenda, a steely resolve, and a burning passion to transform the Ogun environment. Today, five years on, even the most cynical observer would admit that the Iperu-born prince and boardroom genius has turned the Gateway State around, infused a climate of excitement into governance and state management, building joy and hope for the future in the populace. This is remarkable in a country long hobbled by politicians’ failed promises.

Perhaps the most salient aspect of Abioduns’ leadership is the climate of peace actively fostered in the state. Peace pervades the length and breadth of the land because the Sheriff in charge is determined to leave a lasting legacy of life-changing projects behind, and would not be drawn into political brawls even when a predecessor, taking advantage of the calm in the land, tours the senatorial districts, staging hate campaigns. That is not by accident. Abiodun is a transformational leader, and transformational leaders, as the leadership expert and presidential biographer James MacGregor Burns tells us, are those who, in company with their followers,  advance to a higher level of morals and motivation. The fact cannot be disputed that through the strength of their vision and personality, transformational leaders inspire their followers to a higher level of intellectual stimulation, and hence social change.

Against this backdrop, Ogun being rated as Nigeria’s most peaceful state comes as no surprise. People tend to copy what they see their leaders doing. Ogun people have not forgotten the highly instructive incident that took place shortly after their Governor assumed office. Some pastors of the RCCG had been kidnapped while he was away in Abuja on official business. Given the viciousness of the outlaws, hope was low regarding their rescue. But the Governor simply requested for and obtained helicopters for aerial surveillance of the target area, and all the clergymen were rescued unhurt. Jubilations erupted in many places…

The Abiodun administration initiated the Security Trust Fund, rallying stakeholders to contribute to the fight against crime. It procured over 100 patrol vans, motorcycles, walkie-talkies, and other security equipment  to enhance the operational efficiency of security agencies. Then came an additional 25 patrol vans and surveillance drones in collaboration with Lagos and Oyo States to monitor activities along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. And then came Amotekun, deployed at flashpoints…

Because Ogun is calm, the strides in agriculture, the mainstay of the Nigerian economy, have been simply phenomenal. Through the Anchor Borrowers Programme, the Abiodun administration has revolutionized youth involvement in agriculture. It created the Ogun State Investment Promotion Agency (OGUNIPA) and the Ogun State Business Executive Council (OGUNBEC)  to make the Gateway State the destination of choice for investors. The administration empowered thousands of farmers through training, capacity building and provision of farming inputs, and Ogun is now a leading producer of rice, maize, and cassava in Nigeria. The story cannot be different with Abiodun’s heavy investment in the development of agricultural infrastructure, including irrigation systems, farm roads, and storage facilities.

 When a government fosters partnerships with private sector players, attracting investments and driving growth; implements initiatives to improve livestock production, including the distribution of breeding stock, veterinary support, and establishment of grazing reserves, the result is bound to be refreshing.

The Abiodun administration has strengthened extension services, providing farmers with access to expert advice, technology, and best practices to improve their productivity and efficiency. It has supported farmers to produce high-quality products and linked them to markets and processors. It has created thousands of jobs in the agricultural sector, having developed and implemented policies like the Ogun State Agricultural Policy and the Ogun State Livestock Development Policy. There is no space to detail the government’s  empowerment of  farmers with solar pump machines; the N50 million Ijebu Development Initiative for Poverty Reduction (Eriwe) meant to develop the fish subsector in the state; the empowerment of over 40,000 agripreneurs in cassava cultivation, or the distribution of motorcycles to extension agents to reach farmers in remote areas across the state.

In education, the abolition of all levies spiked enrolment in primary schools, even as the government adopted a school per ward for development as a model school. The promotion of teachers and equipment of schools and higher institutions and revolution of the transcript processing system has restored dignity to Ogun schools. And among the giant strides of the Abiodun administration, the Gateway International Airport, an agro-cargo facility situated in Remo North, has garnered global attention, with dignitaries and investors expressing interest in its immense socio-economic benefits. It will generate approximately 50,000 direct and indirect jobs. Fittingly, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has  approved the Special Agro-Cargo Processing Zone as a Free Trade Zone. Actually, what is on the ground is an airport city, with an agricultural processing zone located close by. Exporters of farming produce are about to experience an absolute windfall.

Although the state of federal roads—and they are so many—in the state presented challenges during Abiodun’s first term, the story is fast changing. Go to Ota and see things for yourself. In any case, listing the roads constructed by the Abiodun administration is a daunting exercise. Infrastructure is the first pillar of the ISEYA mantra but accorded  it a top priority attention in the scheme of programmes being executed. Notable among these roads already completed are the 3.41km Olomore Sanni Road,0.9km Elega Mokola Bridge Entrance, 2km Idi -Aba Elite, Oke Lantoro Road, 1.62km Ijaiye-Oke Ejigbo-Iporo Ake Road,7.8km Obantoko Road (Fajol America junction-Unity Estate Gbonagun, 5.7km Somorin-Kemta Idi -Aba Road, 42km Abeokuta Sagamu Expressway, 3km Panseke Adigbe Road, 6.6km Siun Owode Road, 2.35km Arepo Road,8km Revised s Scope Mowe Ofada Road, 1.5km Kuforiji Olubi Quarry Road Adigbe and 1.85km Iyana Oloke junction to Mapoly School Gate. Then we have the 3.1km Ikoritameje Adenrele/Olose Titun Vespa Road,2.4km Olusegun Osoba Toyin Agbado Road,1.5km construction of Sango Ota -Oke -Aro-Ojodu Abiodun Road Lagos End(Yakoyo to Mr Bigg),2.0km Inner Roads,Itori Junction Road, 4km Oba Erinwole Road,Sagamu,13km Sagamu -Ode Lemo Road,3km Idarika Street Road,8km Orile Oko Road,3km Awujale Road,Stadium and Oke Aje,1.2km Ogbagba Street, Ijebu Ode, etc. The Atan-Lusada-Agbara roads are a marvel. Housing estates covering different strata of society complement the good roads.

Enter the health sector, a sector for which even the Federal Government acknowledged Ogun’s exemplary status during the COVID-19 pandemic. We are talking of an administration that inaugurated State Emergency Medical Treatment Committee to enhance the Ambulance and Emergency Service delivery, conducted training for health workers on comprehensive screening for newborns to tackle sickle cell disease and secured, for the first time in 45 years, full accreditation and upgrade of the Ogun State Schools of Nursing and Midwifery to collegiate status. We are talking about an administration that targeted 1.4m school-age children as change agents, promoted partnerships across the three tiers of the health sector, introduced free Covid-19 rapid testing of residents in health facilities, inaugurated Sexual Therapy and Assaults Referral Center in Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital (OOUTH), the Family Planning Center at the State Hospital, Ijebu-Ode, and distributed over 25 Tricycle Ambulances to rural areas.

The administration upgraded and increased the fleet of Ogun State Ambulance and Emergency Services from four vehicles inherited to 26 in two years, introduced 24-hours Ambulance and Emergency Services across the 20 LGAs, carried out free eye surgeries, contained cholera outbreaks, distributed 3.7m insecticide treated nets, commissioned two  molecular laboratories to boost the State’s testing capacity for COVID-19 and other epidemiological diseases, and contained COVID-19 with less low fatalities. Have you been to the Clinical Skills Development Laboratory at the School of Midwifery, Abeokuta? It is the work of the same government that increased the ambulance fleet from 6 to 30 to cater for emergencies, distributed ultrasound machines to facilities across the state, commenced 24-hour ambulance service, inoculated students against cervical cancer and established Ambulance Points in all the nine federal constituencies.

With Abiodun’s strategic foresight, Ogun can look towards the future with hope. Long before the FG removed subsidy on fuel, Abiodun initiated CNG-run vehicles, tricycles and motorcycles in the state. Long before the economic downturn that attended subsidy removal came, he floated the Ogun-Kebbi Joint  Commission on rice production. Ogun, as attested to by multiple awards,  including:

  • Best State in ICT Penetration and Adoption by the National Council on Communication and Digital Economy
  • Best State in ICT Infrastructure Development also by the National Council on Communication and Digital Economy
  • Best State Governor with the Most Improved State in Security Infrastructure by Business Day Newspaper
  • Best Governor in Education by the National Parent-Teacher Association of Nigeria
  • Best Governor in Agriculture by the Nigerian Agriculture Awards
  • Best Governor in Housing Delivery by the Nigerian Housing Awards
  • Best State Governor with the Most Improved State in Agriculture and Economic Empowerment by Business Day Newspaper

Outstanding Political Brand Personality of the Year by Marketing Edge Summit and Awards

Best Governor in Infrastructure in the South West by the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) B zone.

Best Governor in Industrial Revolution at the Award of Excellence in Public Service by President Muhammadu Buhari

2023 “Governor of the Year” Award by Sun Newspapers

2023 “Man of the Year” Award by Silverbird Television and the Daily Independent Governor of the Year award 2023 in Nigeria’s ICT hub. The technology-driven state is poised for greater heights. That is the story of the state under Dapo Abiodun.

Akinmade is Special Adviser on Media and Communications to the Governor of Ogun State.

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Tinubu, the opposition and the Nigerian honey pot

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By Professor Kayode Soremekun

As the Tinubu administration approaches the one year mark, it is important to effect a review of what has transpired in the last twelve months.

At the level of sheer policy postures and pronouncements, much has been done and so much is also  being done, such that it is almost impossible to keep  pace .

In this narrative however, I have decided  to dwell on an unusual aspect of the last twelve months.

On this note, the thrust of my argument is this:Nigeria is a lucrative honeypot for external actors and their local collaborators. It is a situation in which every achievement of  this administration translates into a loss for external actors and their interests. These indeed are the various indices of the opposition which will continue to stalk this administration.

At the instinctual level, and unfortunately, the average reader is likely to view the opposition in terms of predictable variables like the: PDP, LP and possibly the various indices of civil society.

But this piece is not preoccupied with these.

Rather our attention is focused on the implications of the evolving dynamics of Air Peace (AP)and the competition in the aviation industry.

It is instructive to recall here that, as soon as  AP ticked off  on the Lagos-London route, the other  airlines came into some form of self-serving  epiphany. They changed tack through the  process of fare reductions.

The implications of this on-going process are deeper than one may think. As long as Nigeria was absent on the Lagos-London route, the route was something of a honey pot for the other airlines. It  was a sybaritic  situation in which all the other  airlines were busy enjoying themselves at the expense of Nigerians and Nigeria.

In my innocence I  thought  that the only airline that  was benefitting from this bazaar of the Lagos- London route was British Airways (BA) whose ancestors were  the original predators of what  passes for the Nigerian state. Little did I know that other Airlines like Air Maroc and Egyptair were also partakers of this largesse.

On this note, the mind remembers the goggled General, Sani Abacha. In the light of the inclement interplay between his regime and Britain, British Airways was banned from Nigeria. But as soon as he died, BA resumed its lucrative foray into Nigeria. One can imagine how much BA must have lost in the light of that move by the General.

The implication is that for every omission or commission on the part of Nigeria, someone out there is smiling home with huge profits. Such forces and individuals constitute at one level the opposition that anyone who  occupies Aso Rock, has to contend with. Needless to say, our Nigeria is  a huge honeypot since we are  talking here of a huge  market  of 200 million Nigerians.

The situation also partly explains why the Naira will continue to go south since for most of our basic needs, we depend heavily on the external realm. It also explains why anybody who occupies Aso Rock is not just up against the  usual opposition  at the domestic level, he is  also up against  the various indices of opposition beyond Nigeria.

And here we are talking about hard-headed interests and zero-sum games in which what one entity loses, is gained by another  one.

This brings to mind another major area in which over time, Nigeria continues to be a spectator in the scheme  of things.

Our specific reference here is the Nigerian oil industry. Nigeria continues to be passive in this industry. So passive that as an oil producing country there are  no backward linkages like refineries and petrochemicals. Even as I write, there are rumblings to the effect that there are jitters out there. This is because, should Nigeria succeed in bringing on stream her own  refineries, very many jobs will be lost by refiners in places like Rotterdam and South Korea. These are some of the entities who export refined oil to an oil producing Nigeria. Again as regards petrochemicals, should Nigeria come into her own in this vital  area, then our imports of raw materials will reduce drastically. In the light of what is  happening to Air Peace, we should expect a fight-back from relevant interests out there.

Very much the same thing can be said for our steel industry.Till date, it remains comatose. No thanks to international conspiracy ably aided by a wayward ruling class.This is invariably a  sad feature which stretches far back  to the dawn of our political independence. Again, Nigeria’s attempts to come into her own in this vital  area will be resisted, and vigorously too, by  the relevant external forces out there in collaboration with their internal allies. So as PBAT Tinubu settles into his second year in office, he will do well to remember and appreciate that he will be contending with various indices of the opposition at the external   various ways these have their tongues and fingers in the Nigerian honey-pot.They will not give up easily.Which is why, the Tinubu presidency should give these self-serving domestic and external forces a good run for their greed and avarice.

There is some hope however. This cautious optimism lies in the fact that, in the course of  that historic outing in Abeokuta where Tinubu openly staked his claim to the Presidency he also pronounced with equal gravity  on his place  in history. Specifically he opined that he would not want to be a footnote to the Nigerian narrative. So all said and done, it is possible to contend  here that in the light of what can be regarded  as his self-conscious place in history; PBAT has his work cut out for him in critical and vital  areas of our national life like: the steel industry, our oil industry and of  course the Aviation  sector.

Success  in these various  areas can only mean that the Great Black Hope is ready to come into her own.

Soremekun, a professor of political science was the second vice chancellor of Federal University Oye Ekiti, Ekiti State.

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