24
VOL. 10. NO.017 N100 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2015 www.osundefender.org THE 6TH MOST-VISITED NEWSPAPER WEBSITE IN NIGERIA Front Page Comment - See Story On Page 5 - See Story On Page 2 - Pg 2 - Pg 4 - Pg 5 •(L-R) Mrs Rachel Ojimi; Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs; Mr Muftau Oluwadare; Perma- nent Secretary Ministry of Regional Integration and Special Duties, Elder Adelowo Adewumi and Chairman of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry, Justice Jide Falola during the public hearing on Ipetumodu and Asipa town’s communal sitting at Centre for Black Culture and International Understanding in Osogbo, State of Osun last Monday. Photo: GBENGA ADENIYI. Presidential Election: How PDP, Presidency Plan To Use Shekau To Stop Bu hari APC Flagbearer Slated For Arrest Osun Assembly Passes 2015 Budget Of N201bn Buhari Is Stronger Than Fayose - Amosun Osun TUC Dismisses Workers’ Strike Threats Apprehension In UNIOSUN As Visitation Panel Commences Sittings Security Agencies and the Elections The security agen- cies have been thrust into the spotlight and both their reputation and effectiveness is now on the front burner. In a normal democracy this does not have to be so. That this is the situa- of the weak institu- tions which continues to hobble our nascent democracy.For a start it is alarming that the security agencies havebeen dragged into the murky terrain of politics. I n doing so, their operational and institu- tional independence has been compromised. In this way their effective- ness has also been put This is because operational ef- fectiveness goes hand-in-glove with institutional inde- pendence. security agency can- not be effective. For example, intelligence gathering is based on trust. Now how do you trust a compromised security agency. This could from the perspective of personal safety be a dicey prop- osition. This should be food for thought in view of the centrality of intelligence gath- ering to operational Continue on pg7

Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

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How PDP, Presidency Plan To Use Shekau To Stop Buhari . APC Flagbearer Stated For Arrest . Buhari Is Stronger Than Fayose - Amosun

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Page 1: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

VOL. 10. NO.017 N100thursday, february 26, 2015

www.osundefender.org THE 6TH MOST-VISITED NEWSPAPER WEBSITE IN NIGERIA

Front Page Comment

- See Story On Page

5

- See Story On Page 2

- Pg 2

- Pg 4

- Pg 5

•(L-R) Mrs Rachel Ojimi; Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs; Mr Muftau Oluwadare; Perma-nent Secretary Ministry of Regional Integration and Special Duties, Elder Adelowo Adewumi and Chairman of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry, Justice Jide Falola during the public hearing on Ipetumodu and Asipa town’s communal sitting at Centre for Black Culture and International Understanding in Osogbo, State of Osun last Monday. Photo: GBENGA ADENIYI.

Presidential Election:

How PDP, Presidency Plan To Use Shekau To Stop Buhari•APC Flagbearer Slated For Arrest Osun Assembly

Passes 2015 Budget Of N201bn

Buhari Is Stronger Than Fayose - Amosun

Osun TUC Dismisses Workers’ Strike Threats

Apprehension In UNIOSUN As Visitation Panel Commences Sittings

Security Agencies and the ElectionsThe security agen-cies have been thrust into the spotlight and both their reputation and effectiveness is now on the front burner. In a normal democracy this does not have to be so. That this is the situa-

of the weak institu-tions which continues to hobble our nascent democracy.For a start it is alarming that the security agencies havebeen dragged

into the murky terrain of politics. I n doing so, their operational and institu-tional independence has been compromised. In this way their effective-ness has also been put

This is because operational ef-fectiveness goes hand-in-glove with institutional inde-pendence.

security agency can-not be effective. For example, intelligence gathering is based on trust. Now how do you trust a compromised security agency.

This could from the perspective of personal safety be a dicey prop-osition. This should be food for thought in view of the centrality of intelligence gath-ering to operational

Continue on pg7

Page 2: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

2OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february 26, 2015 News

•Lagos State governor, Mr Babatunde Fashola (SAN) (sitting at the centre) with the Eze Ndigbo members during their courtesy visit to the governor to endorse and declare their support for the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate in Lagos State in the forthcoming general elections at the Lagos Government House, Marina.

Presidential Election: How PDP, Presidency Plan To Use Shekau To Stop Buhari•APC Flagbearer Slated For Arrest

by Our rePOrter

The reason why the controversial ekiti State G o v e r n o r Ay o d e l e F a y o s e i s s a y i n g categorically that the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), will never be the next president of this country has been exposed.

Information at the d i s p o s a l o f O S U N DeFeNDeR showed that the presidency and the national leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are genuinely worried by the superlative popularity of the Katsina-born APC presidential candidate.

It is based on this Buhar i ’s uncommon popularity that both the presidency and the PDP’s top notchers met and unanimously agreed that the only way out for the PDP is to stop the political ambition of Buhari by hook and crook means.

It was further gathered that the presidency could not know the reason why all the hate campaigns against the retired Army General president ia l candidate are becoming counter-productive.

It was learnt that a school of thought in the Buhari-Must-Be Stopped PDP agenda has come up with the arrest of the APC presidential candidate a week or two weeks to the March 28, 2010 presidential election.

how to go about the planned Buhari arrest, information reveals, is for the military to intensify efforts on the pounding of Sambisa Forest in the North-east where Shekau, the leader of Boko haram insurgents, is believed to be hibernating.

A c c o r d i n g t o t h e intelligence report at the disposal of OSUN D e F e N D e R , w h a t i n fo rmed the l a t e s t instruction to the military, who are fighting the insurgency in North-east geo-political zone, to capture Abubakar Shekau alive is to make Shekau or his look-alike to make a fa lse confess ional statement that would portray Buhari as the principal sponsor of Boko haram activities.

This false confession, it was gathered, would be the basis on which Buhari might be arrested by the Federal Government-c o n t r o l l e d s e c u r i t y officers, with a view to stopping his political ambition or causing a dras t ic reduct ion in Buhari’s popularity.

Part of the scheme, according to information, is to make available, the sum of N4.5 billion

with which to bribe the leadership of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in the Northern part of the country and their counterpart in the South, who would see Buhari as anti-Christian, thereby withdrawing their support from him.

It was further gathered

that some PDP governors and leaders of the party are opposed to the latest plan of lying against Buhari, saying it might equally have a monumenta l backlash effect capable of further sinking the already plumetted popularity of the party in the eyes of discerning and right-thinking members of the society.

A South-South governor and another controversial counterpart of his in the South-West are said to be the arrowhead of the PDP

task to stop Buhari.Information further

revealed that the two governors have offered to fund and scout for a way of creating a scenario, w h e r e B u h a r i a n d Shekarau would engage in a conversation on Boko haram activities.

The said governors are said to have sent some of their agents abroad with a task to shop for where the illicit fabricated Buhari-Shekau conversations could be made possible.

It would be recalled

that Governor Fayose orchestrated a s tory on Sunday, which was p u b l i s h e d b y m a n y national newspapers on Monday, where he said categorically that he was sure that Buhari would not be the next President of this nation.

T h e S t o p - B u h a r i agenda, according to information, would be so crafted in such a way that the timing would be inauspicious for him to challenge the falsehood in the court of law.

It would be recalled that

the military has owned up to have killed Shekau on about two occasions.

“ T h e m a k e - b e l i e f Shekau, who may be made to implicate the APC presidential candidate, is a prototype one, who might be told to confess under duress or hired for a fee,” the intelligence confirmed.

Apprehension In UNIOSUN As Visitation Panel Commences Sittingsthere are fears within the management circle

of the Osun state university, as the visitation panel constituted by the state governor, Ogbeni

rauf aregbesola, commences sittings. The panel is headed

by Professor Adebiyi D a r a m o l a , V i c e C h a n c e l l o r, F e d e r a l University of Technology, Akure, as the Chairman; Professor Jacob Ladipo; Prof Omotoye Olorode and Mr. Babatunde Adebayo are members with Mrs. Oluwakemi Kolawole as secretary.

Among the fears of the stakeholders in the university are the terms of reference of the panel, which is beyond the supremacy battle between the Vice Chancellor of the university, Professor Bashi r Okes ina , and the Governing Council Chai rman, Professor Gabriel Olawoyin.

The panel, which has

four weeks to complete i t s job , i s cur ren t ly receiving memoranda from concerned individuals within and outside the university management to unravel the management crisis in the university, which led to the alleged suspension of the three principal officers, the VC, Registrar, Dr Julius Faniran, and the Bursar, Mr Adebayo Lasis.

The fear, according to top management members of the university, who pleaded anonymity, said: “The fear of the people is the possible changes in the nomenclature of the university structures as at present, with the liberty of the panel to touch every sector in the university.

he said: “The fear is that the panel may go extra miles to unravel many contentious issues outside the VC and Governing Council Chairman power tussle, and the consequence is that heads may roll after the panel sitting, which may lead to re-organisation within the council and the management.”

“Part of the mandate of the panel is to investigate the smear relationship between the students and management with reference to the recent crisis in Ikire Campus. These are issues outside the management crisis and the funny aspect of it is that members of staff are ready to volunteer information that will assist the panel.”

h o w e v e r , a n o t h e r senior lecturer, who also pleaded anonymity, said the apprehension is limited to the top management and council members, saying

instead, the inauguration of the panel has stabilized the system.

he said: “I t is the inauguration of the panel that is stabilizing the system now. In the last two months, the university has been driving towards disintegration; anarchy had already set in with the purported suspension of the VC.”

W h e n c o n t a c t e d , Chairman of Academic S t a f f U n i o n o f t h e Universities, UNIOSUN Chapter, Dr Oluseye Abiona, declined comment on the matter, arguing that it is before the panel.

he said: “I cannot speak on the matter for now, as it is before a panel and we have forwarded our submission to the panel as a union. Therefore, it will amount to prejudice. Let us allow the panel members to do their job.”

The universi ty has

been in crisis for the past few months over the suspension of the VC and two other principal officers by the governing counci l over a l leged financial misappropriation and abuse of office but the VC has dismissed the allegations and described the suspension as illegal.

According to Governor A r e g b e s o l a w h i l e inaugurating the panel, he admonished them to investigate the basis of the simmering crisis and the misunderstanding between the management and the council in the university, with a view to finding a lasting solution.

he equally tasked them to determine the roles of individuals and groups in the crisis, with a view to recommending appropriate steps to arrest the ugly situation and prevent a reoccurrence in the future.

by KehiNde ayaNtuNji

Page 3: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

3 News OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february

If you have a story or advert for us, contact 08033927286, 08033880205, 08061197897, 08023191891.

by shiNa abubaKar

by Kazeem mOhammed

PubLic NOticeThis is to inform

m e m b e r s o f t h e public that hassaN KafiLat adejOKe, is the same person as hassaN KafiLat f e y i N tO L a . A l l former documents remain valid. OSCOTeCh and general public should take note.

PubLic NOticeThis i s to in form

m e m b e r s o f t h e public that ghasaLi a b d u L L a h i a K i N K u N m i , i s t h e s a m e p e r s o n a s a b d u L L a h i ghasaLi. All former documents remain valid. Osun State Polytechnic, Iree and general public should take note.

2015 Polls: Jonathan’s Fund Divides Osun CAN

the state of Osun branch of the christian association of Nigeria (caN) is set to be on collision over an alleged attempt by

the President of the group, Pastor Oritsejafor, to infiltrate the religious body with President goodluck jonathan’s election fund.

I n v e s t i g a t i o n s revealed that despite the noise raised by the bribery scandal against the religious body and denial by its leadership, the body is hell-bent on ensuring that it secures the vote of Christians for the President through the church leadership.

The leadership of the state branch of CAN was said to be anticipating its own booty from the presidency, but a section of the state executive council were said to be opposed to receiving such goodies, saying the build-up to the August 9, 2014 governorship poll in the state had done enough damage to the body.

It was gathered that the leadership of CAN in the coun t ry had reached out to the state CAN that it would be coming around to discuss issues bothering on the welfare of the body, but the medium learnt that the main purpose of the visit is to bring the state’s share of the president booty.

Findings showed that a section of the state CAN is poised for a showdown with the pro-Jonathan group on the ground that such move is capable of dragging the integrity of the group in the mud, considering the much noise the fund had generated.

It would be recalled that the state CAN was alleged of being induced wi th money by the Presidency in a view to campaigning and sway

votes in favour of the PDP

governorship candidate in the last gubernatorial poll in the state.

This move eventually created division within the body and the anti-Jonathan group is afraid that the latest move to buy the group could cause more serious damage,

hence, its resolve to ensure the body maintains its credibility.

A source within the Christian body confided in OsuN defeNder that the level of corruption wi th in t he body i s irritating because of its symbolism with religion;

hence, a group within it is seriously ready to make sure no one gets away with corrupt act under whatever circumstances.

As at the time of filing this report, the state leadership of CAN is still expecting the arrival of its President.

Meanwhi l e , some anti-bribery groups in the body were not fully carried along on the modalities of the arrival of the President, but they were said to have been at alert to know what would go down within its house.

76.15 Per Cent Of PVCs Now Collected – INECthe independent National electoral

commission has said that the number of people that have collected their Permanent

Voter cards has risen to 52,419,495.

T h e C h i e f P r e s s Secretary to the INeC Chairman, Mr. Kayode Idowu, who stated this in a chat with newsmen in Abuja on Sunday, said the figure represented 76.15 per cent of 68,833,476 registered voters.

INeC had on Tuesday

said that 52,275,367 people had collected their PVCs out of 68,833,476 registered voters.

Responding to questions from journalists, Idowu said: “The update I have with me now is for February 18 and it is 52,419,495 (76.15 percent).”

Idowu also stated that card readers would be deployed in 152,031 polling units across the country during the March 28 and April 11 elections, adding that INeC had procured 26,000 extra card readers.

“Card readers will be deployed at 152,031 voting points, but the commission also has more than 26,000 spares,” he said.

According to him, ad hoc workers for the e lec t ions (excluding INeC members of staff and returning officers) are about 684,000.

he explained that the scheduled training for the ad hoc members of staff ended February 12 in readiness for February 14, the initial date for the presidential elections.

Idowu reiterated that because the elections had been rescheduled, there would be more extensive trainings, especially on the card readers.

According to the figures released by INeC on Tuesday, Nasarawa State led other states in terms of the PVCs collection with 96.29 per cent of the 1,196,583 registered voters having their cards.

Coming second i s Gombe State, where 95.05

per cent of the 1,120, 023 voters had collected theirs.

Jigawa State came third with 93.20 per cent of the 1,831,276 voters receiving their PVCs as of Monday.

Jigawa and Katsina came fourth and fifth respectively.

While the percentage of the registered voters who have collected their PVCs in Jigawa stood at 93.20 per cent from 1,831,276 registered voters, that of Kastina was put at 92.68 per cent.

This figure indicated that 2,620,829 of the 2,827,943 voters had collected their PVCs.

Coming from the rear is Ogun State, where only 40 per cent of the registered voters had so far collected their PVCs.

How O’MEAL Increased Elementary School Enrolmentthe Osun elementary school feeding

Programme (O’meaL) has swelled up the number of enrolment into public schools

across the state.T h e P e r m a n e n t

Secretary, Osun State U n i v e r s a l B a s i c e d u c a t i o n B o a r d (SUBeB), Alhaji Fatai Kolawole, stated this in a chat with journalists, saying the idea was to ensure that children eat healthy food in schools at their tender age, to make them intellectually sound and make educat ion attractive to them.

he noted that with the sensitization of parents on the need to enroll their

children and wards for basic education and the assurance of feeding them with balanced diet, more school-age children have been taking off the streets.

According to him, the p rogramme has eliminated the issue of not having children in schools, saying the issue that the government is addressing was to ensure that the children are properly taught when in school.

The feeding of the

pupils with balanced diet and de-worming them had enhanced their Intelligent Quotient and health status.

“All the elementary schools are benefitting f r o m t h e O ’ M e a l programme and it covers what we used to know as Primary 1 to 4. The beauty of it is that whether you are in the urban centers or the remotest village in the state, you will still be fed.

“Since the inception of this programme, we have had increase in the enrolment into public schools.

“Basic education in the country is about access and equity. Whether you

are rich or poor, there should be no barrier for everybody to send his or her children to schools. There should also be access to allow everybody to enrol children into school.

“These principles are being met by government and it has assited us in the effectiveness of the government commitment to basic education,” he added.

Kolawole then noted that inspite the challenges of fund being faced, the government is determined to forge ahead.

•Warehouse of Ayegbaju Market in Osogbo built by the administration of Governor Rauf Aregbesola. Photo: GBENGA ADENIYI.

Page 4: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

4 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february News

•Aje International Market in Osogbo built by the administration of Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, as captured by our cameraman, GBENGA ADENIYI, last Tuesday.

by shiNa abubaKar

APC Demands Independent Probe Of Ekiti Rigging Tapethe national headquarters of the all Progressives

congress (aPc) has renewed its call for a thorough probe of the ekiti rigging tape that was recently

released by an army captain, who recorded the audio tape, saying it is wrong for anyone to label the tape a fake without a forensic investigation.

In a s tatement issued in Lagos on Sunday by its National Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, the party said the issues exposed by the tape are too grievous to be swept under the carpet or dismissed on the basis of nothing but gross partisanship.

It said the investigation is particularly necessary

because of the alleged role the military played in the whole rigging scenario, and against the background of the court rulings against the deployment of troops for elections.

“If the government officials and politicians, whose voices were heard on the tape are not interested in clearing their

names, what about the military institution that was dragged into the show of shame? has the integrity of the military not been compromised by the alleged role of a General and hundreds of his troops in the rigging saga?” APC queried.

T h e p a r t y s a i d t h e inconsistency of the Federal Government’s response to the whole saga has exposed its underbelly and made it more urgent for a forensic investigation of the tape to be carried out.

“First, those whose voices

were heard on the tape rushed to deny there wasn’t any such meeting. Later, after they were confronted with a preponderance of evidence, they started owning up one by one, starting with Police A ff a i r s M i n i s t e r J e l i l i Adesiyan, then Minister of State for Defence Musiliu Obanikoro and then ekiti Governor Ayodele Fayose, even though they all denied the meeting was about rigging. Of course Nigerians know better.

“But these men, on the basis of their initial denial, are no

longer credible, as far as the rigging tape is concerned, hence it is necessary to have an independent investigation of the whole issue,” it said.

APC also said that while President Goodluck Jonathan had rushed to dismiss the authenticity of the tape, telling the Wall Street Journal: “It’s all fabrications,” his campaign spokesman, Femi Fani-Kayode said the exact opposite:

“We have listened to the audio clip and we make bold to say that the discussion that took place in it did not

make any mention of any form of rigging in the ekiti State governorship election and neither did it contain any evidence of any conspiracy to rig.”

“Can anyone listen to a non-existent audio tape? This confusion in the government circles is the clearest indication yet that they were so panicked by the revelation that they could not fashion out a coherent response to it, hence the discordant notes by the major culprits and their ‘Oga’ at the top!

“We sympathize with them, but we are more worried about the effect this revelation will have on a respectable national institution like the military, which was dragged into the rigging mess. This is why even the military itself must carry out its own investigation.

“If an Army General could be so bullied into submission by political partisans, to the point where he said he will cry, what will they not do to any other military officer or men? Does this whole rigging saga not call into question the role of the military in elections?” the party further queried.

It however vowed not to allow the issue to be swept under the carpet in the interest of the nation, and commended the media and indeed all Nigerians for sustaining the discourse on the rigging tape.

Jonathan Plans To Unleash Suffering On Nigerians Ahead Of Polls PLaNs have been revealed on modalities President

goodluck jonathan intends to use to win votes across the states of the federation.

The President’s campaign organisation is said to be pushing for the ekiti and Osun states approach to the presidential poll, hence, the serious push for poll postponement from its initial date of February 14 to March 28 and April 11 dates.

Findings revealed that the Presidency initially thought it has the goodwill to win votes in so many regions in the country, but was taken aback by its popular rejection among the electorate and it realised there is need for change of strategy.

The medium gathered that the poll shift would allow the presidency to mop up funds from the polity and create a hungry atmosphere among the masses, who would in turn be eager to get any kind of gift during the poll to vote for such candidate.

I t w a s l e a r n t t h a t weeks before the poll, the presidency is willing to deploy funds and stomach infrastructure to the states to buy over the conscience of voters to ensure that if the President did not win in state perceived to be anti-PDP, he would, at least, score 25 per cent votes.

According to findings, the style was found to be

successful in Osun and ekiti States, particularly, Osun, where the PDP never thought it would score half

of the votes it eventually scored during the August 9, 2014 governorship poll.

The current situation across the country, where people complain of hunger is in line with the plan of the

presidency, so that the PDP would deploy food items and cash to the people, as a means of winning their votes like it did in Osun during the governorship poll.

Already, some states in the North have been

Woman Absconds With Baby From Hospital •Bill Not Paida woman, who was just delivered of a new-born baby,

was reported to have absconded with her child from the maternity ward of a very popular private

hospital at agunbelewo area of Osogbo, state of Osun capital, recently.

This was disclosed by the matron on duty when the inc ident occurred on Wednesday, 18th of February.

According to her, the couple had registered at the hospital for pre-natal care and after the baby was delivered, the husband pretended to go back home with a basket containing the baby’s clothes, in an attempt to get other required materials at home.

It was disclosed that the woman and her baby were to be discharged by 5.00pm on the said day, but she took the baby and ran away without paying the hospital bill.

While responding on the incidence, a nurse in the hospital, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said it was obvious that the

couple had planned to get away without paying for the baby’s delivery and this had made the hospital to change

its style of operation.“henceforth, bills would

be charged and paid into hospital’s account before attending to the patients.”

Reacting on the new policy, Mr. Idowu, a relative of one of the patients on admission, lamented that paying hospital bills before

by OLuwadamiL OLa ade-

flooded with Jonathan/Sambo rice, breads and have begun distributing it to some electorate, while funds are said to have started to be deployed to some states through the PDP governorship candidates.

being attended to is unethical and may not go down well with the affected patients.

he urged the Director of the hospital to reconsider the decision, considering the economic situation in the country.

Osun Assembly Passes 2015 Budget Of N201bn

the state of Osun house of assembly has passed the 2015 appropriation bill of N201 billion into law.

The bill was passed at the plenary on Tuesday following a motion moved by the Chairman, house Committee on Finance and Appropriation, honourable Kamil Oyedele.

earlier, the house had dissolved to the Committee of Supply and made necessary amendment in the bill in connection with the report of the committee

over the rev iew and adjustment of the estimate.

The budget estimate of N197,082,191,560, christened: “Budget of Renewed hope,” was presented to the house on December 23, 2014.

In the course of the review of the budget estimate, the Assembly adjusted it upward to

N201,740,360,700 to cater for the omission of the salaries of the Middle School teachers to the tune of N4,428,591,350, which was omitted when the estimate was being drafted.

T h e r e c u r r e n t expenditure in the passed budget is N90,614,061,690, representing 44.9 per cent, while the capital e x p e n d i t u r e s t a n d s a t N111,126,299,010 representing 55.1 of the total budget.

The passed budget is expected to the forwarded

to the governor for his assent.

Speaking on the upward adjustment of the budget, Oyedele said the increase was necessary because when the estimate was being drafted by the State Universal Basic education (SUBeB), the salaries of the Middle School teachers were omitted.

he said it was in the process of scrutinising the estimate that the discovery was made, saying the effectiveness and vigilance of the house led to the discovery.

The Speaker, honourable Najeem Salaam, charged ministries and agencies of government to ensure effective implementation of the budget for the benefit of the people of the state.

he sa id the house de l ibera te ly sped up action on the budget due to its commitment to the development of the state, saying the state parliament would not treat with kid gloves whoever treats the budget with levity.

Commending members for their commitment in handling issues relating to the development of the state, he charged them not to relent.

by Kazeem mOhammed

Page 5: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

5555 News OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february

by KehiNde ayaNtuNji

Buhari Is Stronger Than Fayose - Amosunthe Ogun state governor, senator ibikunle

amosun, has berated the ekiti state governor, ayodele fayose, for his continuous

scathing remarks about the health status of the all Progressives congress presidential candidate, maj. gen. muhammadu buhari (rtd.), saying buhari is stronger than fayose.

he said this on Monday while speaking with journalists after meeting with 705 community development associations and cooperative societies in the state at the June 12 Cultural Centre, Kuto, Abeokuta.

Fayose’s recent remarks came on the heels of the ongoing visit by the APC presidential candidate to the United Kingdom, where he met former Britain’s Prime Minister, Tony Blair, among other engagements.

T h e e k i t i S t a t e governor had alleged that Buhari had gone for a check-up on his alleged failing health, instead of a working visit as claimed by the APC.

however, Amosun said it was not in the character of the Yoruba to wish anyone dead.

he said:”It’s a big shame from the quarters where the allegation came from. We are Yoruba.

“There is an unwritten rule: t’aba n ja, bi ti ka ku ko (even if we are quarelling, it is not to wish each other dead).

“even in this instance, we are not fighting. We want to represent our people. how can a sane person wish somebody else dead. It is a disgrace to our race as Yoruba for somebody to be wishing another person dead.

“For your information, General Muhammadu Buhari is even stronger than the character that is saying the man is weak; maybe because of the military background.”

Amosun, who was part of Buhari’s entourage to

the UK, said he had to struggle to catch up with the 72-year-old retired General, despite his own age of 57.

he said: “even because of the way I walk, it’s like catching up with him. For his age, maybe because of his military background. It’s like seeing Baba Obasanjo too and say he’s old.

“This is the man that is very agile; we are even telling him that you have to slow down. This is the

man that we met together with Tony Blair. We left the place and we went to about five different places. The man is hale and hearty.

“even when we went to Ben Television, I told him ‘you can’t follow me, you have to go home’. he was willing, he was ready even in the cold. The man was walking round.”

he further berated the ruling party for going viral on the internet with falsehood, on the purported visit of Buhari

to a London hospital.he added, “You can

see the photoshop they are us ing; they a re saying a lot of rubbish. This is not politics. It is descending to an abysmal level and I think all lovers of democracy and all lovers of humanity should caution them.

“Politics shouldn’t be like this; saying that he (Buhari) has three months to live. They are just talking rubbish.

“Politics will finish.

Where would they be when you begin to talk this rubbish? I think it’s a shame and I think they are descending to a level that is unheard of, that negates reasonableness and good thinking. It’s against our tradition as Yoruba.”

Osun TUC Dismisses Workers’ Strike Threatsthe chairman of trade union congress

(tuc) in the state of Osun, comrade francis adetunji, has dismissed the

ultimatum given by senior civil servants’ association to government, saying such notice is not in line with labour laws.

Adetunji reiterated that the state government had explained to workers all the factors responsible for its inability to pay workers’ salary as at when due, while he urged workers in the state to be considerate in their demands.

he said with the current economy challenges, the workers are expected to engage government justifiably and watch them closely to ensure that workers’ welfare are not in any way compromised.

The labour leader said this while reacting to the seven-day ultimatum strike notice issued by the Senior Civil Servant Association.

he noted that most of the issues raised by the

union had been resolved by the state government.

The Chairman of the

Senior Civil Servant Association of Nigeria, State of Osun branch, C o m r a d e A k i n y e m i Olatunji, had on Sunday i s sued a seven-day ultimatum to look into their demands or face industrial action.

According to Olatunji, part of their demands include prompt payment

o f worke r s ’ s a l a ry, promotion of workers and review of contributory p e n s i o n s c h e m e , saying non-payment of their salaries in the past four months had subjected workers to untold hardship, while pensioners were suffering in silence.

h e s t r e s s e d t h a t

government did not show enough commitment to the welfare of workers, hence the need for the union to give government a seven-day ultimatum before embarking on a three-day warning strike thereafter.

Nigerians Declare Readiness For General Elections

resideNts of Osogbo, the state of Osun capital, have expressed readiness for the march and april 2015 general elections in

the country.They also expressed

delight that there has been remarkable improvement i n t h e d i s t r i b u t i o n and collection of the Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

According to people who spoke wi th the medium, majority of them had collected their PVCs from the local government council areas where they

registered.Most of the people

interviewed disclosed that they had collected their PVCs and only waiting for the set aside day for the election.

M r . A d e d a y o Thomas, Mrs. Deborah A n i m a s h a u n , S t e l l a Njoku, Bamidele Asimiyu all testified that they had collected their PVCs and

were ready to perform their civic duties.

Asimiyu and Adedayo stated that they now had an expanded knowledge of the workings of the card reader adding that when put to use, the device would elimnate any form of irregularities that would hitherto had been perpetrated by the politicians.

“Due to the level of awareness INeC put into the collection of the PVCs, there is confidence that many members of of the

electorate now know how to use the card reader.

“We now know that INeC did not mean any harm by its introduction of these machines. In fact, it is going to make elections easier and fraud-proof.”

They however charged INeC to embark on more voters’ education programmes in order to make it easier for more w o u l d - b e v o t e r s t o understand that the 2015 general elections would be different from previous ones held in the country.

by fraNcis ezediuNO

•Speaker, State of Osun House of Assembly, Honourable Najeem Salaam (sitting at the centre) with other members and clerks of the House during their sitting on deliberation on State of Osun water sector bill, at the House of Assembly in Osogbo recently. Photo: GBENGA ADENIYI.

Page 6: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

6 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february News

•Osun Waste Management Agency (OWMA) members of staff performing their duty at Estate area of Osogbo, State of Osun, last Tuesday. Photo: GBENGA ADENIYI

by fraNcis ezediuNO

by ismaeeL uthmaN

straNge wOrKs Of gOd OrPhaNageThe general public is hereby notified that the above named Association has applied to the Corporate Affairs Commission for registration under Part C of the company and Allied Matter Act 1990.

bOrad Of trustees:1. Mrs. Adetokunbo Olufunmileye Ajanaku - Chairman2. Barrister Oluwatoyin Adegoke - Secretary3. Mr Akinola Owolabi - Member4. Mrs. Susan Okolo - Member5. Mrs. Olubunmi eji - Member6. Dr. Adenike Olaniba - Member7. Dr. Olubukola Ajanaku - Member8. Mr. Toyin Oduola - Member

Any objection to the registration should be forwarded to the Registrar General, Corporate Affairs Commission, Plot 420, Tigris Crescent, off Aguiyi Ironsi Street, Maitama, Abuja within twenty eight (28) days of this publication.

Signed:barrister Kehinde imoohi

Nigerians Ascribe Credible Polls As Ingredient Of Democracy

ONe of the ingredients of entrenching democracy in Nigeria has been described as the conduct of a free, fair and credible election

that will be seen by all as meeting the standards.Accordingly, the nation’s electoral umpire, the

Independent National electoral Commission (INeC), has a sacred duty to the electorate in ensuring that.

This was the assertion ascribed to by a cross sect ion of Nigerians

who spoke to OsuN defeNder recently on the possibility of INeC conducting a free and fair election.

“The possibility of an election coming up on March 28 and April 11 is not in doubt, just as

the commission’s boss, Professor Attahiru Jega, has declared.

“We should not forget that on many occasions, he has stated that he is ready to conduct the election, but that the security agencies also have a role to play.”

In her own submission, Mrs. Abosede Adeshina stated that conducting a free and fair election is only possible if INeC is truly independent and if

the security agencies are impartial.

She observed tha t both the Osun and ekiti elections were declared as free and fair and the Federa l Government did not interfere in the outcome.

She also maintained that in as much as the president does not have any hidden agenda, what he said about May 29 will come to pass.

Others, whose opinions were sought, urged the

politicians not to see the contest as one of do or die, but rather it should be one where bitterness would be made away with.

T h e y c h a rg e d t h e Federal Government to follow the provisions of the electoral Act and guarantee that every electoral official, material and election results will be safe.

On the military action in the North-east, the G o o d l u c k J o n a t h a n a d m i n i s t r a t i o n w a s criticised for allowing the problem to spiral out of hand before thinking of proffering a solution to it.

“ T h e F e d e r a l Government should have done well to take care of Boko haram in the North-east before allowing INeC

to choose an election date.“Jega was even at the

National Assembly last week to assure Nigerians that the election will hold as planned, let us believe him and see what he will do.”

The unavailability of the Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) was observed to be another problem that would stand in the way of a smooth electoral process, even as some individuals and groups were calling for the commission to allow the use of the temporary voters card with some even heading to the court of law to protest the use of the PVCs.

Nigerians Blast NOA For Non-voters’ Sensitisation

thOse in the know have joined the league of Nigerians criticising the National Orientation agency (NOa) for not effectively educating

the populace on the much-anticipated 2015 general elections.

by fraNcis ezediuNO

Among those calling on the Director-General of NOA, Mr. Mike Omeri, to create effective means of disseminating messages to educate the electorate on how to go about during the election was a popular journalist and blogger, Chris Kehinde Nwandu.

T h e c e l e b r a t e d journalist accused the NOA DG of neglecting his primary responsibilities of effectively educating the people on election matters , which is the most important for this period and concentrating on being the Chairman of the National Information Cen t r e cha rged w i th disseminating information on the face-off between the Nigerian military and Boko haram.

According to him, the Federal Government has been in a running battle with the dreaded sect for some years now and Omeri did not deem it fit to work during the period but it’s funny that he had decided to take full responsibility for spearheading the agency’s handling the distribution of relief materials to displaced people and daily feeding us with information on the ongoing military action.

“To me, the issue of informing and educating Nigerians on the coming e l ec t ion i s t he mos t important for now and anyth ing about Boko haram should best be left to the military authority.”

In Osun, the case seem to be the same, as people who spoke to OsuN defeNder disclosed that the education needed to sensitise Nigerians on the part of NOA was below standard.

Accord ing to Mrs .

Adeniyi Kehinde, “anytime I switch on my television or radio set, any information I get about the election is usually from the state t e l e v i s i o n a n d r a d i o stations.

“I do not even know whether NOA is still very much of an orientation agency. even when the election date was postponed, it was from friends that I heard and the only reason for the postponement that I know about was Boko haram insurgency.

Meanwhile, some of the people interviewed were of the opinion that the voters’ education in Osun is better compared to other states due to the interest of the state government in the political development of its citizens.

They argued that they had not seen the input of e agency in terms of voters’ education but rather it was the Independent National electoral Commission ( I N e C ) t h r o u g h i t s education directorate that was educating the people.

They accused NOA of neglecting its duty of educating the people o n p u b l i c - o r i e n t e d programmes and focusing on disaster management and disseminating information on Boko haram both of which have bodies saddled with the responsibility of handling such.

Meanwhile, attempts to get officials of NOA, Osun to counter the allegation proved futile, as they declined to speak except given clearance from the headquarters in Abuja.

OSUN DEFENDER Back Online As Reactions Trail Shut Downthe online version of OsuN defeNder newspaper

i s b a c k , f e w d a y s a f t e r t h e w e b s i t e , www.osundefender.org was hacked and shut down

by hackers suspected to be working for the presidency. hackers believed to be acting on the directive of the Presidency had, few days

ago, introduced malicious content into the web root of the website to hack it and shut it down eventually.

however, ICT experts of the OsuN defeNder have restored the website and all its historical contents, describing the shutdown as a challenge to further secure the site and improve on its contents.

Reactions have since con t inued to t r a i l t he shutdown of the website by

the suspected presidency agents, as people expressed fear over the freedom of the press.

A media practit ioner, Mr Adelani Baderinwa, in an interview with OsuN defeNder on Tuesday in Osogbo stated that the shutdown of the website was an attack on the Nigerian press, irrespective of who did it.

Baderinwa said that the only reason why the website was shutdown was either the

content was offensive to the presidency and the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP) or it was seen as an opposition newspaper website.

h e m a i n t a i n e d t h a t without consulting oracle, the presidency and the PDP were not innocent of the shutdown, adding that several attempts had been made by the presidency to silent the press in the past.

Baderinwa recalled the deployment of soldiers in some states to mop a specific edition of some newspapers believed to contain stories tha t were offens ive to the President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration in June 2014.

The former Chief Press Secretary to former Governor Bisi Akande stressed that the shutdown of OsuN defeNder website brought to the fore the intolerance attitude of the presidency.

he, however, enjoined workers of the medium to see the a t tack as a compliment of their services to disseminate accurate exclusive information, which the presidency and the PDP do not want people to know.

An ICT expert, engineer Remi Omowaiye, said that OsuN defeNder website is a prominent newspaper site, where millions of people get to know what is happening in Nigeria.

According to Omowaiye,

the website is one of the major sources of information for Nigerians abroad and that most of its contents were what the PDP and the presidency do not want in the public domain.

Omowaiye stated that with the traffic of the website and volume of comments on its contents, the website enjoys some levels of dominance in Nigeria.

he said that it takes a team of ICT guru with access to sophisticated applications to hack into the medium’s website and eventually shut it down.

he maintained that the attack on the website was a move to silent OsuN defeNder and block people from having access to it.

“Considering the traffic and con ten t o f OsuN defeNder website, there is no doubt the PDP and the presidency could have it shutdown. Both the hard copy and the online version of the newspaper have become the voice of the opposition in Nigeria,” he said.

Public Notice

Page 7: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

5557

Security Agencies and the ElectionsContinued from pg1

For example the ekiti-gate tapes revealing the compro-mising of key operators in the security network has not helped. It throws up a dilemma. This relates to perception. And it induces a lack of trust. For the security agencies are not sup-posed to be involved in what is actually a perversion of the electoral law of the country. In addition the problem is fur-ther compounded by bringing the Army into the policing of the electoral process. This is not just wrong, it is dangerous for a democracy especially one without deep roots and one that is hobbled by weak institutions. Incontrovertibly, the police force must carry out the security functions on election day. To do otherwise is to undermine both civil society and the base of the

democratic ethos. Let us also remember the warn-ing of the Greek philosopher Socrates who centuries ago admonished that ` a soldier who goes into politics has already lost his honour`. he is absolutely correct! Like the judiciary the Army is the last line of defense of the republic. Like Caesar`s wife they must be transparently above board. everything has to be done to protect both institutions and their operational independence and effectiveness. The military top brass also have to keep the politicians at arms length. This is crucial in order to maintain the professionalism of the Armed Forces. Immersion of the top echelon of the Armed forces into partisan politics undermines this and should be discouraged at all cost. The coming elections are a litmus test for our democracy. Therefore

in the scheme of things, the honour of the Security agencies and the need to be above politics must be held. The entire gamut of Nigerian life must be professionalised. The professionalisation of the security agencies is crucial in this respect. To compromise will be to endanger the very basis of our democracy. This is why unruly, anti- profes-sionals such as Joseph Mba must be frowned upon. he in particular, represents a dangerous tendency which is incompatible with the ethos of democratic governance. It must be stopped! For 16 years after the restoration of democracy we should not contin-ue to describe our democracy as `nascent`. This is actually insulting. Ghana today does not refer to its democracy as such. On the con-trary the country is now deservedly held up as a beacon of democracy. In that admirable country an in-cumbent central government losing an election and voluntarily giving

up power is now pretty much rou-tine. We ought to be in the same league with Ghana, Republic of South Africa and so on. Other Af-rican countries are also following the same trend. That we are not, is very disturbing! We therefore insist that our police must be neutral, impartial and uncompromising; being the main institution at the center stage of policing the elections. This is the role they are expected to play according to the constitution. This has now been validated by the Courts and we should accept it as such. For those who are clamouring for the involvement of the Army clearly have an anti- democratic agenda. And that not so well hidden agenda must be exposed in order to nip it in the bud. This is because the logi-cal conclusion of `involvement`

OSUN DEFENDERPublisher – Moremi Publishing House Ltd.

Managing Editor – Kola Olabisi (0803-392-7286)

Editor – Kayode Agbaje (0803-388-0205)

Lagos Editor – Kola Odepeju (08023191891) Production Editor – Pet-Kola Taiwo Ibitowa Senior Reporter – Sola JacobsSenior Reporter – Kazeem Mohammed

Magazine Editor – Niyi Olasinde

Reporter – Kehinde AyantunjiReporter – Francis Chukwuma

Photographer – Oluwagbemiga AdeniyiPhotographer – Olushola Aderinto

Admin. Manager – Murtala Agboola

Computer Operator – Saheed AfolabiComputer Operator – Mary AkintolaAssistant Computer Operator – Lukman Oseni OSUN DEFENDER is published by Moremi Publishing House Limited, Promise Point Building, Opposite Guarantee Trust Bank GTB, Gbongan Road, Osogbo, State of Osun.All correspondence to the above mail address.ISSN: 0794-8050Telephone: 0803-392-7286, 08033880205Website: www.osundefender.com/index.phpe-mail: [email protected]

OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february

Jonathan Driving Nigeria Into Economic WildernessIT is crystal clear that

our revenues are dwindling by the day

and if we must survive, we cannot continue on this path of near absence o f a c c o u n t a b i l i t y, m i s m a n a g e m e n t , outright waste and jamboree tha t has c h a r a c t e r i s e d t h e management of public resources under the J o n a t h a n - l e d P D P government.

We can assure the m a s s o f N i g e r i a n people that help is on the way. We know that an APC-control led Federal Government will obviously inherit a huge debt profile and an empty treasury from this PDP Federal Government. We are confident of turning the situation around.

It is apparent that the Federal Government has suddenly found itself in a bind with plummeting crude oil prices in the international market, but typical of a team that lacks capacity for anticipatory actions, the Federal Government

has been running from pillar to post in a vain bid to stabilize the economy.

Unfortunately, all conceived palliatives applied to save the na t ion’s dec l in ing economic indicators have merely scrapped the surface of the

problems, leaving the mass of Niger ians desperate, confused and hungrier.

With external debt standing at more than $10 billion and our internal debts at more than $50 billion, it is without doubt that

President Jonathan is driving Nigeria into economic wilderness. This should be a cause for concern for all well-meaning Nigerians, more so when the Federal Government responses to these rising economic challenges have, at best, been

casual. emblematic of this

casual, non-profound a p p r o a c h t o t h e management of the national economy is the Central Bank of Nigeria’s devaluation of the national currency in November 2014, while retaining the Retail Dutch Auction System (RDAS).

D r a m a t i c a l l y , j u s t u n d e r t h r e e m o n t h s a f t e r t h a t devaluation, the CBN, obviously buffeted by unanticipated dynamics in the foreign exchange market, announced the closure of the RDAS and the Wholesale D u t c h A u c t i o n S y s t e m ( W D A S ) . This shows clearly an uncoordinated template

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8 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february feature

How The Tribunal Made Non-sense Of Omisore’s Petition (9)

ifeLOduN LOcaL gOVerNmeNt

ThIS Local Government has 9 wards and the Petitioners have pleaded malpractices in the conduct of the

election in all the wards in the Local Government. Five witnesses have testified in proof of these alleged malpractices in these wards. These are PW13, PW14, PW16, PW17 and PW29. PW13 – Ganiyu Bashir Akani was the ward collation agent of the 2nd Petitioner at ward 1 collation centre. PW14 – Fashola Adebayo Mukaila was the 2nd Petitioner’s ward collation agent at ward 03. PW16, Adebisi Gbolagabe was the Local Government Collation agent for the Local Government . PW17 – Onedokun Wasil Olaitan was the collation agent at ward 04, while PW29 – Lawal Falilu was the polling agent at Ojaoke/Ojaoke unit 004 of ward 1.

The sworn deposition of PW13 is on pages 1539 – 1541 of Vol.IV of the petition. his evidence is based on the information he gathered personally and from the reports he received from the agents in the various polling units in the ward. his evidence is that election in the polling units was conducted improperly by the 3rd Respondent and this affected the outcome of the election.

While he has testified that there was intimidation and harassment of voters especially PDP supporters’ he did not mention anybody who was so harassed, intimidated and prevented from voting. Nobody has also testified from that ward as having been harassed, intimidated and prevented from voting. he has also not mentioned any eligible voter from his ward that was prevented from voting as testified by him. No unqualified person who was allowed to vote has also been mentioned by him. Under cross-examination he said he does not know the unqualified voters as they came from Lagos. Asked how he knew that they came from Lagos, he said they were speaking “Lagos”.

He testified that the entries on forms EC 8A and eC 8B from the polling units in this ward are irreconcilable and unreliable. Exhibit 194 pages 1 – 5 are forms EC 8A for the ward while Exhibit 169 is form EC 8B from the ward. He confirmed that these are the forms eC 8A he received from his agents at the conclusion of the election. While there are 8 units in the ward and he testified that all the agents in the 8 units submitted their results to him, no explanation has been given why only 5 out of the 8 are before the Tribunal. He also confirmed that all the agents signed the results. As at the date he made his deposition on 28/8/14 he had received the results and reports from all the agents within the ward, he was therefore in a position to state the actual number of legitimate votes the 2nd Respondent got from the ward. It is therefore not acceptable for him to simply allege that votes were arbitrarily allocated to the 1st and 2nd Respondents without given details.

he testified that there were cases of over-voting in this ward. Under cross-examination, he said he cannot remember cases of over-voting. Over voting is a matter which should be apparent on the documents relied upon by the Petitioners. he said multiple voting is apparent in unit 3 of exhibit 194. Clearly multiple voting cannot be apparent on a result form like exhibit 194. He testified that many people voted by proxy. It is however not his evidence that such persons if any, only voted for 1st and 2ndRespondents. According to him, at Okeiroko ST/Baptist Day School, Ikirun, polling unit 001 there are discrepancies in the entries made on form eC 8A. Interestingly this was where he voted. Yet no details of such discrepancies have been pointed out in his statement. As stated earlier, he had access to this form eC 8A as at the time he made his statement. And none has been pointed out to the Tribunal.

PW29 was the polling agent at unit 004 of this ward – that is Ajaoke/Ajaoke unit 004. he mentioned in paragraphs 5 and 15 of his deposition some people as those who were freely campaigning and sharing money to voters, and also intimidating PDP voters

on election day. Asked if he made a report to that effect to the police, his response was in the negative. These are offences created under the electoral Act and proof must be beyond reasonable doubt. No witness has testified before the Tribunal that he was induced in any way to vote for a candidate other than that of his/her choice.

PW29 testified that he was prevented by INeC Officials from witnessing the accreditation exercise insisting that he brings a letter of introduction from INeC. That he reported this development to his ward collation officer who could not however resolve the matter. PW13 who was his ward collation agent did not however testify of any such incident having been reported to him. While PW29 testified that he was prevented from witnessing the counting process, he admits, under cross-examination to signing form eC 8A which is on page 3 of Exhibit 194. He did not say he was forced or threatened to sign the result. he did not also point out the discrepancies he said there are in the scores in his unit.

The evidence of PW14 is found on pages 1569 – 1571 of Vol.IV of the petition. He was the collation agent at ward 03 ie Owode Ikirun ward 003. He testified that he received the results from all the agents in the 9 polling units within the ward and he analyzed all these results before he made his statement. Yet he did not give specific details of where there was over voting, multiple voting, voting by proxy, intimidation, arbitral allocation of votes, disenfranchisement and voting by ineligible voters and so on as testified to by him.

His complaints as regards specific units relate mostly to none stamping of form EC 8A. He also testified to discrepancies on entries in form eC 8A in units 002 and 007. The forms EC 8A from this ward are contained on pages 13 – 18 of Exhibit 194. That is only 6 out of the 9 results are before the Tribunal. These are for units 001, 002, 006, 007, 008 and 009. Under cross-examination he was given these forms eC 8A to point out the alleged discrepancies and his response was “I cannot see clear to point out the irreconcilable differences

in exhibit 194. I will need a calculator, glasses and biro to show the discrepancies in the documents.” These are the same results he said he analyzed before making his statement.

PW16 was the Local Government collation agent for the 2ndPetitioner on the election day. his evidence is found in Vol.IV pages 1533 – 1538. His evidence is based on personal knowledge and from reports given to him by the agents from the wards and at the polling units. He identified exhibit 224 as the result given to him by the agents. He also confirms signing it. He voted at unit 006 of ward 01 on the day of the election. he said when he got to the venue he was asked to check his name on the list pasted on the wall. he found his name on the list and so informed INEC Officials and they ticked his name. This is the process of accreditation embarked upon that day as testified to by most of Petitioners’ witnesses.

This is contrary to his evidence and that of PW13, who was the ward agent, that there was no proper accreditation in this ward. he has chronicled the alleged malpractices in the various wards within the Local Government. Most of these relate to non stamping of form eC 8A, discrepancies in the entries in form eC 8A, number of voters exceeding 750, irreconcilable and mutilation of figures. He said on the election day, APC members and leaders were moving freely from one polling unit to another campaigning and distributing food, drinks and money to voters on the queue and urging them to vote for APC. It is also his evidence that canopies were mounted in all the polling units in the ward by APC members as a ploy to induce voters. That Petitioners’ agents were harassed and intimidated on the instruction of the 1st and 2ndRespondents. That all their complaints to the security officers were not acted upon.

he said although the 2nd Petitioner won the election in 4 out of the 12 wards in the Local Government, he still has problems with all the wards in the Local Government. Of all the 105 polling units in this Local Government, he said he witnessed the voting and counting only in his unit where he voted. Under cross-examination, his testimony is that –

by ibrahim LawaL

•AREGBESOLA •OMISORE

“For the accreditation, voting and counting in other units, I was told by the supervisors

through handsets.”No such reports are before the Tribunal.

his evidence concerning these issues in the various polling units in the wards therefore goes to no issue as they amount to inadmissible hearsay evidence.

he was given exhibit 209, forms eC 8B for the Local Government and asked to point out the discrepancies. His response was –

“I cannot find any discrepancy on Exhibit 209,but there are things on it which I do not

understand.”He also admits signing Exhibit 224 –

form eC 8C for the Local Government. he said exhibit 224 contains the results he received from the polling agents. It is not his evidence that he was forced to sign exhibit 224, he cannot therefore seek to controvert the contents.

The evidence of PW17 is on pages 1584 – 1586 of Vol.IV of the petition. He was the 2nd Petitioner’s collation agent in ward 04. Pages 19 – 25 of Exhibit 194 are copies of form eC 8A he received from the agents at the polling units in the ward after the election. All were duly signed by the agents. He testified that there was no proper accreditation. This fact did not however prevent him from voting. Although form eC 8B from this ward was signed, he said he was not the person that signed it. According to him he saw the form when he went to the collation centre at 10.30pm on the floor, already signed, and he picked it up. he admits that voting points were created in some units.

After a careful review of the totality of the evidence of the 5 witnesses called from this Local Government, we do not find any evidence of non compliance with the relevant electoral Law and the malpractices as alleged by the Petitioners, were clearly not established.

Pages 94-99 of the Judgment delivered by hon. Justice elizabeth Nguveren Kpojime; hon. Justice Vincent Igometi Ofesi and hon. Justice Abubakar Idris Kutigi on the 6th day of February, 2015.

Page 9: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

5559 feature OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february

How The Tribunal Made Non-sense Of Omisore’s Petition (10)

iLesha east LOcaL gOVerNmeNt.

Th e P e t i t i o n e r s a r e c o m p l a i n i n g a b o u t irregularities in all the units

of the 11 wards of this Local Government. They have however called only one witness from this Local Government – Joseph Temitope who testified as PW39. his sworn deposition is found on pages 1259 – 1261 of Vol.IV of the petition.

he was the ward supervisor/ward collation agent for the 2ndPetitioner at Ijoka ward 06 on the day of the election. Clearly he can only testify to what happened in his ward. There being no evidence in support of the pleading regarding the remaining 10 wards, they are deemed abandoned. We so hold.

PW39, as a ward supervisor said he did not stay long at any one unit within the ward as he was going round attending to complaints from the agents in the unit. At the end of the election he collected the results from the agents. This is exhibit 195 before the Tribunal. There are 8 units in this ward 06.

The complaints in this ward, as others in other Local Government Areas is that entries made in forms eC 8A and eC 8B from the polling units are irreconcilable and unreliable. eligible voters were unjustifiably disenfranchised while ineligible persons were allowed to vote in the polling units in the ward. Votes were arbitrarily allocated to the 1st and 2nd Respondents by agents of the 3rd Respondent. That there were cases of over-voting in some polling units. There was intimidation, harassment and molestation of Petitioners’ supporters by agents and supporters of the 1st and 2nd Respondents while the security agencies failed to do anything.

The witness has in paragraph 7 of his sworn testimony listed the irregularities he discovered “from the reports and election results” he received from the PDP polling agents in his ward.

Clearly therefore these alleged irregularities were not personally observed by him. No agent from any of the unit has come to testify before the Tribunal. Meanwhile his evidence is that all of them are alive. While he asserts that all the results in the various forms eC 8A are wrongly entered, he says he cannot produce the authentic result. he could not mention the names of those unregistered

voters who voted, as according to him, he does not know them. he did not also examine the voters’ register as to know the registered voters. he could not also, under cross-examination when asked to do so, point out any irreconcilable and conflicting entries in Exhibit 195. The reason according to him is that “the entries thereon are not clear.” It is to be stated that these are the same results which he received from his agents and which formed the basis of his testimony. They suddenly became unclear.

On the day of the election, he saw his name on the list pasted on the wall and he voted. he further testified under cross-examination that some PDP supporters were prevented from voting. he says he knows them very well as they all live in the same area and they are still alive. he did not mention any such person in his deposition. No such person has also testified before us.

He testified that the total number of rejected votes on form eC 8B for the ward were arbitrarily filled without regard to the actual figures. Asked under cross-examination to state the actual figure, he said he does not know “as it’s a long time ago and I am not a computer.” Why did he not state the numbers in his statement which was made not long after the election and the forms were still at his disposal? he was given exhibits 195 and 210 which are forms eC 8A and

eC 8B respectively for the Local Government and asked to point out the cases of over voting. he was unable to do so.

Clearly the evidence of this witness has not proved any of the alleged irregularities in this Local Government.

iLesha west LOcaL gOVerNmeNt.

I L e S h A W e S T L o c a l Government Area has 10 wards. The Petitioners are challenging the results returned from all the polling units in the 10 wards. They have pleaded the alleged irregularities in all the 10 wards. They have however called only one witness from this Local Government. That is Ajala Adewale Oluseye who testified as PW42.

his sworn testimony is on pages 1380 – 1382 of Vol.IV of the petition. he was the ward supervisor/ward collation agent for ward 09 – Ereja ward. There are 10 units in this ward. There being no evidence in respect of the remaining 9 wards in this Local Government, we hold that the complaints therein have been abandoned by the Petitioners. The only result from this ward is that from unit 002 which is page 17 of Exhibit 196. It has been signed by the agent of the Petitioners.

The complaint as regards this ward in the petition is that at unit 002 – the number of registered voters exceeded 750 as prescribed by law. That forms eC 8A for units 003, 004, 005, and 008

•A cross section of All Progressives Congress (APC) lawyers jubilating at the court room after the declaration of Governor Rauf Aregbesola as the winner of August 9, 2014 governorship election in the State of Osun at the Election Petition Tribunal that sat at High Court, Osogbo, recently.

were not stamped as required by law. These forms are however not before the Tribunal although the witness said he collected them from the agents. The only complaint from this ward before the Tribunal therefore is that concerning unit 002.

PW42 testified in paragraph 6a of his sworn deposition that the number of registered voters at this unit exceeded 750. When asked to look at page 17 of Exhibit 196, he said the number of voters recorded therein is 276. This is contrary to his evidence that it exceeded 750.

In paragraph 6c he testified that the 1127 votes assigned to the 1st and 2nd Respondents from the ward were not earned but arbitrarily awarded. When asked to state the correct votes scored by these Respondents from the ward he said, “I cannot state the correct scores for 1st and 2nd Respondent because I was chased away and I ran for my life.”

Upon further cross-examination he said he used the form eC 8B to write his statement. The said form eC 8B is however not amongst the 4 sheets of forms eC 8B from this Local Government which are before the Tribunal as exhibit 211.

In this Local Government too, the Petitioners have not proved any irregularities or malpractices as alleged.

Pages 99-101 of the judgment del ivered by hon. Just ice elizabeth Nguveren Kpojime

Page 10: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

10 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february feature

A Revolution Long ForetoldFeLLOW Nigerians, no matter your faith

or religion you’ll agree that there’s something spiritual about the current

contradictions afflicting the ruling class in Nigeria. A few years ago, it would have been unthinkable that the almighty People’s Democratic Party (PDP) would be on the defensive in a major election year. Not when its powerful operatives had projected that it would reign and control Nigeria for a minimum of 50 years. But how the times have changed, sooner than later.

The PDP is now fighting the battle of its life and desperately searching for an escape from a seemingly imminent massacre in the hands of its most daring foe to date, the All Progressives Congress (APC). The Presidential race has become such that even members and friends of Nigeria’s biggest political party would confess secretly that the war is virtually lost and won. As at last week however, a few members of the privilegentsia still lived in denial, under the illusion that the election would not hold and that there are options to be explored. One prominent member assured me that “all of us are thieves and most people at the top don’t want and can’t even contemplate a Buhari Presidency.” Another told me “I’m a Northerner and I can tell you that most Northern elites are opposed to Buhari’s ascendancy.”

While I do not doubt the veracity of some of their postulations, I have always believed that there is a power bigger than all of us and that God, Allah, Olodumare, Chineke, or whatever name he’s called in your language, is the One and Only. It is true that since 2003, General Muhammadu Buhari has emerged as a recurring Presidential contestant beating previous contenders like The Owelle, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe and Chief Obafemi Awolowo. The full story of Buhari’s audacity of hope and tenacity of spirit would have to be told by historians, political scientists and eminent psychologists in the future. It will be a tale in the realm of thrillers.

Not many of us anticipated that, a day like this would come again when, Nigerians would practically unite behind a man who once upon a time, carried so much negative baggage that we all treated him with disdain. I’ve read and heard of salacious tales of turning adversity into prosperity but this is indeed a classic in all ramifications. I would like to posit that the foundation for this miracle was laid by no other than PDP, a party that burnt many bridges and wasted its uncommon goodwill and humongous privileges.

We must travel to the past in order to understand how we arrived at this junction of confusion. PDP was the biggest beneficiary of the protracted crisis that resulted from the annulment of our best election yet on June 12, 1993. Power was then auspiciously handed over to the usual conservative elements in Nigeria, offshoots of NPN and NRC, so to say. My theory at the time and till this day is that General Ibrahim Babangida was encouraged and actively supported by the Nigerian Mafia to kill the baby of June 12 right inside the labour room. This innocent kid was just about to birth when they struck and its life was cruelly terminated. That was it! Since then, Nigeria has known no peace. What we’ve managed to enjoy are occasional flashes and sparks of hope but nothing tangible about moving our nation forward in the right direction.

We watched in wonderment and amazement as our country waltzed from one demonic attack to another. For example, General Olusegun Obasanjo’s reign had a fair share of its own turbulence. Senate Presidents were changed like diapers. Governors were in suspended animation under the close watch of Nuhu Ribadu’s eFCC. A promising regime almost collapsed under the weight of a Third Term misadventure. Somehow, President Obasanjo survived the political volcano and promptly handed over power to a rather taciturn and sickly President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua who seemed to have had some great vision but was handicapped by ill-health. The months leading to his demise were e highly suspenseful as those referred to as the cabal vanished into rarefied air with the terminally ill President.

As always, many concerned Nigerians rose up stoutly to the occasion. The then Vice President, Dr Goodluck Jonathan, was seen by many of us as an underdog and a pawn in the power game. human rights activists and celebrities gathered and lined up the streets not because they believed that PDP would suddenly become a party that would care more about the people but to establish the rule of law and enforce the rights of man. This defence

of principle led to the emergence of President Jonathan in an acting capacity until the death of his boss was finally confirmed and publicly announced. The mileage accruable to President Jonathan was so massive and he enjoyed this till the election of 2011 which swept him to power in his own capacity. his Fresh Air campaign and the grass to grace trajectory resonated with most Nigerians at that time.

But no sooner had Jonathan settled in than the tribal warlords moved in confidently and hijacked the President in the fashion of “he’s our son and it is our turn to enjoy power like other regions…” Thus a man who ought to have been the father of the nation was soon transfigured into an ethnic jingoist, inadvertently. he began to dress the part due, I am sure, to some experts who must have assured him that it would be better to portray his Ijaw nationhood through his mode of dressing.

The President needed to concretely invest in infrastructural development for his people rather than turning a few guys into emergency billionaires. All it would have taken to build a mini-Dubai in the South South was the will and determination to resist the flights of fancy; reduce graft and profligacy, and work as if there is no second chance. But reverse was the case. What we have seen is nothing short of a monarchical Presidency, with exhibitionist proclivity. I seriously doubt if an average Niger Deltan can confidently say that his life is much better today than it was pre-Jonathan. Whatever support the President therefore enjoys today is plainly filial and no more.

PDP and the President have been extremely lucky that Nigerians don’t ask for much from their leaders. I had tried in my own little corner on this page to write endless epistles to Dr. Jonathan. The whole idea was to advise and encourage him, at no cost, and warn him about a future that would creep in on him like a thief in the night. I have been around long enough to understand and appreciate the foibles of leadership as well as the sinful appurtenances of power. It would take plenty of prayers and loads of discipline to survive the temptations that strut and fret along the corridor of power.

Nigeria is a country with too many needs in the midst of plenty. Our country is a paradox or an oxymoron of pain and luxury. A committed leader has to urgently shed off the toga of American-style Presidency and instantly embrace the quasi-revolutionary outlook of a Welfarist. As I repeatedly maintain, it is impossible to practise Capitalism without capital. This is the crux of the matter. Both opposition and ruling parties in Nigeria have to make up their minds about their business-

as-usual attitudes or let loose the wrath of the masses on the country one of these days. I’m certain that we are at our ‘Last Chance Saloon’ of having a bloodless revolution if we can successfully manage the forthcoming elections.

The popularity of Buhari is clearly evidence, and symptomatic, of a threat of revolution if we mismanage things as usual. I must say that this election has also brought out the best out of President Jonathan. The energy and resources he has pumped into this campaign should have been unleashed on the country upon attaining power. Now he’s looking very Nigerian by reflecting the fashion of different parts. He is now talking to Pastors and Imams unlike in the past when the impression was that he cared only about his Christian brethren.

he has suddenly energised the military by attempting to achieve in six weeks what he couldn’t in many years. The North east has finally returned to Nigeria after what seemed a deliberate ostracisation by the President and his war commanders. The President is making promises that may now be difficult, if not impossible to fulfil in four years. What I see in all of the above is that the President has ostensibly realised what we have been talking about, that he has underperformed, that some of his closest aides have undermined him by engaging in “galloping corruption” (apologies to Christiane Amanpour), that some of the most advertised achievements of his administration are of the lowest quality at this time and age especially for a country as important as Nigeria…

Yes, we can see the President working at frenetic pace in the hope that it is not too late to salvage whatever is left of his terribly decimated Presidency. The entire world seems to know that these are not the best of times for Dr Jonathan and indeed Nigeria. From editorials in The economist, New York Times, and comments on CNN and Al Jazeera, the story is uniform that President Jonathan has lost substantial popularity to a former dictator. All those who wrote off General Buhari in the past (I was one of his most vociferous critics) now have no choice but to see him as a veritable option worth exploring.

Such is life. The arrogance of a ruling party that could not keep its house in order has now spawned a spiralling movement across the nation. The poor have always seen Buhari as their friend and saviour. What has finally put a stamp of authority on it is the fact that even members of the comfortable class are now ready to embrace Buhari warts and all. No one is ready to provoke the poor further in Nigeria. We’ve already seen the effect of poverty in the way many idle youths are easily recruited for acts of terror. If they can find someone like Buhari who they fervently trust and adore, we

can hope for some reprieve from those children of anger. But if Buhari is patently and brazenly rigged out, we are at the risk of igniting a bigger conflagration. The other reason is that many of us now think we must practise democracy properly by demonstrating that no person or political party can condescendingly perpetuate itself in power when it is very obvious that it has not met our expectations.

I offer the following advice to PDP, APC, INeC, Military, eminent personalities, Nigerian Citizens, in that order.

PDP - There is no question that as a party in power for so long, PDP may not wish to relinquish power but it must know nothing lasts forever. Please, try to run a clean race and leave the rest to the electorate. If you win, you will be applauded and if you fail but concede without rancour, the ovation will be louder. You have fought too many enemies lately and lost a multitude of friends in the process. Who knows, a man whose head has been chopped off may still try to puff some smoke! Nothing is impossible. But do not attempt to win through foul means.

APC - My admonition to you is not too different. This is your best chance ever as a coalition of opposition forces. You have managed a formidable campaign against all odds and all polls put you beyond or at worst neck-to-neck with PDP. This is a great compliment to a new party. You have five more weeks to perform a miracle. You are closer than you know but try to avoid complacency and over-confidence. Please, encourage your members and supporters to eschew bitterness and violence no matter the degree of provocation. In particular, reach out to all peoples and groups.

INeC - I watched the presentation of INeC Chairman, Professor Attahiru Jega at The Senate chamber a few days ago and was very impressed. With what I saw, nothing stops us from having near-perfect elections on March 28 and April 11, 2015. Between now and then, INeC should continue to train its personnel and educate the electorate. history will never forget your salutary efforts if these elections are concluded satisfactorily.

Military - Our military and security forces are first and foremost Nigerians. Your loyalty, as you swore, should be to your nation and not any individual or political party. You’ve always performed wonders while on national and international assignments. I’m happy and reassured about your renewed determination to rid Nigeria of insurgents. Our prayers continue to be with you. There have been all manner of rumours that you may be used by politicians to scuttle the current democratic process. Thanks for coming out openly to deny this allegation. We shall all build a better Nigeria together.

eminent Personali t ies - Like your counterparts elsewhere you are always worried about safeguarding your personal interests but the time has come to put the nation first. Let’s give democracy a chance.

Nigerian Citizen – It is your right and prerogative to want the candidate of your choice to win. however, once we exercise our right to vote, let’s keep calm even if things don’t go our way even if we think elections aren’t free and fair. There are many ways to seek legitimate redress. We should utilise those options.

No matter who wins, it is certain Nigeria will never be the same.

•Culled from THIS DAY

by deLe mOmOdu

•JONATHAN

Page 11: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

55511 feature OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february

Buhari: Many Attacks, More SupportThe Constitution of Federal

Republic of Nigeria states that a person shall be qualified for

election to the office of the President if : a. he is a citizen of the Federal Republic of Nigeria by birth;

b. he has attained the age of forty years;

c. he is a member of a political party and he is sponsored by that political party; and

d. he has been educated up to at least school certificate level or its equivalent.

The raging controversy over the educational qualification of General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, is much uncalled for. Nigerians, who monitor political events, are daily realizing that the PDP has nothing meaningful to offer the people of this country again as they often magnify trivial issues about Buhari.

The noise and time devoted by President Jonathan’s campaign organisation on the issue of Buhari’s educational qualification confirms the PDP’s lack of seriousness and fear of challenges from the opposition.

If Chapter 6, part 1 Sec 1.31(d) of the Constitution states that a minimum requirement of at least school certificate or its equivalent is required of any aspiring Nigerian to be President of the country, the PDP should stop wasting our commonwealth they have illegitimately warehoused for this election. President Jonathan’s campaign organisation and the PDP need to be told that they are offending the sensibilities of Nigerians with the information they dish out and the huge amount being spent on press conferences and newspaper adverts for promotion of falsehood and distortion of facts in a bid to win at all cost the 2015 elections.

The drafters of the Constitution must have envisaged different situations and scenarios that probably warranted the insertion of school certificate equivalent in the Constitution.

N o t o n l y t h a t , G e n e r a l Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) has shown to the world his secondary school statement of results with good grades, notable and respectable individuals in the society have come out to confirm they were secondary school mates. If what is in contention that is making the PDP doubt the educational qualification of Buhari is the presidency of this country, we may need to remind them that as a General of the Nigerian Army, he must have undergone series of courses, seminars and workshops within and outside the country, which place him far higher than a school certificate holder.

Above all, the office is a familiar terrain to GMB as a former military

governor, former minister and former head of State. What other qualification do we require of such a person for the office of President?

I n s o m e s i t u a t i o n s , a g e considerations could be misleading. President Jonathan, who is younger, is said to have performed poorly, according to reports, when compared to a far older former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

Nelson Mandela became the President of South Africa at the age of 76 and he will still forever be remembered, not only for his fight against apartheid, but for putting his country on the right track.

Algerian President, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who is an ex-military officer too, is 78 years old and his country is better managed by him.

Once the constitutional age requirement is satisfied, the PDP should leave Nigerians to decide who to lead them. Whipping up unnecessary sentiments should stop, as Nigerians now know who will serve them better. The few selfish, disgruntled Niger Deltans, who threaten to wage war if President Jonathan does not win the March

election, need to be reminded that Nigeria is bigger than any individual. Nigerians are too sophisticated and cannot be stampeded into making unwise decisions. In 2010, when the late President Umaru Yar’Adua was indisposed and could no longer perform his functions, Nigerians rose up to the situation and did the needful to protect the Constitution. There were peaceful protests, interviews by individuals and civil society organisations and prominent among them was the Save Nigeria Group, an organisation led by Pastor Tunde Bakare. These pressure groups influenced the National Assembly to come up with the ‘doctrine of necessity’ which benefited the former Vice President Goodluck Jonathan who became the Acting President.

In 2011, he eventually became the substantive President through the massive votes freely given to him by Nigerians. Where were the Tompolos and Asari Dokubos then? It’s alleged that these boys are agents of President Jonathan and this makes him to look the other way, whenever they issue threats . The Department of State Security Services (DSS), and the police too

shut their ears to their inflammatory statements because of ‘presidential cover’.

The television documentary on the ‘wrongs’ of General Buhari as Military head of State to sway Nigerians has made less meaning to Nigerians. The War Against Indiscipline (WAI ) introduced by his administration has done more good to us as a people. The documentary is said to be distasteful and has not won any support for the PDP because it’s believed that the worst of all the allegations are happening now under the leadership of President Jonathan if the likes of Asari Dokubo live like kings and walk freely, and several thousands of dollars is being flown out of the country in spite of the cashless policy introduced by the administration. On insurgency, it’s not far-fetched again that the Federal Government under President Jonathan has lost control and cannot stop the dreaded Boko haram.

The All Progressives Congress, APC, vice presidential candidate, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, has said: “General Muhammadu Buhari, if elected, will lead the war against the insurgents.”Shouldn’t we give him

by bashir OmOLaja

•BUHARI

Page 12: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

12 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february phototalk

•A cross section of traditional chiefs at the event.

•Another cross section of the people.

Public hearing On ipetumodu and asipa towns communal sitting at centre for black culture and international understanding, Osogbo, state Of Osun, Last monday.

•A cross section of people at the sitting

Page 13: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

55513 phototalk OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february

•Agunbelewo road.

•The neglected Ojutu bridge.

an abandoned agunbelewo road Project by federal government Of Nigeria as captured by Our cameraman, gbeNga adeNiyi, Last tuesday.

the Neglected Ojutu bridge along ilobu/ifon and erin-Osun road by the federal government Of Nigeria as captured by Our cameraman, gbeNga adeNiyi, Last tuesday.

Page 14: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

14 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february politics

2015 Elections: Disfiguring The Public Face Of Religions

NUMeROUS media reports h a v e s u r f a c e d i n d i c a t i n g t h a t t h e

Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) got N7 billion to enlist pastors to endorse President Jonathan and campaign against the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress party, Alhaji Muhammadu Buhari, in the coming presidential election. The reports came in bits, and on the heels of an earlier allegation by the Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amechi, who announced that President Jonathan had paid some pastors N6 billion to aid his bid to retain the office he is currently occupying. With the presidential election on the horizon, it is quite easy to conclude that politicians are ready to rekindle their primordial instincts and if one adds these allegations to the already established climate that favours, condones, glamorises and promotes corruption, the harmful consequences of the allegations become very clear. In this shameful time, political games in Aso Rock seem to be attracting more attention than political substance.

Stung by the numerous media reports of the bribe, the CAN feebly denied receiving any billion of naira from the government to manage its campaign from the pulpit. however, past alleged involvement of the CAN president in botched arms deals and the apparent Faustian pact between the top echelon of CAN and the

•JONATHAN •JEGA •BUHARI

presidency are permanent highlights of Pastor Oritsejafor’s tenure at CAN. Leaving aside CAN’s feeble denial, the aggressive and blistering rhetoric of some pastors, who are using all dubious ploys to

confound their members are recognizable strategy of thinly-veiled desperation of politicians that are quickly approaching their “use-by” date.

There is something fundamentally perverse about these so-called “men of God” romping with politicians who best epitomize the unchecked gangersterism. They not only disfigure the public face of religion, their very utterances and acts betray the values and principles that divine religions call to. And the alternative to this way is clear and well-trodden by other men of God, who have historically made important sacrifices to sublime causes. In the first of the “Conscience of America” series, a man was cited in 1957 by the Gallop Poll, as one of the most admired religious leaders in the world. This same man was selected in 1957 by Time Magazine as one of the ten outstanding personalities of the year. His citations, more than seventy-five in number, include the fact that he was ranked as one of the sixteen world leaders, who contributed most to the advancement of freedom

in the Year 1959. This was a poll conducted by Link Magazine of New Delhi, India. This great man was Rev Martin Luther King Jr. In addition to his regular duties as co-pastor of ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia, Dr King was an activist, humanitarian, and leader in the African-American Civil Rights Movement. he chose a different path, one that is less-travelled by those who call themselves men of God today, but who are nothing more than demagogues that have built their reputation on political games. While religious leaders like Dr King used the pulpit to advance the cause of honesty, freedom, impartiality and openness, while leaders like

him engaged in difficult struggles to bring peace through justice to fellow human beings, who may not be known to them personally, others use the same pulpit to abuse these same values and devalue Dr King legacies.

however, the desperate politicians’ nemesis seem to be the Nigerian voters, especially young adults, who take their democratic responsibilities seriously. This increasing politically active and informed constituency expect candidates to earn their trust through knowledge, sincerity and intellect, not due to some association to any religious leader or religion. Some have asked the question: “Why the fuss about a N6 billion (or N7 billion), when there have been

countless reports of missing billions in living

memory. The one word that comes to mind is corruption. Corruption of epic proportions! But these corruption and allegations will not cease until enough Nigerians take control of the democratic process, expose any flaw in the election security, and demand real election reform that will include demilitarization of the electoral process and freedom from external interference.

As the 2015 elections approach, Nigerians need the discipline of self-introspection to get it right this time. We need to engage in the serious analysis of our thoughts, ideas, feelings and actions. We must awake to the fact that no politician is corrupt for our sake or because of any religion, but in spite of it. As such, we must commit to work hard to elect only exemplary social leaders who, through their love for people and social competence, would be able to bring a sea change to turn our current challenges into opportunities. Our search for leaders that have excelled in knowledge, skills and character must be done together, irrespective of our faith, or lack of it. It is time that we amplify the voice of reason and

show preference for candidates that set out clear understanding of important issues, define the road-map to bring about measurable improvements and enrich our

by disu KamOr

Page 15: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

55515 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february

Tackling HIV/AIDS Pandemicfeature

hI V s t a n d s f o r ‘ h u m a n I m m u n e - Deficiency Virus’ – ‘human’

because the virus causes disease only in people; ‘immunodeficiency’ because the immune system, which normally protects a person from disease becomes weak; ‘virus’ because like all viruses, hIV is a small organism that infects living things and uses them to make copies of itself. hIV causes AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome).

Youths represent the most vulnerable group to the core of hIV/AIDS. No nation can underestimate the magnitude and seriousness of this problem. More so, when the twin problem of drug abuse has combined with hIV/AIDs to cause aggravated and more devastating harm on the young ones. A research finding showed that over 40 million people were living with hIV/AIDS worldwide; Sub-Saharan Africa being the region worse affected by the epidemic with about 28 million cases. While human deaths due to hIV/AIDS worldwide have increased to over 3 million approximately, 2.3 million of these occur in sub-Saharan African alone. AIDS is the number one cause of death of 50 percent of people in their teens. AIDS is reported to have killed more people than all the soldiers killed in the major wars of the last century. All agencies at the forefront of combating this problem deserve support. Collective efforts, skills, abilities and commitment to forgoing viable partnership seem to be the tools required to achieve the envisaged goals of drastically reducing the ever-increasing incidence of hIV/AIDS particularly in the continent.

Slavery as an institution was established in the 19th century as the world moved towards recognising the rights of all human beings to lead a life of freedom and dignity. Unfortunately, certain persons are still glued to the unethical practise by luring young men and women into depravity and social degeneration. There was a time two first ladies in Nigeria championed the cause of rehabilitating young girls, who were repatriated from Italy, where they had been compelled to practice commercial sex. Tragically, most of the returnees tested positive to hIV, the virus that causes AIDS. This is one fact of the ugly trade in human beings.

The hIV/AIDS pandemic has attained frightening proportions in the continent. There is the need to equally jointly engage in vigorous research for coast effective solutions

as well as search for new techniques for controlling its spread. As beneficiaries of history, Africans know and they saw and are living witnesses to the horrors of slave trade. Today, malaria and hIV/AIDS have combined to pluck the best and the youths of the continent. The AIDS pandemic continues to ravage the population of Sub-Saharan Africa and is seen as a threat to productivity and development. The incidence of the disease in Nigeria is at an all time high with an estimated 2.6 million Nigerians already infected. Governments should intensify sponsorships of awareness and enlightenment campaigns on hIV/AIDS, the development of instructions materials as preparatory efforts towards the integration of hIV/AIDS awareness into the curricula of secondary and primary schools. The National Action Committee on AIDS should intensify their actions. The government should also seek more support of multilateral financial institutions towards the fight against HIV/AIDS.

I commend the various heads of States, who have appropriately recognised the peril of hIV/AIDS and other related infections diseases, and resolved to use their continental organisation, the African Union to draw attention to this threat to the future of the people of the continent.

Other statistics reveal further

that in less than twenty years, a staggering 11.8 million Africans have died from hIV/AIDS, almost three million of whom have been children; an estimated 34 million of Sub-Saharan Africans are currently infected with HIV virus, every five minutes some youngsters between the ages of 15 and 24 are being infected with hIV in Africa; in some African countries, as much as one out of every three persons is hIV positive, in some other African countries, a quarter of pregnant women are infected each year, and this statistic is expected to increase; at least one third of African babies born to hIV infected mothers will likely be unintentionally infected via prenatal transmission or breast-feeding; more than 90 percent of the world’s AIDS orphans live in Africa, and Africa has 80 percent of all AIDS deaths and 70 percent of all new hIV infections; hIV/AIDS has drastically cut the life expectancy in some African countries by more than thirty years in the hardest hit regions.

What the continent has in hands is a pandemic out of control, which is gravely threatening the nation, the children and the future of the nation. Africa has become an endangered continent! Africa will live if it constrains hIV/AIDS. After a long period of neglect, the scale of attention, materially, scientifically and even morally that is being given to hIV/AIDS, is starting to rise to near the level that it requires. There is one frightful truth, which is that

hIV/AIDS does not respect socio-cultural barriers, racial barriers, or national barriers. And for now, there is no cure for anyone infected with the hIV virus, though anti-retroviral drugs can increasingly extend the life of those infected with the virus.

Africa has watched the scale of this pandemic develop to the extent that some may even talk of AIDS being an African problem. Pundits have observed with serious concern that Africa has in no way benefitted proportionately from the resources that have gone into the global effort to combat the spread of the killer disease. Africans as a whole occupy the lowest rung of the poverty ladder, and African AIDS sufferers are made to feel that their march to the graveyard will be poor, nasty and particularly painful. At least, in comparison with AIDS sufferers in London, Paris, or Los Angeles, where affluence means less suffering and longer lives, if not relative comfort, provided by the products of medical science and research in these countries.

I commend the breakthrough in accessing drugs manufactured for the treatment of AIDS in South Africa, and indeed for the whole world. I also commend actions by some major companies to provide their products on a no-profit basis to Africa. It is also gratifying that Nigeria recorded the beginning of a pilot project for the anti-retroviral treatment of 10,000 AIDS sufferers, using drugs imported at affordable prices from India. I hope that the pharmaceutical industry of the developed world will be as open and as helpful for a dramatic scaling-up of anti-retroviral and other treatment throughout Africa. African leaders should be ready to do business with those who are ready to show compassion.

Vaccines represent the best long-term hope for ending the AIDS epidemic. Africa has to commit the best science the world has to offer and this must be done in full and close partnership with African scientists and research institutions. Nigeria should not be left behind in this endeavour. But until an effective and affordable vaccine for hIV/AIDS is found, prevention and treatment are the only real options. To prevent contracting and the further spread of the hIV virus, the only weapons available are information, education and communication, all linked to treatment programmes for those already infected. Responding to the hIV/AIDS epidemic requires the dissemination of information, to enable people protect themselves.

by a.s. asaju

Page 16: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

16 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february for the records

Leadership And Accountability In Period Of Moral CrisisOn 15 May 1998, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.) delivered the fourth annual

Sir Ahmadu Bello Memorial Lecture. That was three weeks before the death of General Sani Abacha and about four years before Buhari entered partisan politics. This speech was delivered almost 17 years ago, but for some few dated parts, it seems to define the essential Buhari and has so much resonance for the present.

iNtrOductiON1. Let me begin by paying tribute

to the subject of this lecture: Alhaji Ahmadu Bello, by common consent the greatest Nigerian of his generation. his place in the hall of Fame is safe for all time. May his soul rest in peace. This lecture is primarily a result of reflection rather than strenuous research. It is at once dedicated to the memory of the Sardauna and a modest contribution toward a solution to our problems of leadership. We are living in very trying times: dissatisfied with the present, and unsure of the future. As a result we desperately look to the past for meaning and succour. In all of human history, the past has frequently been a point of reference and a source of nostalgia. To many writers and historians in all ages and civilizations the past seemed good, noble, and great – the very embodiment of all contemporary aspirations. The very substance of the past – its images, its institutions, its artifacts, its exploits and the individuals who lived in it – were portrayed as larger than life. In other words, the stuff of legends.

2. Thus, for those who feel unequal to the stress of today, the past is a refuge in which present hopes can be kindled and recreated. But why should the past hold so much allurement for us? In part, the answer may be because there is so much going on today - poverty, corruption, indiscipline, greed and a glaring lack of accountability – that we recall and prefer the simplicity and sincerity of the past. In consequence we have, as a community, fallen short of our purpose; perhaps because we have never consciously defined and agreed on what that purpose is.

3. Whether it is the efficiency and effectiveness of the Native Authority system as compared to the rampant purposelessness of the present local governments; whether is the quality of our former educational system at the lower levels compared to its current deterioration at all levels or, the competence and integrity of the public service of the past compared to what is perceived today, it is the past that is being remembered with nostalgia. Indeed so pervasive is the concern about the failures of the present and the possibilities of the future that when Nigerians meet and talk about their country it is this nostalgia, the preoccupation with the past, that frequently dominates their discussions. It has in fact become the subject matter of much public and private discourse across the country. But not much comes from mere talk. Much more is required. Nigerians must liberate themselves from inaction and pious hope for a better future. The past, even the recent past, was no doubt great, but what have they made of the present? That’s the real issue.

4. Why is there so much greed, corruption and indiscipline in Nigeria today? Why are all the legacies of the past decaying and crumbling as a result of so much neglect and lack of care? These questions need answers. But they also point to one direction: the quality

of leadership.5. So serious is this inadequacy

and so crucial has become the search for answers that if all the current pre-occupation is about nostalgia for the leadership of the past years and what that entailed, and the right effort is being made to rectify the situation, it may have been entirely justified. It is manifestly clear that there is today a dearth of leadership everywhere. And it is not just political leadership – spiritual, social, national and international – has deteriorated to the extent that in many countries, in place of the giants of yester-years the world has to tolerate and accept poor substitutes, pontificating over the affairs of nations.

6. Indeed, the social economic and political crises experienced locally and globally derive from this same lack of capable and visionary leadership that leads by precepts and with commitment to sacrifice and self-denial.

7. But besides the wrong-doing that prevents the country from getting the best in any situation, good leadership eludes Nigeria for other reasons. Some of these may be the result of our differences or the peculiarities of our history; and very often we are imprisoned more by their fears than by reason. Yet, imaginary or real, a prison is a prison and its walls are tough to break out of. Nevertheless, the new Nigeria we wish to nurture must break out of this prison shell.

8. Aspects of our history that have imprisoned us have included the

differences in the approach of our regions to independence; in which those who wanted a proper understanding and respect for our differences wanted caution while those who dreamt of uniformity advocated haste. each had its own merit, but though we could live, as we have been able to do this far, with the aftermath of the former, it is debatable if we could have survived the after-effects of the latter. Yet this incident has continued to colour the view of some of us to see the advocates of delayed self-rule as reactionaries while in fact our very history has vindicated them as veritable visionaries. If we had gone the way of haste, we would have had early independence but whether our unity would have survived the numerous disintegrative forces that followed in its wake remains doubtful.

9. In addition to this, there is also the prison of tribalism and sectionalism that becloud the view and stop people from recognizing excellence if it doesn’t occur within their area. It is same mind set at work when a section or ethnic group is stigmatized using one pretext or the other.

10. Furthermore, Nigeria is full of paradoxes. While individual Nigerians may provide the best specimen of the most strongly-willed persons around, we nonetheless display unbelievable passiveness in the face of injustice. Society displays little opposition against wrong policies. Why is this? What is the reason for this apparent docility? What has happened to the

social and political conscience of the people of this country? What has happened to our people’s sense of justice and desire for choice?

11. Part of the answer is the grinding poverty which occupies people’s attention and allows them little time for the luxury of concern in bringing about changes. Individuals are busy trying to engineer one square meal a day. But it must have been clear to all governments that ruled this country that no reasonable growth and development statistically will have any meaning if nothing is done about the level of poverty the majority of the people of this country find themselves in today.

12. Nowadays, not only does the focus of economic development lie in the sense of growth indicating a higher standard of living; but the whole concept of the process of development today recognizes the primacy of human resource above every other factor. But, this human capital has to be planned for, nurtured, educated and trained for the role.

13. It is not mere large numbers of people, but a large number of highly skilled, motivated manpower which is the engine of progress. Without these attributes, a poverty-stricken populace, instead of helping push the engine of growth and development, constitutes a clog in the wheel. And in many ways, instead of helping growth, the poor who consumes but is unable to contribute proportionately easily becomes the cause for dragging the whole society down.

14. Without access to basic needs – primary healthcare, clean water and food, education and without purchasing power—the poor becomes easy prey to manipulation by the nation’s elite. Wrapped up in their exclusive isolation, the elite for example – technocratic, business, religious and traditional – give out divisive calls while the people suffer. This is not leadership to help raise the living standard of the generality of the population for a more balanced and saner society. I would like now, to look a little more closely at aspects of our society under the following random headings. These are by no means exhaustive because our problems involve more than the points enumerated and these are by no means mutually exclusive. I would like to touch on the Military, Politics and Politicians, Public Accountability, the economy, Public Morality and Crisis Management.

miLitary1. For much of the past three decades

the military has been at the helm of affair in this country. Since the first coup d’état in January 1966, soldiers have taken over and, except for brief periods in late ’79 and early ‘80s, they have been the leaders of the land. During this period, the military has rendered notable service to the country. This was possible because by its training and virtual seclusion from society,

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Leadership And Accountability In Period Of Moral Crisisthe military has been partly isolated from much of the divisive tendencies prevalent in the society. As a result, it possesses certain attributes which in the Nigerian context makes it best suited to preserve the unity of the country and to, as it were, impose unity upon a reluctant populace split by parochial elite interest. even though today, with the benefit of hindsight, we realize that our experience of the military in government has been a mixed blessing, we must also acknowledge that the nature and importance of that service was such that it could only have been rendered by the military class.

2. The special attributes which the military possesses are: first, its special expertise, having received some of the best training available, and by virtue of which it controls the instruments of force – a fact that enables it to coerce society to obey its ruling. Second, its constitutional responsibility for the defence of the nation has inculcated in its members a measure of nationalist character and a national leadership not commonly seen in any professional group in the country. Third, its feeling of corporateness, its command structure and its espirit de corps have helped in gluing the cleavages created by crises and conflicts in the society and in charging it with a mission.

3. However, long after the job is done and finished with, the workman is still hanging out there in the fields. The military has accomplished a historic duty – the defence of the nation’s territorial integrity and ensuring the unity of people’s and sections of the country. The civilians are entitled to say: ‘’Well, Military, thank you. It is time you left the stage for democratic, electoral politics’’.

however, it must be stated that none of the military governments came of their own volition. They were pushed, cajoled, encouraged and welcomed by the civilians, both those in active politics and out of it. Nonetheless, it is clear that a global consensus has emerged that democracy, however adapted, is the choice and any country or any institution within a country that rejects this does so at great risk of international isolation and abuse. Democracy does not take root easily, and is full of short-comings. But, it remains still the least evil of any form of government in our time.

POLitics aNd POLiticiaNs1. Still, even after recognizing and

accepting this worldwide democratic consensus, we must be clear about what it is we want. Certainly what we want is democracy not as an end but as a means to end, which, for us, is good governance, economic development and happiness for the greatest number of our people. Moreover, it must be democracy that lasts. There is need to have an attitude and a spirit inculcated in the people - leaders and followers alike. It means accepting and having in place the principle of one person, one vote; and the principle of the rule of law, before which everybody is equal; instituting freedom of expression and freedom of assembly and several other attributes.

In addition, elections must be properly conducted and they must be demonstrably free and fair. In laying down the foundations of this type of

democracy, there are clear steps that must be followed.

2. First, people must be educated on the nature, demands and limits of democracy. Then, a credible electoral system must be put in place and allowed to work. What this boils down to is that people must be given freedom to choose and change the leadership according to the rules.

3. Unfortunately from our experience, many Nigerian politicians are not bothered about these fundamentals, principally because they are not true democrats; they are democrats of convenience – extolling the virtues of democracy when they campaign, rigging the election when they vote, crushing the opposition when they win, and betraying public trusts when they rule. That is no democracy; that’s the rule of the jungle, with the added burden of having to vote for it. Conversely, when they lose, politicians refuse to accept the verdicts and invite the military to return!

4. For our politicians and indeed for all of us there is an urgent need for a change of heart. If all professions, as the saying jocularly goes, are conspiracies against the laity, this is certainly more true of politics than other professions and more true with respect to Nigeria than other places. For, if the truth must be told, much of rulership in this country has been one long, shameful story of betrayal of trust.

5. If our politicians wish to be taken seriously then, they must follow laid down procedures, install and allow to operate a system of accountability and respect, the checks and balances designed to reduce their own excesses. In addition, in order to contend properly for power and keep the military and attendant instability at bay, politicians must unite and end the sad fragmentation that has rendered their class ineffectual and unable to avoid being tossed around

by the very class they wish to replace.6. But it not the politicians alone who

should beware. The truth today is that Nigerians are in danger of losing faith in both the military and the politicians. Salvation however clearly lies with democratic politics; but a drastic and total change of attitude and practice must be exhibited by politicians before people’s faith is restored in a democratic system.

7. Nigeria’s First Republic lasted five years three months before it was overthrown by the armed forces. Instead of seeking to correct the lapses seen, the soldiers decided to rule. If they had only sacked the government, that, in any case was performing relatively well, the story of democratic politics will have been different in the country today. But the Second Republic was even shorter – it lasted four years two months. Though it operated a different system from the ‘’Independence British’’ parliamentary model, the experience gained would have gone on to strengthen and improve the practice of partisan politics. Unfortunately, the American executive presidential system tried in the Second Republic didn’t prove better than the system jettisoned. The Second Republic was doomed from the start on account of incompetence, impatience with the new system which politicians were unwilling to nurture, failure to be fair, grossest corruption and near total indifference to the needs of the country.

8. The Third Republic never took off despite the costly and elaborate transition programme put in place to midwife it. The political class lacked the astuteness to alter the fait accompli put before them by the military. In 37 years of independence, Nigeria has had eight separate coups with ten different governments. On reflection, it is clear that we haven’t given our

politicians enough time and chance to mature. And we unreasonably expected maturity from them while in fact they are political infants. One hopes that future leaders – military and civilian alike – will display a lot more maturity in handling the public trust given them.

PubLic accOuNtabiLity1. It is an understatement to say

that there has been a clear lack of accountability in the conduct of public affairs in this country. The public service, as the executive agency of the government of the day at its various levels wields enormous powers, where the government of the day allows it to function within the normal guidelines and regulations laid, and the activities of public officers affect everyone, but the public has virtually no knowledge or control over what they do in a regime when the public has no representatives in a legislature because a legislative assembly does not exist. With such ignorance and in the absence of legislative monitoring, control of public officers and ensuring accountability become impossible tasks for the public. Generally, however, it is well known that there is a lack of information about everything official. And availability of information for the asking is the first requirement in trying to establish a basis for accountability.

2. The public is entitled to know how choices were made on its behalf and be able to know what policies, activities and development projects are approved by the appropriate agency. In addition, they must have access to the estimates made for public expenditure and the actual incurred expenditure and in order to ensure that public officers are limited by approved estimates.

3. Even when all these transactions have been carried out lawfully, the public is entitled to demand that they must be properly kept in the appropriate books of account and independently audited and accounted for. Unfortunately, this has been done in the recent past.

4. The last time the annual financial account of the Federal Government were prepared and submitted for audit was, I understand, in 1980. And at the 1984 conference of Auditors-General of the Federation and States’ Directors of Audit, it was revealed to the astonishment of no one that eleven states last submitted their annual accounts for audit in 1967! During the tenure of our government in 1984-85 we instituted a programme to update audited accounts and publish them. But this was soon washed away.

5. What all this means is that there is an overriding need today to subject relevant accounts to the scrutiny of auditors. Though there has not been much of auditing within the last decade or so, ostensibly because the accounts themselves are not been prepared, the lack of independence for the auditor severely limits what he can uncover or what query he can expect to have answered. And whether we like it or not if we really desire to see a positive change in public officers the audit department is one of the first places to put right. Let us do it before it is too late.

6. Over the years Nigeria has established the dubious reputation as

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Leadership And Accountability In Period Of Moral Crisisa place where nothing ever gets done until money changes hands, as a result of which it has become the country with one of the highest cost of contracts in the world. Projects executed in the country have been priced more than 300% above what obtains in other comparable developing countries. Within the country, construction contracts are routinely inflated several fold while, for supply contracts, mere inflation is nowadays not sufficient. Corrupt Nigerian public officials and unscrupulous supply contractors have devised the so-called zero-supply system in which a contract for supply is awarded; but, at the end, while supply is zero, payment has been made in full. The accounts have been cooked beyond the historic-cost-verifying knife of the auditor. Thus, 100% of approved estimates have gone into unapproved pockets; and the records show that everything is correct and proper.

7. This state of affairs presents the accountancy profession in Nigeria with a grave challenge. Our accountants must rise to the challenge. Certainly the true and fair view of the state of affairs which the accounts are supposed to reflect is not fiction. It is supposed to be the truth as seen on the ground, and not as figures or signatures on payment vouchers or in ledger books. They must audit reality and insist on not being satisfied with perusing fictional figures, or they will end up being accomplices in the crime of official thievery that is being committed daily against the people of this country. If there is Truth Accounting, we should begin to practice it. Our auditors must stop crowning embezzlement with toga of legality by saying these figures reflect truth and fairness when we know the money has been stolen.

8. With or without our accountants but better with their cooperation, we must insist on the concept of getting value for money. And whether new legislation will be required or a new accounting system has to evolve, the public has the right to demand to know the measure of the economy, the efficiency and the effectiveness with which public institutions operate. Of course, there are requirements to satisfy before value is got for money.

9. First, there is need for consistency in policy planning and clarity in stating policy objectives so that we always know what we are doing and why. This can only be done if we have a purposeful public service in place. No doubt recent events have badly dented the service, but these are not irreparable or irreversible.

10. The public service must be guided to its apolitical efficiency of yester-years. Restoration of the title of Permanent Secretary is a small but important step in return to normalcy as far as the Civil Service is concerned.

11. Besides permanence, the question to ask is whether the service is being readied for the great task before it. After receiving so much battering and the loss of its efficiency and integrity, there is the feeling that a lot must be done to revive it and make it relevant for Nigeria’s needs of the 21st century. Second, there is need to keep adequate and timely records of all events and transactions and make these generally available to the public so that we can always review performance against objective. Third, there is need for a

greater selective involvement and use of management consultants so that project formulation and execution become speedier and more cost-effective. Fourth, we must create a more open, sane and deregulated system so that we can achieve efficiently without sacrificing national interest. Fifth, everybody here knows that no one will part with his hard-earned money for mere figures on a piece of paper, so why should the government? Thus, unless public trust is held with the same care, concern and attention with which with we hold our own property, getting public officers to be accountable will be an impossible task.

12. But if, as we always say, virtue is its own reward, lack of virtue in public officers has today become for this nation more than a punishment. Besides depriving the public of its resources and the benefits accruable as a result of them, lack of accountability has unleashed a chain reaction of repercussions that have in turn created their own special problems.

13. Today this lack of accountability has for instance helped to create wide distortions in income distribution throughout society. And because little is being done to the culprits, this has also fueled the scramble for appointments, especially to executive positions which, because of the same lack of accountability, enable their occupants to do much as they please. The mad rush for the presidency and the unending clamour for its rotation derive directly from the rich pickings which lack of accountability confers on it. This is a very serious matter which ought to be remedied. But more serious are going to be some of the longer-term after-effects on the younger generation that did not know that at one time a system of accountability existed in this land.

14. It was lack of accountability that threatened to turn us into a nation of

arsonists torching down many public buildings in order to cover up some fraud or shady business. In the mid 70s the Federal Ministry of Education went up in flames; in 1983 the Nigeria external Telecommunication tower was burnt. I believe Ministry of external Affairs was also torched around this time! The Federal Capital Development Authority finance department followed suit in 1985, while the Ministry of Defence was burnt down in 1991. In between, so many finance and audit departments have been burnt down, but because of the extent of collision between those who will investigate and those who will order it and those who will approve the findings little ever gets done besides the thunderous rhetorics at the swearing-in of the investigation panels.

1 5 . T h e p r o s p e r i t y w h i c h embezzlement and other fraudulent practices conferred, especially in the recent past, is a direct result of this failure to investigate and punish. In general, corruption and every aspect of the lack of accountability benefits from the fact that ours is a nation that doesn’t ask questions. But in some instances, there is no need to ask questions because the evidence talks louder than words.

16. Public officers controlling votes, awarding contract or belonging to task forces enforcing any kind of law are today lords unto themselves. They do as they please and generate revenues for themselves and their families, and they compete with each other in erecting mansions and indulging in conspicuous consumption – with money largely derived from public sources.

17. Moral absolutes that used to be the pegs on which our society’s values, norms and mores were anchored had by design and default been abandoned so

totally that one could, with justification, wonder whether it would ever prove possible to revive public morality. Neither the hold of religious precepts, nor the sanction of public shame, nor yet the eyes of society, the fear of the legal system’s many penalties nor even secular civic pride or the plain responsibility of being human would make people behave according to the rules and follow laid down procedure.

18. But when did the rot in our character actually start? At some point in time, certainly in the recent past, a materialist ethos seemed to have replaced all time-honoured values. It turned honest, hardworking, homely folk into creatures worshipping money. Almost everyone is today lying prostrate in prayer before the Temple of Materialism. Officialdom isn’t saying the truth if it says the polity is secular. Why? everyone practices the religion of money in or out of office! It is as if some divine curse had been invoked on the country as thieving tendencies take control of the conscience of public officers, and a get-rich-quick mania seizes the imagination of the rest of our people. The leadership of our people that is supposed to be the refuge that would think out solutions introduced, perfected and christened the so-called Nigerian Factor, linking the name of the country for ever to corruption and instituting the culture of Settlement. It quickly became clear that almost every one had a price and it was paid.

19. Public officer behave as if both divine and secular laws were put in the statute books as mere sport. And with advertised impunity, those given trusts betrayed them, those given public offices abused them; and the majority of those given guardianship over any matter of significance compromises their positions. It has become so bad that it is looking as if there are hardly any honest people left.

20. At the same time, the culture of hypocrisy has also been perfected. everybody, including those perpetrating fraud complain, as if the fraudulent practices that exist are committed by extra-terrestrials from outer space.

21. Yet , th is socie ty that i s complaining is one that should be squarely blamed. No other society to my knowledge tolerates such outrage, while our own positively encourages it. Nowhere else in the world can one find a society tolerating the theft of its precious resources in broad daylight with nothing happening to the thieves. A day in the office, as far as the general public is concerned, often means eight hours of converting public resources to private purses. Few societies seem to reward embezzlement with ‘’honours’’ as does our own.

22. Instead of putting rascals on trial we put them in position of leadership – in the communities, in the cities, in the states and in the whole country. Is it therefore any wonder that we are at this impasse – perplexed, bewildered and at a loss? A society that rewards criminal behaviour and applauds the display of a vicious mindset is yet to embark on the path of honour and reform of its affairs. Where we go from here depend on entirely what we make of the current situation. Are we going to arrest it or are we going to let it consume us? And what we choose here will determine what fate the country has

To be contiunued

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Afenifere: Are They The Greedy Dogs?“YeA, they are greedy dogs which cannot have enough; and they are shepherds that cannot understand. They all look their way, everyone for his gain.”

The above quote, taking from the book of Prophet Isaiah Chapter 54 vs 11, rightly described what the Yoruba group called Afenifere is today under the leadership of Fasoranti. The group, formed couple of years back, lost touch of decency and reality after the demise of Chief Abraham Adesanya, who also held sway after the death of Chief Michael Adekunle Ajasin.

These two gentlemen of blessed memory are still our role models and herders even in death. During their fruitful journey in Nigeria, they did not take side or irrational decisions as we are witnessing now. What again can we say about those men of valour? They were simply the best for the Yoruba race after the exit of Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

The Chief Fasoranti-led group becomes depleted immediately another faction named Afenifere Renewal Group emerged from the group. If your hopes, your peace and your happiness are dependant on anyone other than God, learn to detach. The way they condemned Buhari left much to desire. This singular behaviour had shown and exposed them as a bunch of men without decision of character, who can never be said to belong to themselves. They belong to whatever can make captive of them.

To these self-styled elders of the Yoruba race, life has no meaning except it is heavily coded in money. Their slogan that “long life is irrelevant in the absence of money” is a testimony to this assertion. They are so addicted to Goodluck Jonathan to the extent that they can prostrate for him if, by chance he visits them. What a peculiar mess!

The Afenifere Renewal Group and all the youthful generation coming behind these men should condemn them and renounce them as our leaders. The entire Yoruba race with their integrity so intact should avoid these set of elders, who are unhappy and unlucky, or else we die from their misery. emotional states are as infectious as diseases. An average Yoruba man may feel

the leaders are helping him, such Yoruba man is only precipitating his own disaster.

We, the younger generation should realize that we are the spur of ambition and risk. Youth is the juiciest part of human life. All efforts in human life that yield results in old age are made at youthful age. We must refuse to follow their footsteps because they will lead us astray.

The Afeniferes should be aware that, whether they like it or not, that when change, we Yorubas and other progressives are clamouring for comes, all else give way because nothing, even a hundreds of thousands of them cannot stand in the way of progress. Things don’t get better by chance but by change.

The entire Yoruba race should

close their faces in shame. Imagine 75-80 years old of Yoruba origin, who failed to realize that only a fool rushes to take side. Do not commit to any side or cause but yourself. By maintaining your independence, you become the master of others. This is just the reason why we, up-coming generation, love people like Governor Rauf Aregbesola, Babatunde Fashola, Rotimi Amaechi, Adam Oshiomhole to mention but a few. They are the “radicals” who are impeccably mannered and impressively credentialed. They are men of moral masculinity.

These governors and other well-trained Yoruba youths have their intellects sparkle like diamond, while Afenifere smoulders like brown papers.

We should refuse their baits and be wary of the group before

we all get polluted. They are easily aroused to envy. Instead of liaising with them for wisdom, we should hire a former enemy and he will be more loyal than any member of the so-called group because he has more to prove. In actual fact, we have more to fear from Afenifere than from enemies. If anyone of us doesn’t have enemy, please find a way to make one.

The Yoruba race consists of enlightened people. They don’t allow people (Afenifere) to determine the conclusion about their lives. This race believes that with their attitude to life, they believe in fluctuations because if life fluctuates, you live longer but if it doesn’t, they have to be very careful.

by tuNde esaN

•The Late Pa ADEkUNLE AJASIN

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U.S., Iran Positive After Nuclear Talks, Say Much Left To Dothe united states made some progress in

talks with iran on its nuclear program and managed to “sharpen up some of the tough

issues”, a senior U.S. official said on Monday, but both sides said much remained to be done.

Negotiators from Iran and six major powers agreed to resume talks next Monday at a venue to be decided, the official said, speaking af ter U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif held two-day talks in Geneva.

Zarif told Iran’s Fars news agency: “We had serious talks with the P5+1 representatives and especially with the Americans in the past three days ... But still there is a long way to reach a final agreement.”

As Ker ry ’s p l ane t o u c h e d d o w n i n Washington later on Monday, a senior State Department official said Kerry and Zarif would meet again next week and details were being worked out.

The P5+1 group — the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany — are seeking to negotiate an agreement with Tehran to address concerns that Iran is seeking nuclear weapons technology, something it denies.

“These were very se r ious , use fu l and constructive discussions. We have made some progress but we still have a long way to go. We did very much sharpen up some of the tough issues so we can work to resolution,” the senior U.S . adminis t ra t ion official told reporters.

Negotiators hope to meet a self-imposed March 31 deadline for an initial political deal, but the U.S. official said that would not “make us rush to an agreement that does not fulfill the objectives that the president has given to us.”

The aim of ensuring Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon “has to be met and that is not about the deadline, it is about the purpose”, the official said.

Iran, which denies hav ing any nuc lea r w e a p o n s p r o g r a m , hopes a deal will bring relief from international sanctions.

“ B R e A K O U T ” CAPACITY

Diplomats say the six major powers aim for a deal lasting at least 10 years under which Iran would need a year or more to produce enough highly enriched uranium for a single nuclear bomb, the so-called “breakout”

capacity.“We have always said

we will have a one-year breakout time for a double digit number of years and that remains the case,” the senior U.S. official said on Monday.

Reflecting the technical nature of the latest talks, U.S. energy Secretary ernest Moniz and Iran’s atomic nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi took part. helga Schmid, political director of the european Union’s external Action Service, also attended.

T h e a p p r o a c h i n g deadline has caused

divisions between the United States and one of its closest allies, Israel, which has called the

talks “dangerous” and “astonishing”. The United States has accused it of distorting Washington’s

position.I s r a e l i D e f e n c e

Minister Moshe Ya’alon said in a statement on

Monday: “The agreement with Iran as it is coming together now is a great danger to Western world peace and a threat to Israel’s security.”

Ya’alon said the deal would permit Iran to be freed from current economic sanctions on it while continuing to enrich uranium. he called Iran “the most dangerous regime” and a central factor behind instability in the Middle east.

Israel has the Middle eas t ’s only nuclear arsenal and has threatened to attack Iran if it is not satisfied over plans for Tehran’s nuclear program.

French President Hollande Vows Stiffer Penalties For Hate SpeechfreNch President francois hollande vowed to

introduce tougher penalties for “racist, anti-semitic or homophobic” remarks in the wake of last month’s

militant attacks in Paris.Speaking at an annual

dinner hosted by the country’s Jewish community, hollande called for “faster, more effective sanctions” against hate speech and added: “I want such speech to come

under criminal law rather than press laws.”

h o l l a n d e s a i d a n t i -Semitism should be treated as an aggravating circumstance in the prosecution of all offences.

Would-be jihadists would also face stiffer punishment under a draft intelligence bill to be unveiled next month, he said.

The dinner was marked by the absence of the rector of the Great Mosque of Paris, Dalil Boubakeur, outraged over comments by a Jewish community leader, Roger Cukierman, blaming young Muslims for anti-Semitic violence.

Cukierman said he “deeply regret ted” Boubakeur ’s absence from the dinner, adding: “Jews and Muslims are all in the same boat and I hope that contact will swiftly be reestablished.”

Since January’s attacks, in which 17 people were killed, including four Jews gunned down at a kosher supermarket in Paris, soldiers and police have been deployed outside synagogues and Jewish schools.

Last month, the country’s main Jewish group said the number of anti-Semitic acts doubled in France during 2014, with acts involving physical violence leading the increase.

France is home to europe’s largest Jewish population, estimated to be between 500,000 and 600,000, as well as the continent’s largest Muslim population, estimated at around five million.

French mig ra t i on t o Israel hit a record high last year of 6,600 people, and many believe the trend will accelerate.

France is still on high alert following January’s shooting rampage by three jihadists who attacked the Charlie hebdo satirical magazine, the Jewish supermarket and police officers in a three-day campaign of terror.

The attacks were the worst in France in decades.

The violence in Paris and more recently in Copenhagen, where two people were shot dead in attacks on a cultural centre and a synagogue, has sparked fears of a major threat from radical Islamists.

Indonesia Says Executions Won’t Be Delayed Despite Mercy PleasiNdONesia’s president said on tuesday the planned

execution of 11 convicts on death row, most on drugs charges, would not be delayed, warning foreign countries

not to intervene in his government’s right to use capital punishment.

President Joko Widodo has denied clemency to the convicts despite repeated pleas from Australia, Brazil and France, who have citizens due to be executed by firing squad.

“The first thing I need to say firmly is that there shouldn’t be any intervention towards the death penalty because it is our sovereign right to exercise our law,” Widodo told reporters.

he said he took calls from the leaders of France, Brazil and the Netherlands about the death penalty but made no mention of Australia. Two Australians are among the 11 on death row.

The president did not say when the executions would be carried out.

I n d o n e s i a h a s h a r s h penalties for drug trafficking and resumed executions in 2013 after a five-year gap.

Shortly before Widodo spoke, a court in Jakarta threw out an appeal by the two Australians against Widodo’s rejection of their request for presidential clemency.

“We plan to appeal today’s court decision. We have two weeks to file an appeal,” said Todung Mulya Lubis, a lawyer for the two men.

“If the law is respected, the execution should be postponed until the legal process is over.”

Australia has been pursuing an eleventh-hour campaign to save the lives of Myuran

Sukumaran, 33, and Andrew Chan, 31, two members of the so-called Bali Nine group of Australians, convicted in 2005 as the ringleaders of a plot to smuggle heroin out of Indonesia.

Other members of the group have been sentenced to long prison terms.

Australia, which has long had rocky relations with its northern neighbor, has said it

would consider recalling its ambassador to Indonesia in protest if the executions are carried out.

Brazil and the Netherlands have already withdrawn their ambassadors after Indonesia executed their citizens on drug offences last month.

Brazil took the further step of refusing to allow Indonesia’s new ambassador to take part in a credentials ceremony, prompting the Southeast Asian country to recall him in protest.

Indonesia was also re-evaluating the purchase of fighter jets and rocket

launchers from Brazil because of the row, i ts Defence Ministry said.

Trade has ye t t o be significantly affected by the dispute. Australia is a major trading partner of Indonesia, totaling $10.64 billion in bilateral exchanges last year.

Indonesia is Australia’s largest export market for both live cattle and wheat, and a major buyer of its crude petroleum, aluminum and cotton.

Trade between Indonesia and Brazil totaled $4.07 billion last year, according to Bank Indonesia.

Indonesia’s largest trading partner is China with $48 billion between the two

US. South Korea To Start Military Drills Amid Tension With NorthsOuth Korea and the united states will begin eight

weeks of joint military drills starting march 2, military officials said on tuesday, an annual

exercise that typically provokes heightened rhetoric and military threats from North Korea.

North Korea regularly p r o t e s t s t h e a n n u a l exercises, which it says are a rehearsal for war, and has recently stepped up its own air, sea and ground military exercises, amid a period of increased tensions between the rival Koreas.

“The whole course of Key Resolve and Foal eagle is aimed to occupy the DPRK through preemptive strikes,” said an editorial in the ruling Workers’ Party newspaper, t h e R o d o n g S i n m u n , referring to the names for

the exercises.DPRK i s sho r t f o r

D e m o c r a t i c P e o p l e ’s Republic of Korea, the North’s official title.

Tuesday’s statement by the joint U.S.-South Korean Combined Forces Command said the North Korean army had been informed of the dates and “non-provocative nature” of the exercises.

O n M o n d a y, N o r t h Korean leader Kim Jong Un told his Korean People’s Army (KPA) commanders to focus on “combat readiness”

this year, according to state media.

In 2013, following its third nuclear test, North Korea declared the armistice agreement which ended the 1950-53 war as “invalid” in response to the exercises.

The U.S. responded with long-range nuclear-capable B-2 bomber flights over the Korean peninsular in a show of force it said was designed to show U.S. ability to “conduct long-range, precision strikes quickly and at will”.

Overtures for dialogue by both Koreas in recent months have stalled, with Pyongyang describing inter-Korean relations as “inching close to a catastrophe,” in a separate Rodong Sinmun article.

The annual U.S.-South Korean drills are divided into two phases: ‘Key Resolve’, which runs from March 2 to 13, and ‘Foal eagle’, which runs from March 2 to April 24.

‘Key Reso lve’ i s a c o m p u t e r s i m u l a t e d command exercise; ‘Foal eagle’ includes actual “ground, air, naval, and special operations,” field exercises, the statement said.

“A chance for dialogue a n d ( a ) d i p l o m a t i c solution (has) already been scuppered. What remains to be done is to militarily react to the U.S. while bolstering up war deterrence to the maximum,” Tuesday’s Rodong Sinmun editorial said.

•JOHN kERRY

Page 21: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

55521 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february

Job Vacancies In Nigeria

You can subscribe to Job Vacancies in Nigeria, Jobs in Nigeria via your e-mail: www.jobszilla.ng

teaching jobs in an islamic school based in Lagos, february 2015

RmaX Systems is a registered IT consultancy firm. We are into the business of Software Development, IT Trainings, Business Support and School Management Systems.We are looking to recruit an enthusiastic, outstanding, inspirational and student focused teachers to deliver high quality learning and teaching to college students in a reputable Islamic school located in Ikorodu, Along Shagam Road Lagos/Ogun State:job title: Further Maths TeacherLocations: Lagos and OgunresponsibilitiesThe candidate must ensure that he or she must : Design and mark assignments and examinations, conduct assessments for both internal and external monitoring purposes and external certification.Produce effective schemes of work, lesson plans and resources, including appropriate use of new and emerging technologies ensuring they are shared, inclusive, promote equality, engage with diversity and are activity based not teacher ledensure compliance with all College policies, procedures and regulationshelp students prepare for external and university entry exams,excellent communication skillOutstanding teaching style and techniques.Act as a tutor to students, setting challenging targets, monitoring attendance, achievement and those at risk of non completion or progression to a positive outcomeImplement innovative delivery of the curriculum, investigating alternative methods to encourage independent learningQualificationsInterested candidate must possess the following:Minimum of a B.Sc/hND/OND in any related Science, engineering and Social Science DisciplineSignificant skills and knowledge of teaching Maths and a proven track record of achieving good results.Must reside in Ikorodu or Ogijo and other close areas to Ogijo.RmaX Systems is a registered IT consultancy firm. We are into the business of Software Development, IT Trainings, Business Support and School Management Systems.We are looking for an enthusiastic and inspiring teacher to teach full time in a well established Islamic Nursery and Primary school in Ikorodu Lagos respectively:job title: Social Studies and Physical & health education TeacherLocation: LagosrequirementsInterested candidates must have: Must have a SSCE, Degree, NCE or OND in related fieldMust have a minimum of 1 year experience as a teacher.excellent communication skills.Good analytical skills and methodical approachhigh levels of organisational skillsAbility to cope under pressure and prioritise a busy and diverse workload to meet deadlinesjob title: Montessori english Language TeacherLocation: Festac LagosrequirementsThe candidate must ensure that he or she must:Design and mark assignments and examinations, conduct assessments for both internal and external monitoring purposes and external certification.Act as a tutor to students, setting challenging targets, monitoring attendance, achievement and those at risk of non completion or progression to a positive outcomeImplement innovative delivery of the curriculum, investigating alternative methods to encourage independent learningProduce effective schemes of work, lesson plans and resources, including appropriate use of new and emerging technologies ensuring they are shared, inclusive, promote equality, engage with diversity and are activity based not teacher ledMust be able to teach other related subjects. To help pupils develop critical-thinking abilities by gaining an understanding of mathematics concepts.ensure compliance with all College policies, procedures and regulations and assist in the implementation ofexcellent communication skillOutstanding teaching style and techniques.QualificationsInterested candidate must possess the following:Minimum of a B.ed early Childhood education or B ed in english Language.Significant skills and knowledge of teaching teaching in a well recognized Montessori school record of achieving good results for a minimum of 3 years.having received a Montessori training will be a huge experience.job title: NCe Mathematics TeacherLocation: Lagosjob description Interested candidates should have a minimum of 1 year experience, which includes teaching practice.Must reside very close to the area.job title: Basic Tech and Agric Science TeacherLocation: LagosrequirementsInterested candidates must have: Must have a Degree or hND or NCe in any engineering and Science related disciplineMust have a minimum of 1 year experience as a teacher.excellent communication skills.Good analytical skills and methodical approachhigh levels of organisational skillsAbility to cope under pressure and prioritise a busy and diverse workload to meet deadlinesMust reside in IkoroduPreferably Muslim

how to applyInterested and qualified candidates should send their CV’s to: [email protected] Deadline 28th February, 2015. ——————————————————————————————————————jobs in Port harcourt for marketing executives at Padoserve Limited

Padoserve Limited an indigenous company fully registered and incorporated by Corporate Affairs commission (CAC) , with RC Number 908901 on 27th August, 2010, is a major player in the Nigerian economy with main business focus in Customer service consulting, capacity building, Manpower development, logistics, contracts and supplies.Padoserve Limited is seeking for candidate to fill the position below:job title: Marketing executiveLocation: Riversjob description Marketing Executives Urgently Needed, we are urgently in need of marketing executives to fill vacant positions in an ICT company. Interested applicants must have at least 3yrs experience of Marketing ICT products such as Laptops, Desktop, Tablets, accessories, PABX, CCTV equipment and Smartphones.he/she must be a goal getter, ready to exceed set target with little or no supervision.RequirementsInterested applicant must have full IT knowledge, and must be a hND/B.Sc holder in Computer Science or any Social Science related course. he/she must have full knowledge of Port harcourt market and it’s environ.Successful applicant must be ready to resume immediately.how to applyInterested and qualified candidates should send their applications to: [email protected] Deadline 10th March, 2015. ——————————————————————————————four Points hotel is recruiting graduates for its new branch in ikot ekpene city, akwa ibom state

Four Points - An international Branded hotel located in Ikot ekpene City, Akwa Ibom State is due to open soon and is looking to employ suitably qualified candidate to fill the position below:

job title: Food & Beverage Manager and SupervisorLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage.job title: Sales and Marketing ManagerLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage. job title: Purchasing ManagerLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage.job title: Human Resources OfficerLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage.job title: Front DeskLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage.job title: Account OfficerLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage.job title: Training ManagerLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage.job title: Laundry ManagerLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage.job title: housekeeping Manager and SupervisorLocation: Akwa IbomQualification Candidates with at least a Degree/Equivalent qualifications and experience within, the service industry would be seen as an advantage.how to applyInterested and qualified candidates should send their application and CV’s to: [email protected]: There will be a strict screening process on all applications and successful candidates will be contacted for further assessment/interview.Application Deadline 31st March, 2015. ————————————————————————————————glaxosmithKline (gsK) Vacancy in Lagos for an internal audit services manager

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), one of the world’s leading research based pharmaceutical and health-care companies, is committed to improving the quality of human life by enabling people to do more, feel better and live longer. GSK employs over 97,000 employees in over 100 countries worldwide.GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Nigeria Plc is one of Africa’s largest consumer healthcare companies, producing leading brands such as Lucozade, Ribena, etc.GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) is recruiting to fill the below position:job title: Internal Audit Services Manager job code: WD24116Location: Ilupeju, Lagosfunctional area: Governance, ethics and Assurance responsibilitiesEvaluate, advice and report on the processes by which significant risks are managed and the adequacy and effectiveness of systems of internal control with emphasis on financial, commercial and IT processes.Partner with other providers of assurance, senior stakeholders, and compliance groups to lead the continuous improvement of internal control frameworkManage audit projects and activities Leveraging a risk-based approach, determine audit scope and identify risks and implications; develop audit programs, oversee the conduct of the audit and preparation of audit and supporting documentation using the end to end one audit methodologyPerform data analytics procedures and systems back-end validation testingConduct special studies or reviews at the request of management such as those required to discover mechanics of detected frauds or unusual trend in order to develop protective and detective controlsPerform third-party compliance auditsOwn the process of self assessment questionnaire (SAQ) reviewPlan, develop and perform financial, operational and compliance risk based audits for all areasTrack results of prior audits, identify audit themes across organizations and facilitate appropriate corrective actionAssess and appraise business operations in order to provide Management with an evaluation of internal controlsAssess Management’s level of compliance with established policies, procedures and standards, as well as the adequacy of internal controls within business and financial processes and operationPeople Management & Development:establish policies and procedures to guide the audit staff and facilitate consistent, high quality outcomes and deliverables.Share knowledge and develop staff capabilities to strengthen understanding of industry, business and regulatory issues and Internal Audit best practicesClient Relationship Management:Serve as a point of contact for audit business partners and stakeholders; assume overall responsibility for relationship management for specific business areas.Work with Compliance department team members to provide advice and assistance with regulatory matters.requirementsBachelors degree in any field.Minimum of 5 - 7 years post qualification experience with background in audit and business partnering.experience in the use of data analytics and systems audit.experience of FMCG, Manufacturing or Big 4 Audit experience.A recognized Accounting, Internal Control, IT Audit or Anti Fraud Specialist qualification (ACA, CIA, CISA, CFe)Performed work in various areas of a company and developed an advanced perspective of business operations.how to applyQualified and Interested candidate should:https://careers.peopleclick.com/careerscp/client_gsk/external1931/jobDetails.do?functionName=getJobDetail&jobPostId=253657&localeCode=en-us

Page 22: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

22 OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february politics

Jonathan On The Cliffhanger

by erasmus iKhide

PR e S I D e N T G o o d l u c k J o n a t h a n ’ s s u s p e n s e f u l

u n c e r t a i n t r a n s i t i o n a l government is gradually drawing to a close. his secret wish had been truncated. he expects Nigerians to simply reward his 6-year gutter government with another 4 years without election. It was a vain fancy gone awry! It was a sordid denuding piety of dreaming away one’s incompetence in governance. his rule has undoubtedly ended. But he has other tricks up on his sleeves.

In primitive societies, authoritarian governments survive because a coalition of political and military elites stands ready and willing to employ violence to execute Machiavellian vision of politics. The scenario described above mirrors Mr Jonathan’s government and his propensity to perpetuate himself in power beyond 2015. he has been throwing several variables around to reinforce his fable hold on the governance of the nation.

Corruption in his government has decimated the middle class, dampened the prospect of power generation, ruined production industries, brought education to the precipice and the nation to the edge. This version of on-your-face affront by Mr Jonathan’s disingenuous politics of self-sustaining gimmickry cannot be disregarded. Beginning from 2014 in ekiti governorship election, Nigerian democracy became militarized with the overt intrusion of the security sector into the political arena; a process that reached its feverish peak before the August 9th Osun Governorship election.

The electoral dimension of Mr Jonathan’s authoritarianism stems from the fact that his failed government fails to hold elections as constitutionally stipulated. he is searching for an avenue to legitimise his hold on power, so as to manipulate the elections for his own ends. To become a ruled-based democracy, the stated letter of the constitution must be followed. The reign of terror in ekiti and Osun elections was possible because of the symbiosis between the PDP and the security sector, with Jonathan providing the glue that binds them together in pursuit of regime survival.

The ekiti and Osun elections heists marked glooming spots on the nation’s map of liberal democracy as practised in saner society. It has come to the open after linked tape of how military were used to rig ekiti election that Nigerians, who were alarmed at the ekiti and Osun elections infested with soldiers, police, DSS Civil Defence Corps, Niger Delta militant were not alarmists as claimed by the president and the PDP. Nigerian is a symptomatic of a militarised state that reflects a broader mindset on the part of the government.

International communities, civil rights groups, and media outlets have expressed concern about the militarized role of the military in a democratic society, and even the Department of Justice has raised concerns about how to deal with the

brutal force of the military towards unarmed citizens. Taking the long view, I can’t agree less that the militarised army is a reflection of the evolution of government towards a police state model.

Although, the nation has witnessed brutal repression of poli t ical opponents since the Fourth Republic, which was deeply rooted in former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s government, but this phenomenon evolved gradually after 2011 presidential election, which led to the death of many. Militarised of the nation’s politics reflects the convergence of hostile and desperate political groupings and the policy of the government at the centre, which has been striving to remain in power for a hundred years. Now, its new found fang has been to eliminate “potential political enemies as terrorists”.

It’s interesting to know that in essence, the justice system has indicted the military, police, DSS and their blood-curdling cousins in a lawsuit brought before it in Kano by a group of concerned Nigerians.

It’s interesting because the judgement came at a time the entire

justice system was stacked against political opponents or those perceived to be the enemies of the president or his political party.

The drawbacks of the military naivety have been exposed, which misconstrues faithful service to the nation and its institutional structures, as the actual service to the government at the centre.

The crises that attended both ekiti and Osun gubernatorial elections should provoke protests from Nigerians, thereby prompting altruistic reform in our electoral body, its independence, and of course, towards attainment of free and fair election; devoid of manipulation of any kind. Mr Jonathan’s heavy-handed government has consistently used the state apparatus to suppress dissenting voices, break up protesting groups violently more than his predecessors.

The goring scene in ekiti, where the police shot an opposition protesting youth to death, where the military threatened to shoot Rotimi Amaechi, Adams Oshiomhole, both governors of the opposition party and others sympathetic to their cause is still fresh in our minds. The incident of Ayo Fayose, as the Governor-

in-waiting of ekiti ordering the merciless beating of judges handling his eligibility case in Ado-ekiti high Court has not dissipated.

Mr Jonathan can resort to engaging military hostility, given the history of his failed government because under his watchful eye, the state has crushed opposition elements or co-opted their followers in some manner that invariably includes superficial reforms. Nigerians didn’t hold much hope for institutional change under President Jonathan with the culture of militarised elections in Nigeria. The subtle mass protests that attended ekiti governorship election are not just about the frozen institutional structure steeped in military and police-state methods. It was obviously created by the PDP government.

The civil rights groups actually came short of staving off the negative effects of military deployment in an election and the harm’s way such military engagement puts the nation and its toddling democracy. Such protests should have been vehemently designed to address social issues, election manipulation and violence, among others, regarding social justice.

It is true that protests movements throughout Nigerian history have failed to change the status quo and there is no reason to be optimistic that the ones which led to the judgement in Kano court a few weeks ago will amount to anything. Nigerians are not in high spirit that their president will order the implementation of the court judgement. Neither do they expect a revolution if the Presidency used the military and other security apparatus to intimidate, manipulate and ultimately suppress Nigerians voices in the coming 2015 presidential election.

The INeC chairman, Professor Attahiru Jega, has in the past faulted the deployment of soldiers, hooded security men during ekiti and Osun elections, describing it as abhorrent in a democracy. Beside, he spoke of how an attempt to rig the Ogun State governorship failed.

Describing the trend as “worrisome, he said masked men would not be allowed for next year’s general elections”, as he also accused the security men deployed in Osun State of being “overzealous”. Department of State Security (DSS) spokesperson, Marylyn Ogar, admitted that some of the DSS men deployed for the election wore hoods.

There may not be sporadic uprisings in urban areas in Nigeria tha t wi l l de throne Pres ident Goodluck Jonathan overnight, but there will be popular protests that will continue for different reasons; all of them revolving around the issue of absence of social justice and popular democracy. however, the cumulative effect of the protests that is to come, if the military lend itself to wrongful uses, as it were in 2011, will lead to mass demonstrations with very serious consequences on the unity of the country.

When the lives of the people are stagnated and the prospects of their

•JONATHAN

Page 23: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

55523 editorial from other Newspapers OSUN DEFENDER thursday, february 26,

Taming Mbu, Other Unruly Copsthe recent behaviour of joseph mbu,

an assistant inspector-general of police, has once again exposed the

weaknesses of our national institutions. when a senior police officer takes to uttering threats to kill and incites his subordinates against the civil populace, the rot in our security system and in those entrusted with public safety emerges in bold relief.

apparently relishing the notoriety he has garnered in recent times, mbu, in his latest posting as aig zone 2 - covering Lagos and Ogun states - was in his full, odious element when he visited the Ogun Police command two weeks ago. Addressing officers and men in abeokuta, the stat-e capital, ahead of the 2015 elections, he encouraged them to extra judicially kill 20 persons for every policeman shot at by civilians! “if any of my men is killed,” thundered the intemperate officer, “I shall kill 20 of them. “ he then remembered to add, “ ... but don’t shoot first. If they shoot you, shoot back in self-defence. Anybody who fires you (sic), fire him back in self-defence.” Not done with this strange pep talk, he went on to also incite policemen against state governors, perhaps thereby revealing his true, unofficial, mission in the two states, “you have the power to stop the governor, you don’t have to greet him.”

mbu’s utterances were provocative, barbaric and completely out of tune with the norms of a civilised society. extrajudicial killing is a heinous crime and no policeman has the right to kill anyone without going through the judicial process. mbu is inebriated with power. he does not legally possess and is driven to excessive displays of impunity by his reported closeness to certain occupiers of high office whose private agenda he is obviously pursuing.

Nigerians are only partly mollified by the swift rebuttal of mbu’s license-to-kill by the inspector-general of Police, suleiman abba, who in a statement issued on his behalf, cautioned his men against the use of firearms during the elections “except in extreme circumstances.” he rightly reminded all that the police force’s mandate is “to save and protect lives, and not to kill, contrary to recent statements in the media.” we agree wholeheartedly with the ig that even in the face of provocation, their attributes and police regulations require officers to exercise “tact, patience, tolerance and control of temper in trying situations.” unlike mbu, abba reminded officers and men of the rule oflaw as the underpinning tenet of democracy and promised dire consequences for any abuse of human rights as spelt out in the human rights Practice manual of the Nigeria Police.

that abba did not go beyond public disavowal of his subordinate by immediately redeploying him, suggests how political interference has wrought havoc in the law enforcement agency. we are persuaded that mbu is serving interests other than the Police force, Nigeria or the constitution, pandering primarily to the personal whims of some temporary occupiers of the Presidential Villa.

when as commissioner of Police, federal capital territory command, he had done similar violence to the rule of law by imperiously banning public processions of the #BringBackOurGirls campaigners to please his backers, the then ig, mohammed abubakar

, only countermanded the illegality but did not penalise mbu.

but mbu’s cup is full. he first gained notoriety when, as cP in rivers state, he became the political adversary of governor rotimi amaechi, who has been locked in a very public and messy combat with President goodluck jonathan, and his wife, Patience. Police harassed the governor, defied court orders and mbu boasted afterwards that he was a “lion” who had tamed a governor.

the police become political when their bosses like mbu are willing to convert the police to political enforcers. during the second republic, sunday adewusi, as ig, allowed the police to become virtually the armed wing of the ruling party, brutalising opponents and ordinary people. abba and his top lieutenants should resolve today to resist pressure to make the force a pliant tool in the hands of politicians. the force is a creation of the constitution whose duties are clearly spelt out therein and in enabling laws.

mbu’s recklessness is evident in that his threat derived from no known recent threat or attack on policemen in Lagos and Ogun states. he simply came to his new posting with a predetermined mindset. his homily was nothing short of an incitement to violence at a time governments around the world are taking extra measures to curtail police use of deadly force against citizens. in the united states, france, britain, mexico, russia and elsewhere, lawmakers, governments and citizens often react to isolated incidents of police use of excessive force, rolling out new measures. Nigeria, now 16 years into civilian rule, cannot be left behind. crowd control measures have gone beyond firing live bullets at crowds; water cannons, rubber bullets, tear gas and tasers (electronically-charged-guns) are preferred.

we need to reorient our policemen and end the culture of summary executions and impunity. the united Nations special rapporteur on extrajudicial executions in a 2009 report cited false labeling, attempted extortion- and excessive force as factors in police killing in Nigeria. we back calls by amnesty international that our repressive colonial police heritage, laws such as the Police Order 237 that permits killing; poor funding, poor infrastructure and political interference that, combined, predispose police to brutality, be reversed to build a truly people’s police.

in the meantime, mbu should be redeployed to a desk office and eventually eased out of the force. Officers of his ilk are an anachronism in a democracy. jonathan should subordinate his personal interests to the greater well-being of Nigeria. he should not use police, or allow the impression that he is using the force, for personal ends or allow any of his aides or family members to do so.

•Culled from THE PUNCH

whO am i who am i? who am i? i ask myself every day, who am i? is who am i from my gender? is who am i my country? is who i am my family? i am who am i who am i is who i want to be i am the father of all nations, i am the mother of all nations, i am unique

i am special and beautifully made

who you are? who you are?

who you are is who you want to be

your family is who you are

your friends are who you are

your way of life is who you are

you are you

you may be disable

you may be able

you may be bright

you may be dull

you are who you are

who you are is what god wants you to be

you cant change your begin

you are special

you are god’s best creature

you are who you are

you are the best, no one can be you.

by abOsede aKiNPeLu

POem

Page 24: Osun-Defender February 26, 2015 Edition

thursday, february 26, 2015

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by ade OLugbOtemi“NIGeRIA we hail thee; Our own dear native land; Though t r ibe

and tongue may differ; In brotherhood we stand; Nigerians all are proud to serve; Our sovereign motherland” was the song we once cherished as our National Anthem. Service was then seen as a thing of pride because of the honour that went with it. everybody saw the task of being one’s brother’s keeper as specifically delightful. As a deterrent, anybody who failed to seek the good of others suffered serious alienation and ostracism because the binding cord of our nationhood was selflessness. The prevalence of deviant behaviour and sequestrated life, to say the least was extremely repudiated. National identity was fabulously cherished and only rare necessities took people off the shores of our dear country; with the consciousness to quickly be back in the country as soon as possible.

Today, we have different scenario trending in our national life. We suddenly become our own enemies; and we engage in deliberate action aimed at weakening ourselves through subversive actions that obstruct and disrupt our peaceful coexistence. All of a sudden, we destroy our essence through willful psychological bashing that pitches us against one another. The crafty in our midst quickly capitalize on this to profit through our complacency. The trend has continued to smear us in the face until recently; when some individuals decide to embark on a rescue mission to salvage the remnants of our incontinence. expectedly, hope is beginning to rise that efforts can be coordinated to redeem our battered identity.

There are elements of good in evil, and however good a situation appears, it is always alloyed with some taints of imperfection. So, when Nigeria was seen to be in the golden era, certain usages still dented our smooth edges; and today that people see Nigeria as a place where confusion has permeated our entire national life, some concerned individuals (though few) still feel concerned and are busy thinking of the possibility of salvaging the seeming hopelessness. These few individuals, though still have fault semblance, are engaging in a kind of covert mentoring that is intended for a bailout. The effort is now assuming a replica of massive movement, such that the impact is getting globalized with the attendant change influence that is originally intended.

Nobody ever thought that a formidable opposition party could emerge at this period of our national life. It never happened during the time of Nigeria’s founding fathers like Nnamdi Azikiwe, Tafawa Balewa, Obafemi Awolowo, and Aminu Kano. Actually, what we had were parties built around these notable individuals who were seen as leaders of their blocs. The closest they went to the current situation was alliances, which never endured anyway. That was the reason the ruling-Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) took the emergence of All Progressives Congress (APC) lightly. This rare feat and the architects must be

appreciated by well-meaning Nigerians because of the effects both on the short and long runs. Nobody is talking of one Action Congress (AC) predominantly peopled by Yoruba, All Nigerian People’s Party (ANPP) of the eastern Nigeria, or Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) that was synonymous with the Northern part of the country.

This development is not without attendant ills and vices. The pervasive hate speech and malicious advertorials in the media clime is a direct product of the emergence of the two mega parties viz PDP and APC that are now known as providing viable options for the teeming electorate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to make. General Muhammadu Buhari is not just contesting for the first time. he has tried over and over again, but nobody considered him a threat because of the sectional nature of the platform on which he has been running in earlier attempts. It is the product of an imminent change and preponderant weight of opinions that portray power shift from a party that has been in saddle for almost sixteen years to an amalgam that adopts BROOM as its logo and

ChANGe as its slogan. There is also the positive side in the

urgency that the ruling PDP that has taken people for granted for who they are now see the voting populace as important. This is the first time it will happen in the post-military era that PDP will really try to resist the formidable opposition that has come like a holocaust that is trying to sweep off a party that has prided itself as the biggest in Africa, destined to rule the country for the next sixty years. This also responsible for the urgency that many have regarded as belated, which now propels the ruling party to engage in aggressive campaign and the seeming mad rush to initiate bogus projects that complacency has not allowed for in almost six years of President Jonathan’s occupation at the helm of affairs.

The emergence of APC has also caused some hawks preying on our commonwealth to have a rethink; to the end that they dumped the ruling-Peoples Democratic Party to embrace the emergent move that has culminated in a party that now controls the majority seats in the lower chamber of the

National Assembly. The ruling party has failed to quickly see this as a mass movement because of that predilection for inertia and impossibility mentality that has plagued governance under PDP. Some top notchers in PDP realized that unless they repent, they may soon become political relics, who are bound to become irrelevant in

the emerging dispensation. They derived incurable guilt from the debilitating sabotage they have dealt our economy over the years as PDP cronies, and therefore thought it wise to dump PDP and the evil it stands for in Nigeria’s political platform. Most of the people that dumped PDP for APC have told Nigerians that they left their former party for the perceived injustice being meted to the masses through massive corruption and economic sabotage. According to them, it will be a disservice to continue to wine and dine with those who mean and design evil perpetually for the country. They intend that Nigeria should move forward, and this may be too daunting if they remain in their former PDP camp. They have hinted Nigerians on the events now playing out in the political circle, so that people will not get confused regarding their choice of candidates at the polls. The recent poll shift is prominent in PDP’s file as revealed by some of those who decamped; and consternations are rife that elections may not hold at all because the ruling party feel that they have lost too much ground to opposition and for fear of prosecution over past misdemeanour. The ongoing tenacious media campaigns are intended to possibly reverse the trend in the event that elections are made to hold compulsorily. It is now left for Nigerians to demonstrate whether they are fed up with economic saboteurs in the ruling party, or they are ready to effect the much needed change which the entire world is looking forward to; time will tell

The ruling party is not allowing anything lie low as a result of mass exodus of some of its notable members. We have suddenly arrived at an era of adoption; ostensibly for the ruling PDP to claim relevance as the general elections are fast approaching; and applying the considered most potent instrument of financial inducement on gullible Nigerians as usual. They consider it an anathema to defeat a sitting president, as this has never happened in Nigeria’s history. Though some people have come to a conclusion that PDP’s actions are rather belated, the ruling party is trying hard to discredit the emerging scenario. They said APC is a party of spent forces from PDP. They also said that there is nothing for APC to change; meaning that in their own opinion, they are running the best government possible for Nigeria, irrespective of unprecedented corruption that Nigeria in now known for. They believe that corruption is no evil, and that poverty is also nothing to warrant any hues and cries. In the unlikely event that the ruling party wins the forthcoming election however, they now know that it is no longer easy to take Nigerians for a ride.

When It Is No Longer Business As Usual

•BUHARI