Prospects for an Omisore victory in Osun
By Bayo
Ogunmupe
CERTAINLY, there are prospects
for Iyiola Omisore’s victory in the forthcoming gubernatorial election next
month.
Given the Ekiti State scenario including
unlimited funding from Aso Villa, even without any appreciable policy platform
the stage is set for an electoral enterprise in Osun come August 9, 2014.
Surprisingly, the Ekiti governorship election of June 21, 2014 has enthroned a
bizarre concept of an election determined by the building of the stomach
infrastructure rather than dividends of democracy in Nigeria.
As a nation suffering from oil curse, that
means too much oil money coming into the hands of a people lacking in
intellectual honesty, the era of come and dine with me is finally overwhelming
the last bastion of participatory democracy of Southwest Nigeria. Thus, Omisore and counterparts in the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) are set to repeat the Ekiti experience in Osun.
But Osun is different from Ekiti State. While
90 per cent of Ekiti is Christian, Osun is divided into three main religious of
Islam, Christianity and African traditional religion with majority of them
being Muslims. Moreover, the gladiators: Rauf Aregbesola, an Ijesha engineer
who cut his teeth as a Lagos businessman and Iyiola Omisore, also an engineer
with huge business interests in Lagos, are seasoned but iconoclast politicians.
Aregbesola, the incumbent governor is of the
All Progressives Congress (APC). He came to power on 26 November, 2010 when the
Court of Appeal declared him the winner of the 2007 gubernatorial election in
Osun State. He garnered his political experience in Lagos culminating in being
appointed Lagos State Commissioner for Works for eight years. Aregbesola is
regarded as a rabid Muslim, but his progressive and studied outlook shows him
as accommodating and tolerant.
It has been said that his rabble-rousing
rhetoric and oratory earned him the title Ogbeni – meaning comrade, the outcome
of his electioneering campaign in 2007. Aregbesola is imbued with the
progressive rhetoric which is motivated by ending poverty, injustice, the
desire to help those unable to access opportunities, to help those who aspire
to better themselves, and achieve their utmost potential. In context of the
Nigerian reality, ogbeni was a change agent who sought to transform a state
living on the edge of naked existence to a well educated and fully employed
people.
As a progressive, he espouses a philosophy
which in essence, does not lie in a particular set of solutions but in a way of
thinking and a lifestyle that isn’t time bound, but perpetual. Because they are
set to modernize the country, their ideas are dynamic, not static. Progressive
values are reflected in Aregbesola’s achievements in Osun. In terms of service,
he is focused on empowering the state in the areas of agriculture, development,
full employment, quality education and social security.
Aregbesola’s vision for Osun is cast in six
point programme of banishing poverty and hunger, provision of health care for all,
skills acquisition education that creates employment for all. Aregbesola ha
gained in four years what the PDP could not attain in seven years.
Aregbesola introduced free feeding in schools
and proper dressing. Only recently, it was discovered in a research carried out
in Ghana by an American University that 60 per cent of Ghanaian girls left
school owing to inability to buy sanitary pads. Besides, it has been discovered
ages ago that inadequate nutrition impairs the intelligent Quotent of children.
Therefore, Ogbeni’s efforts at providing adequate dresses and good food is
boosting student enrolment in Osun State.
Moreover, Aregbesola is the first state
governor to be mindful of security by building Emergency Security Centres where
calls can be directed for rescue operations in situations of emergency.
Unfortunately, the federal government isn’t helping on security matters. This
is because the security centres cannot function due to the withholding of a
short security code by the federal government. With the provision of such a
code, a helicopter could touch down within twenty minutes anywhere in Osun to
identify violent sports.
Only recently, Dr. Abraham Nwankwo, the
director of the Debt Management Office (DMO), Abuja debunked the PDP blackmail
that Aregbesola’s government is indebted to the tune of N350 billion. Surely,
the DMO director refuted the PDP allegations, declaring that Osun State status
is sustainable since it does not borrow beyond its capacity. Aregbesola
introduced the Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (O-YES). Through it, he has
empowered 20,000 volunteers across Osun’s local government areas. He plans to
empower 80,000 volunteers in eight years. Through the O-YES scheme, each person
receives an allowance of N10,000 monthly, providing community services in
return. By this scheme, Aregbesola has injected over N200 million into the
state economy each month.
The O-YES has skills acquisition programme to
arm the volunteers with practical skills with which to make a living. What is
more Ogbeni also established the Osun Rural Enterprise Agricultural Programme
(OREAP) to boost agricultural development. Through OREAP Aregbesola aimed to
make Osun the food basket of the Southwest. By these schemes, restiveness,
idleness and joblessness are tackled among the youths of the West. By these
schemes and policies, you will agree with me that Ogbeni deserves a second term
as governor of Osun State. For the PDP, with a myriad of problems the federal
government is facing, it is unconceivable that it can win in Osun. With its 15
years in power at the centre, it has not brought jobs to the people, peace from
bombing Boko Haram insurgency and electricity for business enterprises.
Certainly, its purported victory in Ekiti State is a hoax. Ekiti people can
never vote for a party that cannot rescue more than 200 Chibok girls kept in
captivity. The election must have been manipulated.
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