Ekiti guber: Why I don’t trust INEC – Gov Fayemi
BY EMMANUEL AZIKEN, GBENGA ARIYIBI,
DAPO AKINREFON, CHARLES KUMOLU & GBENGA OKE
It was set to be a 40-minute
interview with the Vanguard Political Desk that commenced shortly after 10 p.m.
in the Governor’s Office in Ado Ekiti last Tuesday. However, as Governor Kayode
Fayemi churned out statistics on his adventure in the Ekiti political turf, the
time keeping Chief Press Secretary, Yinka Oyebode, lapsed in his duty as the
interview stretched beyond the hour.
Governor Fayemi, a one-time
democracy activist, and civil society champion is at his most eloquent self
when talking about how he is using the platform of office to champion the
egalitarian ethos that he at one time could only talk about. The daily soup
kitchen for citizens, the N5,000 monthly cash benefit to the elderly and the
uplifting of public schools are among indices that would give him attention in
the congregation of social democrats. Excerpts:
Did you have the intention of
seeking a second term when you sought for election the first time?
Gov Fayemi
I did not seek for election in 2007,
as you put it. I wasn’t even in politics in the partisan sense of politics. I
was prevailed upon to run. There is no one in politics at that time that would
say that I was one of those running around wanting to be governor. I did not
set out to be governor which in the true sense of it, is a duty and not an
ambition.
So, I was not ambitious. I was not
interested but I was eventually convinced of the necessity to put my hat into
the ring at the time.
So, if you want me to answer your
question properly, this is actually the first time I am running on the strength
of my own conviction that I want to be governor in Ekiti State. So, you could
call me an accidental governor. But then, that accident quickly stopped at the
time I really became active in the race.
Attractive period
I was convinced to run. I moved
round the state and assessed the enormity of the challenge and don’t forget,
when I threw my hat into the ring the first time, a certain gentleman called
Ayo Fayose was governor here and it was not the most attractive period for
anyone to want to become governor in this state.
The question then among many of my
friends in academia and civil society was: ‘do you have a death wish?’ ‘Why
would I want to go and do this in a place as dangerous as Ekiti?’ That was the
general feeling. It was almost aimless boldness to venture into the political
terrain in Ekiti State at the time I did.
And I was like the most unknown
quantity. If you recall at the time I came into the race in 2006, you already
had the likes of Ayo Arise, Caleb Olubolade, Segun Oni, Dayo Adeyeye, Dare
Babarinsa already in the ring. In my party, we had 20 people, prominent Ekiti
citizens, who were in the race for the job.
I was an unknown quantity as far as
politics was concerned. I didn’t have the ambition to be governor. I never
really had an ambition to be governor but when I was convinced to be governor,
I saw it as a duty to the party which was out of office at the time.
One of the people who convinced me
to run happened to be the former governor, Otunba Niyi Adebayo.
Now why do you want to go for a
second term?
I have an unfinished task. The task
is not complete. We have restored Ekiti back to its pride of place. But
restoration does not necessarily equate to transformation. Restoration brings
Ekiti to a point of stability. I do not delude myself that we have achieved all
that we set out to achieve.
First, most of the people I know are
no longer ashamed to say that they are from Ekiti now unlike what used to
happen.
For me, people make reference to
what we have done in the education sector, infrastructure, health care and
particularly, the social security for the elderly, but that is not my
most profound value addition if you ask me. It is the restoration of dignity
and respect to Ekiti. So, when we say land of honour, people know that we are
honourable people who have nothing else but integrity to sell. And it is a high
net-worth value for me.
That has since translated into
practical deliverables in the various sectors because the fact that my word is
my bond has enabled me to say that I promised this on October 16, 2010 when I
delivered my inaugural address, and this is where we are now on that agenda. We
have gone way beyond the 70 per cent mark, but it is still unfinished business
because poverty has not been totally eradicated.
The vision as advertised to everybody
in Ekiti, which became a mantra in the eight point agenda for Ekiti recovery
was that we want to make poverty history in Ekiti State and I don’t think we
have fully done that. We definitely dented the impact of poverty in our
state but we still have some way to go.
Given the saying that no governor of
Ekiti State goes for a second term, could it be suggested that your declaration
for a second term is the cause of the heightened tension in the state?
I have already indicated that for
me, this is a duty and not an ambition. And I have made a distinction between a
duty and an ambition. What am I constitutionally and legally allowed? I don’t
believe I am subverting the constitutional obligation that I have as enshrined
in the Nigerian constitution. I also think it is actually a myth when people
say in this part there has been no two-term governor.
Even though we had seven governors
in the last seven years before I became governor, that simply tells you that
none of them even completed a term in office, let alone have ideas about
running for any other term. You need to complete one term before wanting to run
for another. So, when they say that, they don’t add that only one governor
completed a democratic term in office, and that is Governor Niyi Adebayo.
And there are many people in this
state who continue to insist that Adebayo won the election in 2003. Let us even
assume that it is true that there has been none, (but) so it was in Kano before
Shekarau became a two term governor. So it was next door Ondo where it was also
said that no one could be a two-term governor. The choice is very simple.
Luckily, this a state where the
prominent parties have both had a go at it. PDP had been in charge of this
state for seven and half years. Place the two governments of the PDP and ours
side by side and do a dispassionate analysis of what we both contributed to
governance. Every asset that is standing on ground in this state, happened
under the progressive wing. Whether you are talking of Ekiti House in Abuja,
Ikogosi Water Springs that many people are visiting now, or the revived bricks
factory among others, you will realise they all happened under the watch of the
progressives.
That is in terms of physical
infrastructure. If you talk in terms of human development, which involves
social security, youth volunteer scheme, peace corps, we have also done much.
In Agriculture, the story is clear. If you talk of health care in terms of the
state of hospitals, access to healthcare, health insurance, it is only under us
that these things occurred.
Of course, if you talk of education,
the statistics are very clear. You only need to go to the merged Ekiti State
University and see a focused government that has an agenda for educational
reform. If you don’t want to go as far as the university, check out what is
happening at the secondary school level. The statistics are also clear.
So, I don’t know how that will now
be the source of tension. The evidence before us suggests that if you don’t
want to arrest development, then continuity is very critical to growth,
especially in an environment where every time government has been sidetracked
or affected by the term of office, you also almost automatically have
abandonment of key initiatives.
This is the only government in Ekiti
State that did not abandon projects of previous governments. The projects that
Governor Adebayo did that were abandoned, the residences of our House of
Assembly members that Fayose never touched are there. This (Governor’s Office)
is a hotel built by Governor Adebayo and somebody came and said this is more
befitting for me as an office, but we would have been making more money if it
had remained in its original state that Governor Adebayo put it.
I came and said I was not going to
abandon any project. People thought I was stupid, ‘how could you be doing the
road to your enemy’s hometown?’ But I said Governor Oni is not my enemy. I only
challenged him because I was convinced that I won an election. The money that
was being used to construct the road to Ifaki was not Governor Oni’s personal
money.
It is Ekiti money, it is our
commonwealth. So, why would I abandon it simply because it goes to Oni’s
village? When I came, the road to Governor Fayose’s home town was the worst
road in the state. I was the one who did it. Virtually all the roads leading to
the supposed enemies’ home towns, I did them because I felt it was right the
thing to do.
I don’t see any tension. Naturally,
when election is on the way, it is the nature of politicians to exaggerate
their own importance and to give a sense of ‘if not me, hell will break loose’.
The urban renewal project embarked
upon by your administration in Ado Ekiti seems to have stagnated. Is it paucity
of funds?
Work has not stopped. If you go to
Ikole or Ikere, you will see that those local roads are being constructed. In
Ado, we have had a peculiar challenge with the contractor handling the
beautification and the contract has been revoked. And there is a process to
that. We cannot get a new person to do it until we legally remove those who
were in charge of the original contract, that is the reason for that. I know
that the new contractors are about to start work on the beautification of Ado
Ekiti.
Your administration initiated
community development projects across the state. To what extent have they
benefited the populace?
We have spent so far about N614
million on the various projects. The way we went about it was that we had a
philosophy that the people are the best monitors and implementers of projects
that are dear to their hearts.
Best monitors and implementers
These were projects submitted by the
communities and not government projects. They are not really gigantic projects.
What we did was to take the presidents and secretaries of the town unions to a
workshop. They would bring their projects. They would also bring their plans
and the costs.
We will then send people from our
Ministry of Rural Development to assess and evaluate projects and we then give
them money in phases. 50 per cent to start, then 30 per cent and 20 per cent
subsequently.
And the evidence before us indicates
that in virtually all the communities where we have projects, it is almost 80
per cent completion, and they have been completed on time and cost. They have
done much better more than we are able to do as a government that awards
contracts to people outside.
From the assessment I have done, it
simply shows that people take ownership of what they implement and it is
difficult to steal community money. If it is government, nobody is
government. Government money is money for everybody and whoever can grab. I
have an unfinished task at Govt House.
That is the notion that has been
engraved in people’s mind. But for communities, you need to see the kind of
accounting records that they keep. It is one of the most successful project
initiatives we have come up with.
Why do you hate Teachers in Ekiti
State given the allegation that you are going to use the competitive test
introduced by your government to sack them?
Anyone who asks you to improve
cannot hate you. If somebody is interested in you becoming better and much more
qualitative in what you do, then the person loves you. I think I must admit
that there are times when good initiatives may be communicated in a way that it
does not achieve the objective that you set out to achieve. I don’t think there
is any teacher in this state that believes that I hate teachers.
First, I am a product of a teacher
and secondly, I am a teacher by training. Thirdly, free education is an
obsession for me and at every opportunity. I also want to improve myself and I
want people around me to also be improved. Fourthly, I am a product of public
school education in this state, not in Lagos or Abuja. You can walk to my
school in ten minutes from here (Governor’s Office).
So, I grew up here and I knew what
solid public education was when I was growing up, and I really wanted to
rekindle that when I became governor here. I can tell you that teachers in
Ekiti have never had it so good.
Core subject allowance
So if you teach English, Mathematics
or you teach basic science in Ekiti. On top of your normal salary, you get 20
per cent as an incentive. This is an addition to the general teachers’ peculiar
allowance. In fact, other workers of government are complaining that teachers
in Ekiti are too well treated to their own detriment. For the first time in the
history of this state, primary school teachers are getting car loans. We gave
car loans to secondary schools and civil servants in. the state. But the
previous government did not even give loans to anybody, whether you are primary
or secondary teachers. This is the government that has pioneered all these
things.
This is a government that renovated
and reconstructed 183 secondary schools and 856 primary schools, some of them
had not been touched since during the time of Chief Obafemi Awolowo. We
received the good news from Abuja of having the best primary school in the
country. The Stock Exchange did a competition just late last year and our
College of Education Demonstration School in Ikere-Ekiti came first. The state
university made the best result in the Law school this year. For the first time
in 34years, Ekiti State University has all its courses accredited by National
Universities Commission, (NUC).
This was a university that was in
the doldrums when I became governor and I took that step that many believed to
be foolish by merging three universities. I did what I had to do and I told
people that leadership is not by popularity contest, it was about a clear
mission, a solid mission and about the deliverable. My interest is that
teachers who teach in our schools must improve themselves. Today, we have seen
the results because students are leaving private schools for public schools in
Ekiti State and we have to give the credit to the teachers for the work they
have done but they should not relent because I want the future of our children
to be better.
Is there any truth to speculations
that you and your one-time political associate, Opeyemi Bamidele are in talks
for reconciliation?
If Opeyemi believes that he is not
my friend, that is his prerogative. Opeyemi is my friend. He will remain my
friend for as long as I live. I consider him more than a friend. I consider him
a brother and that is why he could do all of what he is doing without my
batting an eyelid. But I also said to you, in times past, that there is nothing
wrong in having an ambition, it is legitimate.
The only objection I had was the
notion that he was hounded out of the party because there was no space for him
to contest. I will give you specific examples and evidence that Opeyemi never
approached the party that he wanted to run for any office, not at the ward
level, not at the local government level and not at the state level. So, nobody
could have denied him the right to run.
Denial of right to run
His objection was that some
political leaders in our party had endorsed the governor and you cannot
legislate against endorsement. Endorsement is not election, it is not
primaries. Chief Obafemi Awolowo endorsed a gentleman named JS Olawoyin as the
candidate for UPN in Kwara State. That primary held thrice, some unknown
university lecturer named CO Adebayo defeated the giant of Kwara politics.
Chief Awolowo had no choice than to
accept the result even though his own colleague and friend, whom he wanted, was
the victim of that race. Nobody said Opeyemi could not run. Opeyemi, in his own
estimation, looked at the terrain and felt if this man has been endorsed by
some leaders of the party, if I run against him, it may be a futile effort. Why
don’t I go to another party? And he is right in doing that. I don’t think that
should make enemies of us.
Are there indications on ground to
buttress claims by INEC chairman that the Ekiti elections would be the best in
the country given the fallouts from the recent election in Anambra?
Let’s just say the taste of the
pudding is in the eating. INEC is always good at demonstrating preparedness but
there is always a difference between demonstrating preparedness and
implementing preparedness.
I would like to think that Professor
Jega is genuinely committed to a clean and credible process. The little that I
know of him gives me that sense that he is genuine about his claims.
But when you do things the same way
and you expect different results, it does not come across to me as genuine
preparedness. I will like to be proved wrong that I have not seen that
qualitative, objective, independent readiness. Maybe I don’t know enough of
what is in place.
But I sit in my vantage position, I
monitor what is going on and I also talk to those who are somewhat involved in
the process and I do not get a sense that we have learnt lessons. But then, my
reactions maybe extreme because I have been a victim as you know and I am not
prepared to give INEC a benefit of the doubt. My own mantra is to be over
prepared for them.
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