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Fitting farewell for the last of the founding septet

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By Tunde Olusunle

Boboye Olayemi Oyeyemi could not have wished for a more fitting conclusion to his public service career. Thirty four years ago, he enlisted into the nascent Federal Road Safety Corps, (FRSC), specifically on June 6, 1988, as Superintendent Route Commander, (SRC). In response to public outcry and outrage about the accentuating arithmetics of carnage on the nation’s roads, the administration of President Ibrahim Babangida, formally established the FRSC. There is, however, a little story behind the eventual fruition of the concept, relative to Oyeyemi’s ascendancy.

In 1976, the Murtala Mohammed/Olusegun Obasanjo military rulership carved Oyo, Ogun and Ondo states, out of the old Western State. David Medaiyese Jemibewon, then an army colonel and military governor of the new Oyo State,established the Oyo State Road Safety Corps, (OSRSC). The initiative was in response to the disturbing incidents of automobile mishaps and the staggering casualty figures arising from such mishaps, within the state. In particular, such occurrences were commonplace on the federal highways which straddled Oyo State.

These included the Lagos-Ibadan expressway; the Ibadan-Ile Ife-Ilesha, and the Ibadan-Oyo-Ogbomoso roads.

The road safety initiative had a volunteer arm. This attracted among others, no less a personality than Wole Soyinka, the iconic literary creator, scholar and activist, who would later become Africa’s first Nobel Laureate for Literature. Some members of the volunteer scheme, patrolled on power motorcycles and flagged down over-speeding drivers, admonishing them on the imperative of speed moderation. They were nicknamed maja maja in popular folklore, which translates literally as “catching dogs.”

After Soyinka’s investiture with the Nobel prize in 1986, Babangida, hosted him to a reception. The former military leader exhorted Soyinka to make available to Nigeria, his broad-based vistas and experience, in any department of governance and administration. Soyinka advocated the adoption at the federal level, of a road safety management model, previously pioneered by the old Oyo State. He expressed concern about the high attrition rate of Nigerians in avoidable road accidents, which was diminishing the stock of irreplaceable potential contributors to national development. Soyinka seemed to be reading the mind of the military president. Babangida’s government was equally disturbed by Nigeria’s unsavoury record as one of the countries with the world’s most dangerous roads, and highest highway carnage figures.

Babangida bought the idea and set in motion the machinery for the implementation of the dream. Soyinka was invested pioneer chairman of the project, saddled with the conceptualisation and implementation of a sustainable countrywide road safety model. He invited Olu Agunloye, a physicist who functioned as technical adviser to the initiative, and would later become the pioneer Corps Marshal and Chief Executive, (COMACE), of the FRSC. The new outfit was formally inaugurated February 18, 1988, by Babangida’s deputy, Augustus Aikhomu.

A young, job-hunting engineering graduate, Oyeyemi, had walked determinedly into the primordial FRSC headquarters in Bodija, Ibadan, June 6, 1988, shortly after the flag-off of the new outfit. He met Agunloye and expressed his desire to join the fledgling, amoeboid organisation. He was unfazed about potential uncertainties which could affect a nascent creation, which had been the lot of several government initiatives. Oyeyemi thus joined the pioneering septet which birthed the FRSC, and which included: Ben Ifode; Sam Aleno-Wyse and Engr. Coker (both now departed) and Adeyemi Omidiji. And so began a career which was going to last 34 long years, and during which history would beckon at Oyeyemi at various intersections of his eventful career.

Oyeyemi went through the toughening, oftentimes ambivalent mills and grills of the FRSC, beginning from those teething years of the organisation. He was moved quite frequently, around all the critical offices, units and departments of the Corps, which enriched his aggregate experiences about an organisation he least imagined he would someday head. He looked at the positives of every task, every posting, taking them in his stride, in an eternal learning process. These would serve him in good stead in his professional evolution. Oyeyemi wouldn’t forget his spontaneous redeployment by executive fiat to Sokoto State, in one instance in a hurry, a destination which like a number of others in the nation’s humid north, was largely considered punitive. All these experiences, however, have combined to make him easily the most decorated specialist and professional in road management and traffic administration, in Nigeria, and the West African subregion.

He stayed on in the FRSC, even in those testy years when the agency was strangely subsumed under the superintendence of the Nigeria Police Force, (NPF), in gross disobedience to the founding rules and objectives of the FRSC. That development, witnessed a rash of appointments and the disengagements of several chief executives of the body within a short period. These threatened its evolution, as a novel, distinct, specialised creation, to pointedly help engender road sanity in the country. That illegality subsisted until its decisive abrogation in November 2003, by former president Olusegun Obasanjo. The FRSC, thereafter continued to bloom into a model, internationally certified, globally recognised model traffic safety administration outfit.

Having attained the peak of his career following his elevation to the position of Deputy Corps Marshal, (DCM), Oyeyemi was subtly divesting his office of his personal effects, preparatory to retirement. He desired to complete his long-abandoned doctorate in public administration, at the University of Nigeria Nsukka, (UNN). He equally wanted to develop his passion in agriculture. This was until his historic and providential elevation to the position of COMACE, July 24, 2014, by former President Goodluck Jonathan.

His appointment was against the extant tradition where chief executives of the FRSC, were sourced from outside the organisation. Some of Oyeyemi’s predecessors, notably Maj. Gen. Haldu Hananiya and Osita Chidoka, were hunted from outside the FRSC. Popular expectation within the organisation therefore, was for a perpetuation of the practice. Instructively, President Muhammadu Buhari, reappointed him for a second term of four years beginning from July 24, 2018, on the strength of his altruism and innovations in his first term. This enabled the completion of many of his initiatives.

As though on a mission, Oyeyemi grabbed the opportunity with every strand of his body, to justify, even supersede the expectations of the federal government and the motoring sector. He set for himself a three-pronged mission: Continuity, Innovation and Sustainability, (CIS). This was to guide his dispensation in the organisation. His primary responsibility was to impact road traffic crashes and fatalities across the country. This remained a galloping phenomenon, with reductions in parts, and increments elsewhere. But Oyeyemi and his team remained committed to the admonition, education and public enlightenment of road users, many of who could not divest themselves of dangerous old habits.

He had long appreciated the imperative for increment in the personnel strength of the organisation, against the backdrop of its expanding roles and responsibilities, in a very dynamic, post-democratic sociopolitical ecology. Under his leadership therefore, at least 7000 new positions were created in the FRSC. This has enabled the outfit to better man its 55 Outpost Commands, seven Corridor Commands and 764 (newly created) Station Offices, in the various local government areas across the country. More permanent prototype offices were also built in several states, while housing schemes were initiated across the country to ensure comfortable accommodation for serving staff, and homeownership in retirement.

Oyeyemi, who had profited from trainings and refresher courses in many institutions at home and abroad, committed to broadening the scope and depth of human capital development under his watch. He prioritised training, retraining and capacity building. He widened access by FRSC officers and personnel, to opportunities in all elite policy tutoring and management redevelopment programmes.

Under him, top FRSC officials were availed openings at the: National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies, (NIPSS); National War College, (NWC); National Institute for Security Services, (NISS) and the Nigerian Army Resource Centre, (NARC), among others. This is not forgetting the lower officers and “other ranks,” who also benefited from such opportunities in institutions and programmes compatible with their job descriptions. It is credit to his regime, that many management level officers have highly respected ascriptions such as: Mni, fwc, fdc, fsi and mnarc, among others, behind their names, to underscore their exposures to contemporary trends in policy, governance and administration.

He moved quickly to ensure the establishment of a wholly FRSC-grown Command and Staff College, (FCSC), consistent with extant practice in other military and paramilitary organisations. The budding College, presently operates from the FRSC Academy, Udi, Enugu State, even as its permanent site is being developed in Ibadan, Oyo State. The FRSC Academy has been affiliated to the Federal University of Technology Owerri, (FUTO), to run post graduate diploma courses and masters degree programmes, respectively, in Transport Safety Management.

FRSC’s Traffic Radio which programmes are solely about traffic and safety matters, was actualised under Oyeyemi. FRSC’s collaboration with intelligence and security services were also enhanced. This is a positive development as against erstwhile rivalries and contests for turfs, between brother uniform-wearing organisations. It is now commonplace to find the Nigerian Airforce for instance, working with the FRSC on highway traffic management operations. A joint aerial Airforce/FRSC team, is able to advise operatives on ground, about gridlocks and flashpoints on various routes and sections of the national roadways, especially during festivities which encourage mass travel. Such partnerships have also been deployed during flood incidents, which overrun vital road arteries, precipitating traffic bottlenecks. The FRSC in recent years, has also been enlisted on election matters, because of the integrity and respectability the Corps has built over time.

Accentuated international partnerships were consolidated, and fresh opportunities cultivated between the Corps and several affiliates, under Oyeyemi. These include the World Bank; African Development Bank, (AfDB); the International Roads Federation, (IRF) and the World Road Association, (WRA). Similarly, contemporary international allies of the FRSC include the International Road Transport Forum, (ITF); United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, (UNECA) and the National Transportation Safety Board, (NTSB) of the United States of America, (USA). Under Oyeyemi, the FRSC received the “International Standards Organisation,” ISO Certification ISO: 9001: 2015, consummating its recognition from international stakeholders.

Oyeyemi’s professional perspirations have not gone unrewarded. His primary professional community, the FRSC, awarded him the “Road Safety Grand Star of Excellence,” (RSGSE). He also, finally earned a PhD in 2017, which he observed, took him 14 long years, no thanks to the unending mobility of his job. He has been decorated with the national honour of “Member of the Order of the Federal Republic,” (MFR) and the National Productivity Order of Merit, (NPoM), respectively.

He was also festooned with the medal of “Member of the National Institute,” (mni) from NIPSS, after a one year “executive programme, at the institute. He has similarly received a chain-length of fellowships, memberships and medals, at home and abroad. These include the Nigerian Institute of Management,” (FNIM); Institute of Safety Professionals of Nigeria, (FISPN) and the Chartered Institute of Corporate Administration, (FICA). He has also received the American Medal of Honour, American Biographical Institute, USA, among many others.

In honouring its first-ever “home-grown” Corps Marshal, for a fulfilling and successful career, Oyeyemi’s colleagues put up a loaded, week-long valedictory programme for him. Beginning Monday July 18, 2022 with a “Farewell Management Meeting,” and “Special Marshals’ NEC Meeting, other programmes included the “Corps Marshal’s Strategy Session with the FRSC High Command. The latter which took place Wednesday July 20, 2022, was flagged off by the Chief of Defence Staff, (CDS), General Lucky Irabor.

The ninth in the series of “Valedictory Lectures” delivered by retiring top officers who had attained the rank of DCM and above, was delivered by Oyeyemi on Thursday July 21. Friday July 22, there was a parade in his honour at the Zone Three, Abuja National Headquarters of the FRSC, which was followed by a thanksgiving service at the FRSC chapel at the same address. On Saturday July 23, two programmes, the “Corps Marshal’s Walk” and a novelty football match featuring the wives of top management, both featured.

Monday July 25, 2022, however, was the climax of the valedictory programme. The handover ceremony between Oyeyemi and the acting Corps Marshal, Dauda Biu, the DCM in-charge of Finance and Administration, that morning, was followed by the “pullout” at the Old Parade Ground, Garki, Abuja. It was a very colourful ceremony which was very well attended by dignitaries and public officials, among others. Soyinka, the grand actualiser of the FRSC concept, and Agunloye, founding Corps Marshal, were present. Agunloye who knows my close relationship with Oyeyemi, told me in a private chat en route to the programme: “This is a momentous stride for Yemi. I’m proud of him. May God bless his next endeavours.”

Secretary to the Government of the Federation, (SGF) Boss Mustapha; former Inspector General of Police, (IGP) and incumbent Chairman, Police Service Commission, Musiliu Smith, were present. Chairman of the FRSC Commission, Bukhari Bello and his members, as well as former Chairmen of the FRSC, notably: Vice Admiral Akin Aduwo; Adamu Waziri; Greg Mbadiwe and Col Lawan Gwadabe, attended the event. Danyaro Yakassai a former acting COMACE during the years of the Corps wrongful appropriation into the NPF, was present.

The Ministers of Information and Culture; Federal Capital Territory, (FCT) as well as Labour and Employment, were represented. IGP Usman Alkali Baba; Commandant-General of the Nigerian Civil Defence and Security Corps, (NCDSC), Abubakar Audi, and Comptroller-General, Federal Fire Service, Abdulganiyu Jaji, were present. The Chief of Army Staff and the Comptroller-General of the Nigerian Immigration Service, (NIS), were represented. Director-General, (DG) of the Budget Office, Ben Akabueze; his counterpart from the National Productivity Centre, (NPC), Kashim Akor; Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media, Garba Shehu, also made it to the event.

Former Assistant Inspector General of Police, (AIG), Tunji Alapini; former FCT police commissioner, Lawrence Alobi and the Deputy High Commissioner of the South African High Commission, Dr Bobby J. Moroe, graced the programme. National President of the National Association of Road Transport Owners, (NARTO) Lawal Yusuf Uthman; former President of the Nigerian Union of Road Transport Workers, (NURTW) and Eunice Odegbe, President, Female Drivers’ Association, (FDA), honoured the event.

Boboye Oyeyemi will be 62, November 26, 2022. Much as he hails from Odo-Owa in Kwara State, Oyeyemi was born and raised in Ibadan. He has been happily married to Mrs Yemisi Oyeyemi, a senior civil servant, for about 30 years now, and the union is blessed with children and a daughter in-law. A golfer and lawn tennis player, his official engagements have impacted his regularity on the golf course and tennis courts, in recent years. He attempts to make up by dutifully jumping on the treadmill to burn calories. An intellectual by disposition, he enjoys scholarly banter, reading, writing and travelling. Now that he will have more time for himself, he hopes to do some catching up with some of these interests which have been in abeyance for sometime. He hopes to begin by reorganizing his primary work station, his study, in his home.

Olusunle, PhD, poet, journalist, scholar and author, is a Member of the Nigerian Guild of Editors, (NGE)

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Opinion

How Governor Ododo stole the show at Edo APC Governorship campaign Mega Rally

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By Ismaila Isah

The tempo of activities leading to the governorship election holding September 21, 2024 reached a crescendo last weekend when the Kogi State Governor, Ahmed Usman Ododo, in company of other APC governors and leaders were in Edo state to campaign for the party’s candidate, Senator Monday Okpebholo.
It was a homecoming for Governor Ododo whose first port of call wasIgarra in Akoko-Edo Local Government area of Edo state. The Igarra shares cultural and linguistic affinity with Ebira. Their language is a dialect of Ebira with a lot in common with the Ebiras in Kogi, Nasarawa, the FCT, Ondo, Ekiti and other states with high population of Ebira speakers and settlers.

The people also turned out in large numbers to support and join hands with their “son-governor” from another mother in last-minute campaign to win the hearts of Igarra and Edo people in general and to drum support for the APC candidate, Senator Okpebholo.

After successfully leading the youth rally in Igarra, headquarters of Akoko-Edo on Friday, Governor Ahmed Usman Ododo proceeded to Benin City, the Edo state capital where he was seen receiving other governors and party leaders ahead of the APC mega rally held at the University of Benin Sports Complex in Ugbowo.

Governor Ododo was the cynosure of all eyes as many party leaders including APC governors were seen consulting with him as the director of youth mobilization for the Edo State Edo APC Governorship Campaign Council.

He stayed awake through the night on Friday till early Saturday morning addressing different groups who thronged his base at the GRA in Benin City to consult with him on strategic direction for effective mobilization for the mega rally and grand finale of the Edo APC Governorship election campaign.

The Kogi State Governor was well supported by his brother and the Edo state Deputy Governor, Mr Philip Shaibu who hosted the Governor and his entourage and ensured that the Governor and members of his team enjoyed the comfort and hospitality of Edo state throughout the stay.

Governor Ododo who was at the Benin airport to receive Vice President Kashim Shettima who was the special guest at the mega rally also accompanied the Vice President to the palace of the Oba of Benin, His Royal Majesty Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo Ewuare II.

The Kogi State Governor received commendation from Vice President Kashim Shettima, the APC National Chairman, Dr Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, other governors and members of the National Working Committee of the party who were impressed by the level of mobilization of youth for the mega rally which is largely atttibuted to Governor Ododo’s ground work which went on for weeks before the mega rally.

With stops, meet and greet in different communities in Etsako, Owan and Oredo where he interfaced with non-indigenous communities like Igbo traders and Kogi state indigenes in Edo state, Governor Ododo’s message for them to support the APC and its Governorship candidate was loud, clear and persuasive.

From Lampese, Igarra, Auchi through Afuze to Benin City, Governor Ododo’s presence was electric and his impact was felt throughout Edo State as he went with his team to mobilize support for the APC Governorship candidate Senator Monday Okpebholo.

The Ododo story in the 2024 Edo Governorship election which will be complete on Saturday the 21st of September is that of courageous and energetic young Governor who is following the footsteps of his boss and predecessor, Governor Yahaya Bello in unequivocal and absolute loyalty to the APC irrespective of the terrain, the personality of the candidate and the burden of staying true and committed to the success of the political party that has redefined partisan politics in Nigeria’s history.

With the statistics and predictions in favour of the APC, there is hope that Senator Monday Okpebholo will be victorious at the polls and become the next Governor of Edo state.

Isah is the Special Adviser on Media to the Kogi State Governor

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Opinion

Edo 2024: Betsy Obaseki’s broadside and Adams Oshiomohle’s bombshell

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By Ehichioya Ezomon

The 1967 hit song, “The First Cut Is the Deepest,” written by British singer-songwriter, Cat Stevens, may not be related to the discourse hereunder, but it’s a strong advice to humans, to bridle their tongues – as the Apostles admonish in James 3:8-9 – against censoriousness, and reproving others with a magisterial air, as true wisdom comes only from above.
“The First Cut Is the Deepest” was originally released in April 1967 by P. P. Arnold – an American soul singer, born Patricia Ann Cole, on October 3, 1946, in Los Angeles, California – who relocated in 1966 to London, the United Kingdom, to pursue a solo career, and enjoyed considerable success with the single, which also became a hit by Rod Stewart in his seventh album, “A Night On The Town,” released in 1976.) 
In the past week, all eyes and mouths have been on former Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole, even as social media remains agog – albeit slantily –  over the Senator’s attack on Governor Godwin Obaseki and First Lady Betsy Obaseki, over their childlessness – a very sensitive and no-go-area issue in our cultural, traditional and religious settings. 
Yet, the judgmental critics have made the Oshiomhole tactless attack – that touches the underbelly of the Obasekis – to appear as out of the blue, whereas it’s a riposte to Mrs Obaseki’s equally graceless reminder of the Edo people – especially the women – that only the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, Dr Asue Ighodalo, has a wife among the candidates vying to succeed her husband from the September 21, 2024, governorship election that’s 12 days away.
Below is Mrs Obaseki’s unprompted remarks at a PDP campaign rally in Benin City: 
“Among the candidates wey dey contest election, na only one get wife. And na our own party candidate, Asue Ighodalo, na only him get wife. Na him wife bi dis” (as she raised Mrs Ighodalo’s right hand, to the cheers of the rallygoers). 
“Women for Edo, make una know sey na only one candidate get wifeooo” (Mrs Obaseki added, as she pulled her left ear, as a sign of warning to the female voters). 
What’s Mrs Obaseki’s motive(s) for dragging marital matters into the campaigns when there’re myriad issues of alleged poor performance in Mrs Obaseki’s husband’s eight-year governance, in which Mr Ighodalo’s the Economic Adviser?
Was it to change the opposition narratives on the subpar outing of Governor Obaseki; score political points for Ighodalo and the PDP; a dig at the other candidates, who, perhaps, have no wives to act as “First Lady” should they win the September 21 poll; or throw herself and family into the mix, to curry sympathy for themselves and votes for Ighodalo, and disparagement and denial of votes for the “wifeless” candidates? 
On the basis of the law of reciprocity, one would be tempted to say good riddance to bad rubbish, as what’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander: Considering that it’s Mrs Obaseki, who prompted the “familial controversy” at a campaign rally, which Oshiomhole – a non-candidate at the election –uncouscionably jumped in to respond to. 
Now a case of “Two wrongs don’t make a right,” Oshiomhole’s likely unsolicited intervention on behalf of the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Senator Monday Okpebholo (APC, Edo Central) – whose campaign council Oshiomhole chairs – has several contextual proverbs. 
The axioms include: 1) Without pulling the trigger, the gun will not fire. 2) Actions speak louder than words. 3) Familiarity breeds contempt. 4) People who live in glass houses should not throw stones. 5) The farting of the rich smells sweet, that of the poor fouls the air. 6) Someone who knows how their anus is should learn to sit properly. 7) First take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye. (Matt 7:5) 8) Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. (Matt 7:12) 9) If you point one finger, there are three more pointing back at you. 10) The bird whose feathers are used for sacrifice moves about stealthily. 
Some or all of these sayings fit into Oshiomhole and Mrs Obaseki’s dockets, but only Oshiomhole (APC, Edo North) ultimately opens himself up to vitriol and odium. Because – short of scientific attempts to challenge nature – childbearing is a gift and a miracle from God, the Creator. So, no one – no matter the circumstance – plays God over an issue they’ve no knowledge and power to determine. 
Let’s look at a post on the WhatsApp page of PAN EDO POLITICAL FORUM – which may not be altruistic but politically-motivated – to gauge the public angst over Oshiomhole’s attack on the Obasekis. The anonymous post, entitled, “What All Truthful Pastors Should Preach This Sunday Until It Reaches All,” reads: 
“Words can be weapons, and Adams Oshiomhole’s recent jabs at Governor Obaseki and his wife have left many Nigerians in shock and dismay. Mocking someone’s childlessness is a hurtful and personal attack that crosses the boundaries of decent political discourse.
“Imagine the pain and anguish that comes with longing for a child, only to be met with ridicule and scorn. The Obasekis have shown remarkable strength and resilience in the face of this adversity, but Oshiomhole’s comments have reopened old wounds and caused fresh hurt.
“Let us rally around the Obasekis and show them that we stand with them in solidarity and support. Let us reject the politics of personal attacks and embrace empathy and compassion.
“Childlessness is a sensitive issue that affects many families, and we must approach it with kindness and understanding. Let us create a society where people can share their struggles without fear of judgment or mockery.
“Oshiomhole’s comments may have been meant to score political points, but they have ultimately revealed his own character and exposed the dark underbelly of our political culture. Let us rise above this and choose a higher path – one of love, empathy, and respect for all.
“Furthermore, Oshiomhole’s behaviour falls short of the standards expected of a public figure, and his actions are a disservice to the people of Edo State and Nigeria as a whole. His comments are not only unbecoming of a leader but also contradict the values of our cultural heritage.
“In the Benin Kingdom, where Oshiomhole hails from, respect for elders and dignity for all individuals are deeply ingrained traditions. His utterances have brought shame to his people and tarnished the image of the kingdom.
“Let us reject Oshiomhole’s divisive and hurtful rhetoric and instead embrace a culture of empathy, kindness, and respect. We must hold our leaders accountable for their words and actions, and demand better from those who seek to represent us.”
The foregoing is a mild version of what concerned members of the public have written about and against Oshiomhole, whose public utterances – time and again – have tended to be unguarded and out of step and control, like a loose cannon. It’s time he checked his exuberance, and act as a Statesman!
That said, Oshiomhole appears unfairly treated by the same public that wears Mrs Obaseki the toga of victimhood! Why should the critics be one-sided? Why don’t they also censure Mrs Obaseki, who pulled the trigger first by mocking other candidates – who’ve no wives – in the September 21 governorship election? 
While there’re pressing issues of governance to highlight at every stop on the campaign trail, Mrs Obaseki off-handedly threw “familial matter” into the political arena. Thus, as we blame Oshiomhole for unwarrantedly responding in kind – especially as he’s not a candidate in the election – Mrs Obaseki should also be held responsible for unnecessarily teasing the “unwived” candidates!
In the interim – as if Mrs Obaseki’s allusion to candidates with no wives was specifically targeted at Okpebholo – there’ve been calls from broadcast talking heads and pundits, and women groups for Okpebholo to introduce to the public his wife, who, they argue, should join in the campaigns to elect her husband on September 21 – citing, as an example, Mrs Ifeyinwa Ighodalo, who joins her husband’s campaign train and/or does separate stomps on his behalf.
Still, having a wife isn’t a requirement for the Office of Governor – and other elective positions of a Member of the Senate; a Member of the House of Representatives; a Member of the State House of Assembly; the President and Vice President; and the Deputy Governor – as spelt out in Sections 65, 106, 131, and 177 of the amended 1999 Constitution of Nigeria. 
To qualify for any of those elective positions, a candidate must certify that: (a) he is a citizen of Nigeria by birth; (b) he has attained the age of 35, 30, 30, 40 and 35 (applicable to each office in that order); (c) he is a member of a political party and is sponsored by that political party; and (d) he has been educated to at least School Certificate level or its equivalent. 
Clearly, there’s no provision of the 1999 Constitution requiring a candidate to have a wife before they can vie for the governorship. It’s an extraneous matter injected into the campaigns by Mrs Obaseki for political optics, to puncture the enthusiasm and momentum in Mr Ighodalo’s opposing camps.
So, going by the 1967 hit song, “The First Cut Is The Deepest,” shouldn’t Mrs Obaseki’s “polemic” on candidates, who’ve no wives, be ranked as the deepest cut – or at least placed on equal pedestal with Comrade Oshiomhole’s  “thunderbolt” on the Obasekis childlessness – for attempting to throw an already tensed Edo politics into a tailspin, which, indeed, she’s succeeded in doing? Let’s not bury the truth in emotion or partisanship!

Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria

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Opinion

APC Must Probe Zazzaga And Other Moles Within

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Abdullahi Sule

By Dr Kassim Muh’d Kassim

The recent attack on Nasarawa State Governor, Engineer Abdullahi Sule by one Alhaji Saleh Zazzaga a self acclaimed chairman of a faceless group, which referred to itself as “North Central All Progressives Congress (APC) Forum”, for visiting the National Chairman of APC, Abdullahi Ganduje, was in bad taste.
In a purported interview credited to him, Zazzaga made a so-called call for an apology from the governor. The said Zazzaga “condemned” Governor Sule, who is the Chairman of the APC North Central Governors’ Forum for “endorsing” the party’s national chiarman.
In the apparently sponsored outing syndicated in selected national newspapers, Zazzaga, acting the script of his pay masters, attempted to weep up emotion and hatred against Governor Sule across the North Central by connecting the visit to the national chairmanship seat struggle and the ongoing agitation to return it back to the zone.
In his desperation and that of his sponsors, Zazzaga also unsuccessfully tried to ignite sentiment in Governor Sule’s home state by pitching him against notable figure like the former National Chairman of our dear party and a father of the state, Senator Abdullahi Adamu and others, even as he veered off the track by bringing the issue of performance into the fray.
Now, how does a visit to the national secretariat of our great party amounted to an endorsement of a man who is already occupying the seat?
What motive does Zazzaga have for quoting Governor Sule out of contest? How does Governor Sule’s speech to the effect that: “I am here also to pay my respect to a man that deserves respect. To our National Chairman, Dr Ganduje. He deserves respect and deserves all the cooperation, especially at a time like this. In the next couple of weeks, we have an election in Edo, so the man does not need to be distracted in any other way so that we can go and win our election in Edo, and that is one of the reasons why I came to encourage him to be focused,’ translated to an endorsement?
But unknown to Zazzaga and his sponsors, Governor Sule was at the national secretariate of the party on a special invitation, as chairman of North Central Governor’s forum to find a solution to resolve the APC crisis in one of the state from the zone, “Benue state ” and he mentioned the elections in Edo because he is the publicity committee chairman for the party’s national campaign in Edo governorship election.
Now, let’s analyze the above statement by Governor Sule based on its content. If he called on stakeholders to rally behind Ganduje to enable the national chairman deliver Edo and Ondo for the party in the forthcoming governorship election in those states, why should someone who has the love of the party in his heart crucified him for that?
It is public knowledge that the governorship election for Edo State was slated for September 21 while that of Ondo is coming up on November 16. If the party’s stakeholders don’t put their houses in order and act collectively now how will it hope to win those states?
From all indications those faulting Governor Sule for calling for the stakeholders’ unity at this crucial time when the polls for the two strategic states are at hand do not mean well for the party and want it to lose. That is why it is imperative to initiate a probe to unmasked those using Zazzaga to further distablise the party because of their parochial interest. I don’t think Zazzaga is from Plateau State because if people like Zazzaga exist yet, we lost Plateau to opposition.
Come to think of it, who is Zazzaga within the party hierarchy to launch such attacks on the person and personality of the Chairman of the North Central Governors’Forum and key stakeholder of the party.
It must be stated here that the offensive against Governor Sule is an assault on the office of the North Central Governors Forum and an attempt to ridicule the party before the public.
But I’m challenging Zazzaga and his desperate sponsors to come to the NEC meeting of the party on the 11th of September to move a motion for the removal of Ganduje if they are serious about their agitation to have Ganduje removed from office, else their affront on Governor Sule deserves a decisive action against the perpetrators.
In it is surprising that despite his make-believe standing as stakeholder of the party in the North Central, Zazzaga is not even abreast with the transformation going in Nasarawa State under Governor Sule.
In his blind hatred and desperation to do the bidding of his pay masters, he failed to or probably ignored the need to do his research well before going public with his falsehood about the state of governance in the Home of Solid Mineral.
Even if he couldn’t take his time to visit the state for a firsthand information about the massive development going on in Nasarawa State, one would have think that as someone who is enlightened, Zazzaga should at listen to news and read the newspapers about what is happening in Nasarawa under Governor Sule.
If anything, the transformation in the solid mineral subsector courtesy of Governor Sule’s insight and resourcefulness, which has endeared the state and the governor to the presidency, should not have escaped Zazzaga ‘s attention. But he chooses to turn blind eyes and rather brook the disdain from the public over his misinformation regarding the situation in Nasarawa.
The state is now exposed to investors and development courtesy of Governor Sule. No one insults Governor Sule and goes free without being challenged by that community for his development strides across the state.
Dr Kassim Muh’d Kassim is the Special Adviser on Political Affairs to the Nasarawa State Governor, Engineer Abdullahi Sule.

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