24 December 2012

EDUCATION AND LIVING-WHY CANT ALL STATES IN NIGERIA BE LIKE THESE ACN STATES?

SOMETHING IS HAPPENING IN EKITI STATE FOR REAL!


[caption id="attachment_1248" align="aligncenter" width="501"]SOMETHING IS HAPPENING IN EKITI STATE — FOR REAL! Ekiti+and+Fayemi[/caption]

Something is happening in Ekiti State that needs to be told. And I will, since I bear witness to it.



Quite a few folks, including my good friend and brother Femi Orebe and Sam Omatseye,


both columnists in The Nation newspaper, have written volubly, extolling the “quiet


revolution” going on in Ekiti State. It is difficult reading some of the stuff written by them


and not think, ‘there’s some exaggeration afoot.’ I needed to be there to see with my own


eyes.I finally wrestled the demon of procrastination and made it to Ado-Ekiti last week, my first


time there since Dr. Kayode Fayemi became the governor two years ago. Ekiti had really


never been a favourite destination for me. Tucked within the heartland of


the old West, it seemed its only distinguishing tourist feature was some “miracle of


nature” somewhere in the denseness of the Ekiti forests at a village called Ikogosi,


where cold and warm water springs out side by side from the ground into a running


stream; and her only claim to fame was that old high school of excellence — Christ


School, Ado-Ekiti — along with Ekiti’s renown as the land where every household has a


PhD holder! But, over the years, even those little graces had wilted and become virtually


the stuff of distant memories. Ekiti land, with all its vaunted brains, had proved not


immune to the malaise of a country gone to the dogs: although nature had remained


faithful with its ‘miracle’ warm spring at Ikogosi, the forest had reclaimed its own and it


would’ve taken a dare to venture there in a hurry (the way it was fun for me to do some


30 years or so ago). Christ School had become a sham, with neither ‘Christ’ nor ‘school’


in place. Gloom was evident all over the land, the roads were impassable, and even


Ado-Ekiti had become no more than a glorified village! In the few times I had strained to


be in Ekiti in the last 10 years — essentially for one ceremony or the other of friends like


the late Rufus Orisayomi and Akin Osuntokun — the experiences had been some ordeal.


But there was no mocking of Ekiti, the fate that befell her had befallen virtually the entire


old West. Successive governments had been preoccupied with the glamour and


self-opportunities of office. Lacking in depth, vision and commitment, governance was


essentially cosmetic and nothing beyond how to share the monthly dole from Abuja


between individual pockets and token gestures of attention to desolate infrastructure


within a governor’s very limited horizon. Everything was about politics — politics of the


stomach and of longevity in office. I was in Ado-Ekiti last week at the instance of


Governor Fayemi who rightly felt this old man has been unfair in not visiting Ekiti since


he became governor, even when we shared some common history in the struggle


against Gen. Sani Abacha and for the enthronement of democracy. Of course, Fayemi’s


antecedent and role far outstripped mine in those years — be it as the brain-box of Radio


Kudirat or as intellectual strategist for many global institutions and governments, having


himself acquired a doctorate in War Studies from the prestigious King’s College,


University of London. Accompanied by my barrister son, Kunle, and my friend from way


back in England, Taiwo Adedoyin, I was provided with a vehicle and guides (led by the


Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, ex-PUNCHer Yinka Oyebode) to tour the state and


go as I pleased. For hours and hours, we drove with our mouths drooping in amazement


at what we saw.


The renewal of the urbanity of Ado-Ekiti as the state capital was clearly evident: arterial


roads that had been half-heartedly begun by preceding governments have been


widened and dualized, with streetlights installed all along the median. As old roads are


being reconstructed and retarred to high standards, new ones are surfacing


everywhere; city center is buzzing with new energy — buildings wear new look, shops


and petty businesses are all over; new impressive structures are springing up; an


arcade here, a center there. But the development was not limited to the state capital. As


we drove for miles and miles, we were stunned to find dualised roads running for long


stretches and high-grade roads interconnecting most towns and villages. I learned other


governors wonder how Fayemi has been able to have so many roads done in just two


years! Our eyes connected with schools beckoning with renovated or new buildings


wearing bright new looks and we are told about 100 schools have already benefited in


the first phase and the exercise would continue until all public schools have been


restored to their old glory. However, even all would be nothing were they limited to


these externalities. Truly concerned about the rottenness of the education standard,


Fayemi has embarked on a holistic restructuring and restitution of education in the state:


re-equipping the schools with appropriate furniture and sporting equipment, and


starting the teachers on a whole range of training and retraining after the discovery that


a scandalous less than 10 per cent of teachers in the state primary schools could pass a


primary four exam! At secondary school level, Fayemi has done something


unprecedented, perhaps in the entire country. He has provided customized and solar-


powered laptops to about 30,000 pupils and 18,000 teachers. The stunning achievement


has encouraged the manufacturers of the computers — Samsung — to set up a computer


engineering centre in Ado-Ekiti that would be a manpower training and development


centre and assembly workshop for their computers! The buildings’ foundations have


been laid and work is going on apace. It is difficult, nay impossible, to write all there is to


write about what Fayemi has done or is geared to doing in Ekiti State in just a


thousand-word column. And yet, it is important to let the world know about every aspect


of this amazingly resourceful and talented (genius, I’d say) governor’s program in


their uniqueness and developmental pace. His style of government is similar to that of


Fashola of Lagos State in intellectualism, seriousness and time management, shorn of


frivolities and giving no room to entertaining jesters and debilitating stream of unhelpful


visitors. And similar to that of


Osun’s Aregbesola and Edo’s Oshiomhole in pace and vision. Fayemi pioneered a Social


Security Program for the aged, paying a monthly stipend of


N5,000 to all registered elderly people and provides free medical services for children,


pregnant women and the aged. His investment program spans agriculture and


industry. The moribund Ire Bricks Factory and Odua Enterprise Centre have been


resuscitated. More spectacularly, he is developing a ‘tourism corridor’ around the


Ikogosi Warm Spring, which is already redeveloped with villa chalets and an


amphitheatre outsourced to a top South African tourism company, to include vast


stretches of game reserve, Disneyland type of amusement complexes, etc. To be honest,


I do not know and cannot even imagine how this guy does it. He says he has managed to


raise the state’s IGR from a paltry N109m to N600m monthly, mainly by blocking existing


loopholes in the tax collection and management systems. Above all, I think what stands


Fayemi in good stead are his frugality, integrity, intellectual base, and his vast


international connections and credibility, all of which have been deployed in the race to


making Ekiti a positive example in Nigeria, nay Africa. If I sound like I’ve been paid to be


Fayemi’s megaphone, I apologize; but I challenge the reader to go there and come out


sounding different!

 

By Tunde Fagbenle


 

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