Opinion
MIMIKO: THE PENKELEMESI AND CHICHIDODO AFFAIRS
Published
2 years agoon
By
admin
Sola Ajisafe, Esq
I wish Governor Olusegun Mimiko had remained in his party, the PDP with his “Gbasibe gang”, to support the candidate of his party, maybe our Governor would have known the true position of where our party the APC is headed or the political muscle that still remains in Mimiko’s chest. I wish Mimiko has some historical understanding of the ” Asiwaju Tinubu Company Ltd” called APC, maybe he would have stayed in his corner and wait for favour somewhere.
This political machine honed in Bourdillon is the most delicately fastidious but complex political machine that ever existed in the anal of Nigerian political history.
Finally, I wished Aketi were to be alive, the doors to a Rahman Mimiko coming to APC would have been an “impossicant” of impossibility. It would have been nerve wrecking. The current APC in Ondo State is an admixture of the Adefarati and Agagu political house hold. Both were dealt death blows by Mimiko. I wished Mr Governor understands this and do not allow Mimiko to come and profit from their political suffering and not allow him to dance on the grave of Aketi his childhood friend. Historically, Mimiko betrayed the trio. That is the truth simplicita!
In our own very eyes, someone of Iroko calibre has gone to unlikely places to bite the political dust. But like it is said ” if wishes were horses…”. Yet what do I know? Nothing.
What is happening in our own very eyes is the epic centre of political radarada or rederede(ism). (Apology to Zadok Akintoye). More than the vacuous and void sensational noise ” We have joined the APC”, I do not see what Mimiko and his gang are bringing to the APC that can add anything to what Ayedatiwa already has to make him to win or make him loose the November 16, 2024 election. The optics are high and the momentum is on his side. What on earth does he want with this Mimiko thing? Again, what do I know? Nothing still.
As far as I know, the best of Mimiko is gone past except we want to deceive ourselves or we like to ” pe were l’oko iyawo…”. Mimiko and his gang are just hungry hyenas looking for political rehabilitation.
Let’s start from Ondo town of (Ondo West and Ondo East). There are new entrants in the political landscape of those places. How would a Hon. Makinde, ranking MHR, who worsted Mimiko severally on elections or the suave and monied Dr. Jibayo Adeyeye allow Mimiko to take over Ondo political space from them. Despite the known and brewing see-saw between them, they still have the capacity to hold the forth for Aiyedatiwa. Also, I cannot imagine who will convince the affable and committed progressive, Lola Fagbemi to bow and take directives or direction from Mimiko’s invading gang. Even the witches and wizards of Ondo Kingdom would protest heavily on the part of Fagbemi a political warlord who stood against Mimiko when he was even a Governor.
This story as told above is reminiscent of the entire Ondo State. More particularly, the rumbles caused in PDP during his invasion from Labour Party is now been transposed and transported with Dangote trailers to our beloved party, the APC. For better understanding, there are many people in APC from PDP today who cannot stand Mimiko no matter what. Most of those who initially left PDP for APC were the core supporters of the respected Dr. Olusegun Agagu. To house them in the same roof is calling for an Iran v Iraq war. The “Konigba v Gbasibe transfigured to the Mimiko v Jegede war will continue to sprout. Why should APC be the dumping ground of such insanity? I do not understand.
Methinks, Mr Governor should have allowed Mimiko to stay in PDP and play the “Wicked Wike” principle, rather than come to APC to foul an already fouled political environment.
I have had discussions with many people who were first eleven of Mimiko before but who felt his leadership is skewed towards self alone and would rather remain free because only a foolish woman follows a man to bed twice under a tree. Few days ago, my friend and brother the highly resourceful Dayo Awude was unveiled as the Deputy to Mr Sola Ebiseni another Mimiko man Friday as candidates of the abandoned political shop of Mimiko in the Labour Party. How Dayo Awude found himself in such miasma with Sola Ebiseni my big Egbon (who has become so politically confused as his principal Mimiko despite his intellectual and political sagacity) is still strange to me. I have not found the spirit to call Awude for our usual deep intellectual engagements. Neither have I found Rotimi Ogunleye ( Olembe) our common friend available to discuss the issue.
I have heard people say Mimiko is in APC because of Asiwaju’s second term and I say nothing can be more far from the truth. Mimiko is no man’s friend when it comes to power and it’s acquisition. Anything that is not in favour of Mr. Abayomi Rahman is a no brainer. We have tested this template and we can see that the man has no standard practice except that which satisfies Mr Mimiko and his political interest. For instance, would it not have been more profitable to ask Gboye Adegbenro to vie for the Senate in 2019 rather than sending him on a goose chase for Governorship under another party while he went for the Senate which he lost woefully? Dr. Mimiko’s blood brother is the proud inheritor of another Mimiko abandoned political shop called Zenith Labour Party. Only a man of divergent and atrophied political views abandons his own ship and run to another mans ship even when there is no tempest. Such men are politically dangerous.
For me, Mr Governor would have had more peace and political mileage in all local governments in the coming election than this self inflicted burden he has brought on his shoulders. I do not doubt the reverence given to the former Governor but in actual fact, he does not command much political relevance or capacity as it is been viewed. The era of the ” capacity leader” Iroko …Gbasibe is gone and gone for good. A leader that cannot carry his followers along is not a true leader. This is a hard tale to tell or a naughty fact to accept especially for roadside analysts. Politics as I know it is a rolling stone that gathers no moist. The continuous political indecision and rigmarole embarked upon by the once revered Iroko has affected his committed and dutiful followers. He no longer has the wherewithal, financially or influence or that special political effect that used to mesmerize people. In the course of this political ” kurukere movement” he has lost many of his committed followers. Those that are still following him are those whose ambitions are intricately tied to him.
For instance, nothing can bring Akogun Tokunbo Modupe (TPT) from Ose Local government back to the hubris of continuous political voyage. Who would price him away from Jegede or make Akinmade abandon Dapo Abiodun of Ogun State and follow Mimiko now. Where is our mother the political Amazon of Akoko land, Oloye Olasinnmi Odunmbaku ( Mama Eto). While they still respect him, many of them are embarrassed and can no longer do this kitikiti kitakita dance. Hence, the lines has broken the house no longer stands again. It has fallen. All that remains are remants of old, grumpy and tired legs. They can no longer dance the political Gwo Gwo Ngwo dance anymore.
Let us take Akoko South West where I come from for instance. Today, we have Baba Ali Olanusi former deputy Governor to Mimiko as the leader of the party followed by a core Agagu loyalist in Rt Hon. Victor Olabintan, former Speaker of the Ondo State House of Assembly and the respected Olajide Ajana, SAN, former SSG and former AGCJ, Ondo State to live in communality with Mimiko and his terse supporters in Akoko South West. Historically, there exist a strong political dissonance among them.
Those who are Mimiko men in Akoko South West like Rt Hon.Dare Emiola, former Deputy Speaker, Ondo State House of Assembly, Hon Abiodun Ogunbi( Onireason) former Member ODHA, Hon. Yinka Alabi former Commissioner, Women Affairs and many more have bested Mimiko to the tape of APC, they cannot abandon their tracks to return to him. The father.of them all, Col Omowa is the grandfather of PDP in Akoko, great grandfather of the party in Akoko South West and the Lord of the party in Oka Akoko. Nothing can make him toe the line of Mimiko to APC.
I look at other Akoko towns where people like like Rt Hon Fatai Aburumaku who has been in APC and worked with Aketi and transfered his love to Wale Akinterinwa (WA) holds court. What of Hon Araoyinbo, former Majority Leader ODHA. Can they ever go back to Mimiko? Prince Solagbade Amodeni is an institution in Akoko South East politics and by extension Akoko land. A highly independent minded politician of no mean status. If my learned brother and friend Tunde Atere joins today, what will he do to take Ipesi from Amodeni or Akoko South East from those currently calling the shots there? For instance, Babatunde Kolawole ( Amaechi) and Young Alhaji, the current MHA? He will have to live with the reality of current political exigency. Remember no politician likes that.
I make bold to say that in my Ward in Akoko South West, Mimiko has no follower and I do not see him having anyone in the foreseeable future. The time has really changed.
The new normal now is that many things have changed from the period of Irokoooooo…Gbasibeeeeeeee!!! which used to be the sing song then. Many politicians cannot forget or forgive him for the betrayal of trying to impose Jegede, SAN on the rest of the State immediately after his tenure as Governor. That single act is a dark mark on the political landscape of the gentleman and well loved Eyitayo Jegede. It is still haunting the innocent man who would have been the greatest passport for Akure political renaissance. Whatever will become of his political fate now is in the hand of God. What a lost opportunity.
I believe and I know that this Mimiko’s kiti kiti -kitikiti- kirakita kirakita has not come to an end. I don’t know what he is seeing and those who are encouraging him to continue in this Barber’s Chair political rigmarole. If he has his eyes on the Senate in the Central Senatorial district, Akure people will not let go. If he wants a Ministerial appointment, Tinubu will be wiser this time. If he wants to fix his people that he is bringing from political doldrum to the limelight under Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa, he should know that Lucky has learnt some political lessons and is prepared for any “audio poli-poli” from him.
I posit very strongly that not much will be associated or conceded or attributed to Mimiko in APC for this election no matter how he try. For all I care, he has entered a political “one chance”. He would not find it easy politically no matter how he tried.
For instance, let me see what Dr. Gboye Adegbenro will do in a political conscious environment like Ifedore or Dr Ademujimi in an extreme politically charged and volatile environment like Idanre. Unlike the election of Agagu in 2003 when Mimiko betrayed baba Adefarati, and he was compensated, no one will give him any medal if eventually Lucky wins in November.
My advise to Mr Governor is to look at history and watch his steps with Mr. Mimiko. In dinning with the devil politically you don’t need a long spoon anymore. You need a spear or a bareta pistol or AK-47. I agree he may bring some ” efisi” into the campaign (party) but leopards do not change their spots. Whatever previous additions he had given you prior to this period, you have given him equal measure of compensation. So, do not allow him to make a ” rough-a-thon” of your political efforts and those of committed members of our party that have given their all to you these past few months. If eventually you will in November, any ascription to Mimiko will be an unfair and unjust treatment of your committed party members and the people of Ondo State who truly loves you. Remember you would not have become a governor if Mimiko had succeeded in the last election.with his plan with Hon. Agboola Ajayi.
Again, personally, I do not trust this Mimiko invasion. I see it as a poisoned chalice from a Machevalian politician backed by a set of hungry and dire devil politically embarrassed and desperate set of politicians. I do not know their plan but I suspect they have a hidden agenda that may not be in the interest of our party now or in the nearest future. I would have preferred you gather together members of APC and appeal to the voting mass of the people of Ondo State rather than this road to nowhere.
I just hope, I am wrong whether for this election or for the peace of our party in days to come.
Anyway, I write this history in a hurry for posterity.
Sola Ajisafe, is an Akure based lawyer and journalist. He is a strong member of the APC.
Opinion
President Tinubu at Three: Advancing skills development, strengthening TVET and building a globally competitive Nigeria
Published
1 month agoon
May 30, 2026By
admin
As President Bola Ahmed Tinubu marks his third year in office, Whitecloud TVET Solutions Limited joins millions of Nigerians in reflecting on the progress made in critical sectors that drive national growth, particularly Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET), skills development, and human capital advancement.
Over the past three years, the administration has demonstrated a growing commitment to repositioning skills acquisition as a cornerstone of economic development, youth empowerment, job creation, and national productivity. At a time when nations across the world are investing heavily in human capital, Nigeria has continued to take strategic steps toward equipping its citizens with practical, industry-relevant skills needed to thrive in the modern economy.
One of the most remarkable developments within the nation’s skills ecosystem has been the increasing attention given to Technical and Vocational Education and Training. Through policy reforms, stakeholder engagements, and institutional support, TVET is gradually gaining the recognition it deserves as a vital pathway to employment, entrepreneurship, innovation, and sustainable development.
Particularly commendable is Nigeria’s growing engagement with WorldSkills International, the global movement dedicated to promoting excellence in vocational, technological, and technical skills. Nigeria’s participation in the WorldSkills community represents a significant milestone in the nation’s journey toward global competitiveness.
Beyond membership, it opens opportunities for Nigerian youths to benchmark their competencies against international standards, participate in global skills competitions, foster innovation, and showcase the immense talent and potential that exists within the country.
WorldSkills serves as a platform where nations prepare their workforce for the future, and Nigeria’s involvement reflects a deliberate commitment to producing a generation of highly skilled professionals capable of competing and excelling on the world stage.
This achievement aligns with the broader vision of creating a workforce that is not only employable but also globally relevant.
We also acknowledge the efforts of the Federal Ministry of Education in driving reforms within the TVET sector. The establishment of strategic committees and frameworks under the leadership of the Federal Ministry of Education under the leadership of the Honourable Minister of Education, Dr Maruf Olatunji Alausa has further strengthened coordination, stakeholder engagement, and implementation of policies aimed at transforming skills development across the country.
Equally worthy of recognition is the pivotal role being played by the Industrial Training Fund (ITF) under the leadership of its Director-General, Dr. Afiz Oluwatoyin Ogun. Through various initiatives focused on vocational training, apprenticeship development, workforce readiness, and industry-driven capacity building, the ITF has continued to bridge the gap between education and industry while supporting the Federal Government’s vision of building a skilled and productive workforce.
The renewed emphasis on practical skills acquisition, digital competencies, entrepreneurship, and industry partnerships has created new opportunities for young Nigerians to acquire relevant knowledge and become active contributors to the nation’s economic transformation.
As a leading organization committed to skills development and technical education, Whitecloud TVET Solutions Limited recognizes these achievements as important building blocks toward a more prosperous and self-reliant Nigeria. We remain committed to supporting government efforts, collaborating with industry stakeholders, and providing world-class training that equips Nigerians with the competencies required for success in today’s rapidly evolving world.
As President Bola Ahmed Tinubu celebrates three years of leadership, we congratulate him on the progress recorded in advancing skills development, strengthening technical education, and laying the foundation for a more competitive and economically resilient nation.
We also commend all stakeholders, institutions, development partners, and industry leaders who continue to contribute to the growth of Nigeria’s TVET and skills ecosystem.
Together, we can build a nation where skills drive prosperity, innovation fuels growth, and every Nigerian has the opportunity to realize their full potential.
Congratulations, Mr. President, on three years of purposeful leadership and commitment to national development.
Signed
Mr. Jasper Oluranti Netufo
Chairman/CEO
Whitecloud TVET Solutions Limited
Opinion
The Shame of Afe Babalola Way: Why Ekiti and Abuja Must Fix This Road Now
Published
1 month agoon
May 28, 2026By
admin
By Sola Ajisafe, Esq
I was at Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti, yesterday for an important function. I felt proud of what one man can do, and angry at what government has failed to do.
The Ado/Ijan Road, now known as “Afe Babalola Way,” is an eyesore. It serves a Federal Polytechnic, a world-class private university, the Ekiti Golf Club, an agricultural settlement, and multiple government establishments. Yet neither the Federal Government nor the Ekiti State Government has treated it as a priority. For 16 years since ABUAD was established, this critical corridor has been left to rot. This is not just bad infrastructure. It is ingratitude.
Chief Afe Babalola, SAN, is Ekiti’s most significant living contribution to Nigeria and the world. A local boy who conquered the legal profession and was recognized by leaders, including Queen Elizabeth II. At 97, he has built what no government in Nigeria has matched.
Over the past sixteen years, he has created employment and opportunity on a scale that rivals the state itself. ABUAD currently employs more than 2,500 academic and non-academic staff, with over 5,000 additional support staff working as cleaners, artisans, drivers, farm hands, and others. That employment base has turned the institution into one of the largest private employers in Ekiti.
The university’s impact has not gone unnoticed. It has been ranked No. 1 in Nigeria by Times Higher Education for four consecutive years, 2022 to 2025, No. 3 in Africa, and No. 84 globally on impact ratings. Those rankings reflect not just academic output but the university’s role in advancing healthcare, research, and community development.
In healthcare, ABUAD operates a Multi-system Hospital ( AMSH) that has become a referral center for the country. The hospital runs an MRI unit, CT-Scanners, Digital X-Ray machines, 17 dialysis machines, and has performed over 400 dialysis procedures. Just two weeks ago, more renal transplants were successfully performed to make a total of 50 renal transplants carried out without complications for donors or recipients in ABUAD. The center also performs cardio-thoracic surgeries and runs an IVF clinic.
Beyond the hospital, Chief Afe Babalola established the Afe Abiye free antenatal program for women in Ekiti State, a model similar to Ondo’s Mother and Child scheme, ensuring that thousands of women receive care without cost. He also established two hospital annexes at Odo Ado( Girigiri) and Basiri all within Ado Ekiti.
His philanthropic contributions to Federal Polytechnic, Ado Ekiti and Ekiti State University coupled with yearly empowerment programmes for Ekiti State farmers, traders, artisans and scholarships for students are monumental.
Where government infrastructure has failed, ABUAD stepped in. The university runs an independent power plant not connected to the national grid, and a private dam that meets the water needs of the university and its farm. It also operates an industrial park with space for 126 factories, and a fully integrated farm that produces vegetables, fruits such as pepper, mangoes, papaya and tomatoes, livestock including birds, fish and other animals, and processed products like flour, cassava, plantain, rice, pepper, and cashew nuts for local consumption and export. The farm even has its own feed mill for livestock, and the institution is involved in recycling to sustain its operations.
The economic multiplier effect is evident. ABUAD attracts students from all 36 states and the FCT, as well as from countries including the US, China, and across Africa. To further open up the State, Chief Afe Babalola personally contributed N2 billion for landing equipment at the newly established Ekiti Cargo Airport and N450 million for the construction of its current car park.
This is what one man did for Ekiti without waiting for Abuja or Ado Ekiti. He even provided his house as the take-off administrative office for the State university at inception.
And what did Ekiti and the Federal Government do in return? They left the road to his university unmotorable.
Governor Biodun Oyebanji is widely regarded as an Omoluabi. Unlike two of his predecessors, he has publicly shown respect for Chief Afe Babalola, prostrating for him in line with Yoruba ethos. But respect without action is empty. Governor Oyebanji recently delivered a lecture at ABUAD, yet avoided the Ado/Ijan Road entirely and came through the bypass. That tells you everything.
President Bola Tinubu is an alumnus of ABUAD, having received an honorary doctorate from the university. The Federal Ministry of Works claimed to have awarded the road two years ago, then passed it to FERMA. Since then, silence. Nothing has been done.
So I ask; How does a country honor its heroes while they are alive? The best gift Ekiti State and the Federal Government can give Chief Afe Babalola at almost a century is not another plaque or title. It is to fix the 8.5km road that bears his name so he can drive on it, and so the students, patients, staff, and investors who keep ABUAD running don’t destroy their vehicles and waste their lives in traffic and dust.
Anything short of immediate resumption and completion of work on this road is a dent on Governor Oyebanji and Minister David Umahi. It tells the world that Nigeria celebrates its builders only in speeches, not in deeds.
Ekiti opened its doors to the world because of ABUAD. The least the world can expect in return is a road that works.
Fix Afe Babalola Way. Now. While the man can still see it.
Oloroogun Sola Ajisafe, Lawyer/Journalist. He is from Oka Akoko, lives and practices law in Akure, Ondo State.
Opinion
Hisbah, Alcohol, VAT: An Unpopular Opinion
Published
3 months agoon
March 30, 2026By
admin
Bamidele Johnson
VAT does not know who drinks what. Every time news breaks of Hisbah, Kano State’s moral police, smashing bottles of beer, millions of people, mostly in the South, erupt in rage.
Band A rage, that is. Most of the anger, I believe, is expressed by people who identify as Christians and who see the Muslim North as bad news.
The comment sections, especially on Facebook, burn hottest. The question that comes up again and again is why should states that ban the consumption of alcohol receive VAT from alcohol? I used to think this was a clever gotcha, but I no longer do. The argument rests on a moral instinct that feels good but dissipates in the face of law, economics, or basic fairness.
The claim is simple. If some states ban alcohol and even use religious agencies to seize or destroy it, they should not benefit from VAT generated from alcohol produced elsewhere. It sounds like justice. It is not. It is fiscal confusion. I do not expect this view to be popular with the permanently enraged.
VAT is not a prize awarded to states that host certain industries, but a national consumption tax collected by the Federal Government and shared using agreed constitutional formula.
Once collected, the money loses memory of its origin. It stops being alcohol VAT, gambling VAT, pork VAT, nightclub VAT or interest-based banking VAT. It is just VAT.
This debate is often framed as entitlement. If you ban alcohol, you should not “chop” alcohol money. I do not think states with Hisbah and other agencies that convulse at the thought of liquor are taking alcohol money. What they receive are statutory allocations from a common pool to which all parts of the federation contribute in different ways.
No state earns VAT by permission. None. Every state receives VAT by membership; because Nigeria exists as one fiscal unit.
There is also the small matter of selective memory. If moral purity is the standard, alcohol cannot be the only issue. VAT also comes from gambling, interest-based banking, insurance tied to interest and uncertainty, pork-based food items, nightclubs, adult entertainment, lottery and media content that would give religious leaders across faiths fits.
Southern states do not reject VAT because some of it comes from predatory loans, betting apps, pornography-adjacent entertainment or music and films churches regularly denounce. Moral filtering becomes impossible once the lens widens.
The argument also ignores economic reality. Citizens of states with alcohol aversion and moral police pay VAT outside their states every day. They travel, trade, bank, rent homes, insure assets, borrow money and work across Nigeria.
VAT is paid at the point of consumption, not at that of belief. A trader buying goods in Onitsha or a traveller spending in Lagos pays VAT regardless of what their home state bans. To deny their states a share is to believe that the economy stops at state boundaries.
The noise around Hisbah and smashed beer bottles, while emotionally powerful, is a distraction. Destroying alcohol within a state is an internal regulatory choice that has nothing to do with national revenue sharing.
A state can ban an activity locally without losing access to federal resources generated nationally. There is also an uncomfortable undertone that deserves honesty.
The Southern position suggests that religious difference should determine fiscal worth and that some Nigerians deserve less because their moral codes are stricter or simply different. Once accepted, that idea does not stop at alcohol. It starts asking who truly belongs and on what moral terms. That is no fiscal argument.
If we believe Nigeria should abandon pooled revenue and adopt strict derivation, the honest path is to argue for full constitutional restructuring and fiscal federalism across all sectors.
It is weak to single out alcohol and gambling as a special moral exception while enjoying the same system everywhere else.
VAT is not a moral endorsement of how other Nigerians live. It is the price of sharing a country. Sharing a country means no group gets to redesign the national revenue framework in the image of its own theology after the money has already been collected.
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