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Saturday 26 April 2014

Ekiti 2014: People’s might stronger than federal might —Fayemi

GOVERNOR Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State, who is the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), in this interview, speaks on his confidence as regards the forthcoming gubernatorial election in the state and other contemporary issues. Group Politics Editor, TAIWO ADISA, presents the excerpts:
 
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Vice President Namadi Sambo was quoted as saying recently that the Ekiti election would be a war front. Are you worried by this statement?
Quite frankly, my immediate reaction when I saw the statement from the vice president was disbelief until I eventually read it in about five newspapers and saw that the language was consistent and that the reports were similar in all the papers. He is someone I relate with very well. He and I are on the board of the NDPHC (Niger Delta Power Holding Company) and Nigeria Integrated Power Project (NIPP). He chairs the company and I represent the South-West in the company. And through that, we meet fairly regularly. He has every right to push for his party in any election. That is his legitimate right but to have said what the media reported is quite unfortunate because we are not at war in Ekiti. We have enjoyed three and a half years of peace – and we are one of the most peaceful states in the country today. So, to reduce the importance of his office and promote insecurity, either directly or by subterfuge, is quite unbecoming of a
person who occupies the number two position in the country.
There is a part of me that still wants to treat it with scepticism and I still would like to take it up with the vice president whenever I have the opportunity. I hope he will deny the report. But I do think the underlying implication of the purported statement should worry any decent Nigerian who is interested in credible elections, especially in the light of what recently happened at Ilaje-Ese Odo in Ondo State and the role played by a minister, which has been confirmed by the Resident Electoral Commissioner in that state. In a decent polity, the minister would have been asked to leave by now. If you do anything that flies flagrantly in the face of the law, the maximum weight of the law ought to be applied by INEC (Independent National Electoral Commission). The law is very clear on these matters and even the military is empowered to disobey manifestly unlawful orders. What happened in Ilaje-Ese Odo appears as a precursor of the plan to steal elections in Ekiti and Osun states. And INEC ought to be sending a very strong signal that the institution would not take kindly to unlawful interference in the electoral process. I can tell you that there is a lot of intelligence available to me about people sewing fake army and police uniforms in preparation for the Ekiti election and I hope INEC would be reassuring not just the Ekiti people but Nigerians because the election is even far more important than the 2015 election. If confidence is lost in INEC’s preparation and eventual prosecution of the election, it will rub off terribly on the 2015 election. I mean, INEC is already on the tenterhooks, given what happened in Anambra State. To then see Ekiti election going in the wrong direction would totally put paid to any hope on the part of Nigerians that anything good can come out of the 2015 elections and I don’t think President (Goodluck) Jonathan needs that. I think he has conveyed an image of himself as a decent politician who is not going to manipulate or resort to extra-legal or illegal ways in election management in the country. So, I think the INEC together with the Inter Agency Committee on Election Security will need to give Nigerians a lot of reassurance, following the vice president’s statement.
But perhaps out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaketh. I think it is very unfortunate. I think it is unbecoming of his office. And I think the vice president really ought to withdraw the statement and reassure Nigerians that the agenda for Ekiti election is not going to be determined in Aso Rock but by Ekiti people, because it is a referendum on the performance of the government in Ekiti; it is not a national election. It should not be expanded to a national election. But let me also say that whatever evil machinations are in place from Abuja, Ekiti people are fully ready.
What are your fears over the election, in view of that statement and the determination of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to recapture Ekiti?
This is Ekiti and people who are familiar with the history would know that this is not a very good place to rig election. You can afford to manipulate elections in Anambra because Anambra has a lot of people who are even richer than the governor and do not care too much about who governs the state. In Ekiti, you will discover that everybody is interested in what happens because we have a total of 2.5 million potential governors in the state. Every single indigene believes he has what it takes; that he understands government and knows how to govern. So, you can’t say such a person should not have an opinion on who governs. And every time an election was manipulated in Ekiti, the result had not been palatable.
Whether you refer to the 1964-65 wetie crisis, which eventually culminated in the 1966 coup d’état - Ekiti was a very strong zone of resistance and of course, when you talk of the 1983 election rigging in Ondo State, we all can remember what happened in Ekiti. And of course, my own recent experience has also demonstrated that our people are far too sensitive to allow external interference in their affairs. People will make all sorts of claims, they will do this, they will do that but the truth of the matter is even the PDP admits that this governor has done well but it is about gaining an inroad to the South-West by hook or crook. Unfortunately for them, the PDP had been in government here for seven and a half years and Ekiti people cannot forget in a hurry what they went through in those years. It was murder, mayhem and crises for the bulk of the period. And don’t forget that for those seven and a half years, there were six governors. So, it was instability galore. That is what would have to be placed side-by-side what happened in our time in office.
Federal might is always going to be a factor in any election, but I can assure you that the people’s might is bigger than federal might. So, we have nothing to fear. We are ready for the worst but light will overcome darkness.
What do you mean by the election being a referendum on your performance and are you sure you have done enough to guarantee yourself a second term?
First, what do I mean by that statement? An election is necessarily a referendum of what an incumbent has done or failed to do in the judgment of the electorate. Somebody running for the first time can only make promises and hope that the people will believe his promises. As an incumbent, I am running on the record of the public goods that I have delivered in every community and constituency. I have been on the campaign train for over three weeks now and every place I get to, the people are the ones who reel out what we have done in their communities. It is a much taller order for me in the sense that I must present tangible, palpable, verifiable evidence of what I have done. That is what I have to sell. And in addition to that, with the record that you know I have, I now want to do one, two, three and four things when I come back. So, it is a referendum on my performance. It may not be a referendum of the performance of my competitors. But even in the case of one of my competitors, the election is a referendum on who he was and what he did when he was in office. Even if he chooses not to talk about that, others would talk about his record in office. The record will be set straight.
To your second question, have I done enough to earn a second term? I ran in 2007 on a platform popularly known as the Roadmap to Ekiti Recovery – My Eight-Point Agenda. At the time, I was very specific about what I was going to do in office – as far back as 2006. When you talk about social security, if you read my inaugural speech, you will find social security benefit to the elderly there. If you read my inaugural speech, you will see laptop per child there. There is nothing that we have done in this state that we have not picked up from the eight-point agenda. And everyone who is objective can attest to the fulfillment of what we promised Ekiti people. And in the various communities that we are going to meet people, they speak to that. So, I think the answer to your question is yes. My performance has earned me a reason to believe that I would be re-elected. A dimension to this, today a result of one of the polls that we conducted at the various communities came to me – one woman they spoke to basically just said, ‘We like Fayemi. He has done very well. He has fulfilled all his promises. He has not done anything that we don’t like but the issue is that since he has already done everything he promised, he should allow another person come in.’ I found that very interesting. But the thing is that we have not actually done everything. There are areas where I would score myself 70 per cent or even 60 per cent. There are still some things to be done.
I think we have done reasonably well. Don’t forget that the state is number 35 on the revenue ladder of the country. People often forget that. And this is a state that gets N3 billion a month as against Bayelsa with a smaller population which gets N23 billion. So, I think it is important to put this in proper perspective. We run a social democratic agenda and it is a progressive government. You will see that in many of the policies that we put in place, we concentrate on how to pull up the weak and the vulnerable in our state.  Additionally, we have run a reasonably clean government.
So, I think we have done enough to earn a second term. But we are also not unaware that performance itself is not the only factor in an election but it is the most critical success factor for an incumbent.
There are some things you said about the disparity in the money you get from the Federation Account. With that being the case, are you comfortable with the current federal structure being practised in Nigeria?
We don’t operate a federal system in Nigeria. At best, we operate a distorted pseudo-federal system which does not operate coordinate powers among the federating units but a hierarchical, subordinate powers inherited from our military past. If we operate a federal system, then you will not have things like UBEC and TETFUND which give people the impression that states are beholden to the Federal Government, whereas it is the funds jointly owned in the Federation Account that is being shared. If we run a proper federal structure, you will not have us (in Ekiti) spending our meagre resources in sustaining the police – while we have no authority over its activities in the state unless our views coincide with or reinforce the instructions from Abuja. It is simply a distortion of federal system.
As for the disparities in earnings between Bayelsa, or Rivers and Ekiti, I do not have any problem with it. I am an advocate of fiscal federalism.
So, I do not necessarily have a problem with Rivers State, for instance, earning what comes from its soil. However, in order for us not to undermine the nation, for any federal system to work well, we often need equilibrating mechanisms, so that one side is not overwhelmingly rich and other sides of the federation so despicably poor. We have to find a mechanism to balance this and if you look at the Australian and the Canadian constitutions – even in the American constitution - you have these mechanisms there. We have them in ours as well but they are exercised in breach rather than in consistency with the law. So, I hope those who are working on this in the national conference will be able to come up with a federalism that is more cooperative than combative because states are being forced into a combative model. You have states like Ekiti where we have done several federal roads but are being owed billions. You also have other states that are being owed and have collected all they are being owed. So, you would ask yourself why that happens if there is justice, equity and fairness in our federal system.
A few days back, there were reports that the APC governors shunned a security meeting called by the President Jonathan on the grounds that they were not properly invited?
We didn’t say we were not properly invited. My brother, Governor Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State was the one, who said we were not invited. I don’t know what he was talking about. In any case, we have asked the chairman of the APC Governors to issue a statement. We were invited by the president. The usual text message was sent and signals also came as they normally do for such meetings. The APC governors were in Abuja on Tuesday night for our meeting and once we were in Imo State Lodge for the meeting at about 10.00 p.m., we got information that the security meeting had been stepped down. So, it wasn’t that we were not invited. We were invited and then notified of a postponement. It was a surprise to us that the meeting later held. Indeed, the following morning, we were in the hospitals to see victims of the Nyanya bombings. We were in Asokoro. We were also at the National Hospital before we all departed from Abuja since the meeting had been called off. So, I don’t know what Governor Akpabio meant by his statement that we were not invited. In any case, if this was a meeting about security, the APC states have been the most affected in the North-East and our interest should necessarily be keener than those non-APC states.
The state of emergency that was declared in the three APC states — Adamawa, Borno and Yobe — is due for a review. Are you bothered that the Federal Government may be considering an extension of the emergency rule?
Well, the attitude of the APC to the current state of emergency is that it has not produced the result that we would have loved to see. I don’t want to pre-judge what might happen.  In any case, there is a process for renewal of emergency rule in the constitution. I am sure the president will adhere strictly to the provisions of the law as far as this matter is concerned.
One of your programmes that the opposition has not really criticised is the digitalisation of your income. We want you to throw more light into it?
You are talking about the Integrated Payroll Biometric System. I don’t know if the opposition has not criticised it. When we started it, they called us all manner of names; that the agenda was to get rid of the civil servants, but eventually, you are right, they couldn’t criticise it because the civil servants and the teachers became champions of the electronic payment system and it has saved us a lot of money spent on ghost workers. We are now even trying to use the same system for our Citizen Identity Management System and our social security payment, which is still manual payment and there is still a level of inefficiency and waste that we have detected in the social security payment. But clearly, biometrics is the way to go. If you want to run an efficient government, technology has to play a major role. And that is how we have been able to reduce fraud in the system. We now save an average of N200 million.
Are you likely to pick another running mate?
You know what they say, if it is not broken, why fix it? The deputy governor has done very well. She did exceedingly well managing the state’s Universal Basic Education Board. My party has a position that the deputy must come from Ado-Ekiti and I cannot go against the position of the party on that. My late deputy was also from Ado-Ekiti as you know. So, we just replaced her with another Ado-Ekiti person who happens to be a direct descendant of the monarch here. But that is not what qualifies her for the job. She is more importantly a professor and expert in education administration.
When Governor Olusegun Mimiko was inaugurated for a second term, you were the only APC governor in attendance. What does that imply? Could that imply that after the election, you may also extend the hand of fellowship to both the governorship candidate of the Labour Party and PDP, Honourable Bamidele Opeyemi and Mr Ayodele Fayose, respectively?
If you know my politics, you will know that, that is not really exceptional. I’m very friendly with (erstwhile governor of Anambra State), Mr Peter Obi, but I went to campaign for my party’s candidate, Chris Ngige, in Anambra and I actually called Peter that I was in town to campaign for Ngige. Governor Mimiko is my egbon. I would like to think he is still my friend. For me, there is a whole world of difference between ideological affinity and friendship. I have many friends in the PDP. One of my closest friends was the PDP gubernatorial aspirant in Edo State before he eventually came back to us and became the Secretary to the State Government. Even when he was in the PDP and was working with President Obasanjo, this didn’t really affect our friendship. My politics is not politics of bitterness. Opeyemi used to be a good friend, I am sure you know. He chose to distance himself on account of his ambition and he has every right to be ambitious. Every human being should have ambition but that should not turn him into an enemy. He is, therefore, my opponent but he is not my enemy. Governor Fayose is my acquaintance and I am sure if you ask him, he would probably tell you the same. I may have my own issues with him, he probably has his own issues with me, but he is a former governor of this state and deserves to be respected. For me, I do not think anyone who occupies this seat should do anything to denigrate the office because there is a mystique around the office that we must all protect; whether you are a putative aspirant for the office or you are the occupant, you should not denigrate the position. And you are right, when election is over, governance begins and don’t be surprised, if there is any reason for us to come together in the ultimate best interest of Ekiti State and Ekiti people, I am going to solicit for their assistance and their wise counsel. Besides, Ekiti is unique; we are different from any other state. This is the only mono-ethnic place you can point to in Nigeria. Even Bayelsa still has strands but in Ekiti, we are one stock. We are the same people and we are probably all related in one form or the other in our various 132 communities. In politics, there are no permanent friends and no permanent opponents.
What will be the focus of your second term if you are re-elected?
Three things: agriculture, tourism and the knowledge economy. Let me explain what I mean by that. Clearly, I am not going to stop my focus on education but it is going to be narrowed into the creation of knowledge economy. We have a lot of focus on technological education, on vocational education, on ICT and the knowledge park that we are constructing. We have a 3,000-hectare Ekiti Knowledge Zone in the making. It is probably bigger than the Lekki Free Zone. It is going to be the base for education tourism, medical tourism and ICT outsourcing. We feel that is an area that can give us an edge. Agriculture is expanding and developing the food value chain. We will be focusing on cassava, the revival of our cocoa, rice and oil palm. On tourism, we feel that Ekiti can still be the best destination of choice – all of us talk about what has happened in Cross River but we still feel we are better placed than Cross River because that state is much more difficult to get to, particularly Obudu. It is much easier to get to Ikogosi than Obudu. And we are building Ikogosi into a tourism hub to serve our grand vision of making poverty history in our state. So, it is more of consolidation of what we have been doing. But it is going to be driven by how many jobs can be generated from these sectors. The focus is going to be largely on jobs.

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