
Oyo State has been very much in my mind this
week since I had an encounter with photos of the latest destination wedding
organised by the state governor, Abiola Ajimobi, for one of his daughters. It
appears the state has not been fortunate with the right kind of leadership
since the exit of the late Lam Adeshina. Don’t get me wrong, there are great
people in Oyo State, but I’m worried that the state under its present
leadership could make partying in Beirut, Lebanon, a serious affair than the
governance of the state. How can a governor whose state is struggling with
financial crisis dare to insult the sensibility of his people by going to do
offshore wedding for his daughter?
Just last week, Ajimobi admitted that his government
was in shambles financial wise. He admitted to the financial mess he’s sitting
on as a governor, when he told a presenter on a radio station that, “Next
(this) week, we should be able to access the Federal Government bailout of
N26.6bn. As of today, we owe the state workers N21.3bn but all we could get
from the bailout is N17.3bn. So if we get the money today, we will still have
to look for more money to balance the account so that all the debt can be paid.”
Ajimobi said government should take a sheer size
of the blame for the economic woes facing Nigeria. According to him, “We should
blame the culture of spending without saving, lifestyles of Nigerians,
ourselves and government for the position we find ourselves today. We have not
managed the economy well but government should take the larger blame. So much
money had been stolen.’’
Do you take Ajimobi serious, when he speaks? No. I
don’t. One follow-up question to his treatise on the bailout issue is: who
stole the money in Oyo State since Ajimobi only succeeded himself and not any
other person or party?
In the new arrangement, primary school pupils will
be paying N3,000 education development levy per session, which will be paid in
three installments of N1, 000 per term. This poor policy is Ajimobi’s response
to “abysmal academic performance” of students in Oyo State.
How do you respond to an outdated idea such as
this? Let’s look at the United States. That is a country that is far gone is
education policy. Primary and secondary education are not only free, children
equally enjoy free ride to and fro whenever school is in session. Only
recently, when the US government realised that people from certain race in the
country are not enrolling for college education as expected, it started to promote
the idea of free education up to the first two years of college (university).
The Oyo State example is a bad example for governance in south-west Nigeria. And that idea that development levy should be paid
for students to be serious with their education is obviously for lack of ideas.
What happened to the taxes being paid by the residents? Any state government
that knows its onions must be creative about how to fund elementary and
secondary education, if such state must be ranked high in development.
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