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Fayose Don Go The Dariye/alamco Way - Politics - Nairaland

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Fayose Don Go The Dariye/alamco Way by lewa(m): 2:09am On Oct 16, 2006
Seem as if egbon Ayo don abscond,thereby affirming the Alamco/Dariye
Principle.See www.punchontheweb.com.I only hope it's not true grin
Re: Fayose Don Go The Dariye/alamco Way by Odeku(m): 2:53am On Oct 16, 2006
Only in Nigeria. How can a governor disappear? what about his family? my opinion if indeed he abscond. arrest all his immediate family members and keep them under house arrest including his children that will force this criminal to come back. blood is thicker than water.
Re: Fayose Don Go The Dariye/alamco Way by akintoso1(m): 11:07pm On Oct 16, 2006
Home Page THE BEST OF PUNCH TODAY Punch Search E-Punch



Fayose escapes to Ghana
By Semiu Okanlawon, Femi Makinde and Olamilekan Lartey
Published: Monday, 16 Oct 2006
There were indications late on Sunday that the Ekiti State Governor, Mr. Ayo Fayose, had escaped to Ghana.

Skip to next paragraph

Our Correspondent
Embattled Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose

Reports available to our correspondents at about 10pm indicated that the embattled governor left home in the state capital at about 10.30am, on the pretext that he was going to church.

He thereafter reportedly drove himself to Ibadan, where he beat the security trail and was assisted by aides to flee the country.

A top security source said when the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Sunday Ehindero, was informed of the governor’s frantic movements earlier in the week, he said that he (Fayose) could not be apprehended since he had constitutional immunity.

Throughout Sunday, Fayose could not be reached on his mobile phones, neither could he be located in Ekiti.

Also, a source said that none of his top aides, including the Deputy Governor, Mrs. Biodun Olujimi, knew of his whereabouts.

Fayose‘s disappearance coincided with the deployment of more riot policemen and Armoured Personnel Carriers in the state capital, Ado-Ekiti, ahead of Monday‘s (today) presentation of the report of the second panel that probed allegations of corruption against the governor to the state House of Assembly.

It was also on a day when three of his aides were arrested by security agents.

Sources said the suspicion was that Fayose dropped his resignation letter before departing the state.

It was gathered that most of his top aides had advised him to resign in order to get a soft landing for himself since it was obvious that the Presidency had declared support for his removal.

It was learnt that the governor left the state at about midday on Sunday, after the deployment of more riot policemen in the state capital.

One of his aides, who spoke with our correspondent on condition of anonymity, said that after policemen stopped a function that he was supposed to attend, it became clear to him that his best bet was to resign.

Some of such functions were a rally at the Fajuyi Park, Ado Ekiti, and a town meeting where he was to address his supporters.

It was gathered that after a few calls to some top government functionaries between 11am and 1pm, which did not give him the assurance that the situation could be brought under control, Fayose decided to leave Ekiti State.

He was said to have told his aides that he was going for a church service.

When our correspondents visited the Government House, there was no sign that he was around.

But at about 6pm, Olujimi was sighted in her official residence.

Sources said she had just returned from a burial ceremony in her hometown.

But our correspondents learnt that some people in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, sighted Fayose.

He has a personal house in Ibadan,

In fact, unconfirmed reports said that men of the State Security Service traced Fayose to Ibadan where he was suspected to have taken refuge.

But another source said that at about 3pm on Sunday, he was sighted in Saki, a border town in Oyo State.

The bizarre circumstances leading to Fayose’s escape fuelled speculations that there might have been official complicity.

A source said, “It is simply a joke to say that the SSS cannot find the governor.

“He has been under surveillance for over two weeks and those in charge should stop pretending that they are looking for him.

“It’s another Charles Taylor case. Simple.”

It is believed that Fayose‘s escape could have been aided to shield him from prosecution for the murder of a Peoples Democratic Party governorship aspirant in Ekiti State, Dr. Ayo Daramola, and killings that occurred in Ekiti State since he came to power in May 2003.

However, a governorship aspirant in the state, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, said people should not be too sure that Fayose had truly disappeared.

Fayemi said Fayose was capable of playing pranks.

He said, ”Yes, what we have heard is that the man has disappeared.

”They cannot find him at the Government House; they cannot find him at the Governor‘s Office.

”But you cannot be too sure that the man has disappeared because the man can emerge tomorrow to claim another glory from speculations that he has disappeared.”

Fayose‘s Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Idowu Adelusi, however, debunked the claim that his boss had fled the state.

Adelusi said, ”Fayose is in the state.

”There is no cause for him to run away.

”Why? He is not a criminal.

”What is going on in Ekiti borders on legality versus illegality.

”It‘s no longer Fayose.

”If we allow illegality to prevail, good luck to Nigeria.

”Nigerians need not weep for the governor, they should weep for our country.

”But I can assure you that Fayose will come out victorious.”

The governor‘s aides allegedly arrested on Sunday were a lecturer at the University of Ado-Ekiti and a member of his kitchen cabinet, Mr. Bosun Osaloni; Layo Olowokere; and T.K.O. Aluko.

It was gathered that the aides, who were picked up in Ado-Ekiti, are being held by the SSS.

Fayose‘s celebration of his clearance by the Remi Bamigboye-led panel was cut short on Saturday following reports that another panel headed by Mr. Emmanuel Omotosho had found him guilty of official misconduct.

Olujimi was also reportedly indicted by the report of the Omotosho-led panel.

Both of them are expected to be sacked from office on Monday (today) after the report of the panel has been presented to the House of Assembly.

Ahead of the presentation of the report, security was tightened in Ado-Ekiti on Sunday.

The Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Zone 8, Mr. Ade Ajakaiye, was sighted in the state capital a few hours after an APC and truckloads of riot policemen were deployed in Ado-Ekiti.

Among the places with a heavy presence of armed policemen were the main gates to the Government House; the Trade Fair Complex; the palace of the Ewi of Ado Ekiti, Oba Rufus Adejuyigbe; the major roads leading to the old Governor‘s Office; the state Assembly complex; and the Akure-Ado-Ekiti Road.

Later, our correspondents sighted Ajakaiye, in company with the Commissioner of Police, Ekiti State Command, Mrs. Uche Okoronkwo, briefing the detachment of policemen at the Assembly complex.

The riot policemen screened vehicles and their occupants entering Ado-Ekiti.
Re: Fayose Don Go The Dariye/alamco Way by blackhope: 2:19pm On Nov 24, 2006
See below URL for a NY times story about Kayode Fayemi.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/24/world/africa/24nigeria.html

ADO EKITI, Nigeria — Early one Sunday morning in June, a mysterious text message flashed across Kayode Fayemi’s cellphone.
Skip to next paragraph
Multimedia
Transforming NigeriaVideo
Transforming Nigeria
The New York Times

At local levels, in cities like Ado Ekiti, democracy is in trouble.

“Since you continue to oppose Governor Fayose, we shall kill you,” the message read, referring to the bare-knuckled incumbent at the time, Ayo Fayose. It was signed, “THE FAYOSE M SQUAD.”

Mr. Fayemi, a candidate for governor in this tiny state in southwest Nigeria, tried to brush off the threat. But if there was any doubt what the M in the message stood for, it evaporated six weeks later, when another candidate for governor, a World Bank consultant, was stabbed and bludgeoned to death in his bed.

So lucrative is public office here that even in a backwater like Ekiti, a state of only 2 million people in a nation of 130 million, the state house and the spoils that come with it are apparently worth killing for. Of Nigeria’s 36 governors, 31 are under federal investigation, mostly on suspicion of corruption, and 5 have already been impeached, including Mr. Fayose in October. He is now in hiding.

“This is democracy at work in Nigeria,” Mr. Fayemi muttered as he drove between campaign stops in Ekiti in early November. “Murder and money, violence and fraud.”

It has been seven boisterous years since Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and an anchor for the entire region, shed its military rule and ostensibly became a democracy. But the transformation has been slow and stumbling, hobbled by a political culture of graft and intimidation that has led to widespread neglect and disillusionment.

Despite some progress by the government of President Olusegun Obasanjo in fighting corruption and improving the economy, Nigerians are deeply disappointed with how their country has turned out. In 2000, suffused with the euphoria of new freedoms, 84 percent of Nigerians said they were satisfied with the state of their new democracy, according to the Afrobarometer public opinion survey. But six years later, the same survey found that just 25 percent of Nigerians felt that way.

New democracies naturally suffer from the letdown of high expectations, but the drop in Nigeria is virtually unparalleled on the continent. Of the 12 African countries surveyed in 2005, only Zimbabwe, which the Bush administration has called an “outpost of tyranny,” had a lower score.

“Confidence in the new democracy has crashed,” said Peter Lewis, director of the African Studies program at Johns Hopkins University, who was among the researchers who conducted the survey. “Nigerians expected a democratic dividend in 1999. They expected more economic opportunity and better governance.”

In small states like Ekiti, it is plain to see why confidence in democracy has fallen so far, so fast. Nowhere is Nigeria’s democracy in deeper trouble than at the state and local levels, where the most bruising contests for power take place in a bloody, winner-take-all system in which the voters are all but superfluous.

“Greedy politicians are literally killing their own people by stealing the money for health care, for schools, for clean water, for everything the state should provide its people,” said Sola Adeyeye, a member of Nigeria’s national assembly who once served as a local government chairman.

In April, Nigeria is to hold its next election, choosing a president, governors and legislators in its third contest since making the transition to civilian rule in 1999, after 16 years of military domination. Though the election is still months away, political chaos and electoral violence are already gripping the nation.

The main political parties hold primaries in December, and the ruling People’s Democratic Party may splinter over its nominee. The wave of impeachments has left statehouses in disarray and sparked violence that has killed dozens.

If Mr. Obasanjo, who is barred from running again by the Constitution, successfully passes the baton to an elected president next spring, it will be the first time this troubled giant of a nation has handed over power from one civilian government to another. That would cement its place in the growing family of democratic nations in Africa and further stabilize an uneasy corner of the globe.

But if the election fails — and there are indications that it might, given the political chaos, electoral violence and lagging voter registration — analysts worry that a number of grim possibilities could play out, including a military takeover that could steer the country back toward despotism.

Failure would have broad consequences. One in six Africans is Nigerian. Nigeria is the fifth largest supplier of oil to the United States. It is the economic, social and political fulcrum on which West Africa balances.
Re: Fayose Don Go The Dariye/alamco Way by Nickyspice(f): 9:54am On Jul 08, 2012
hmmm...may God help us! undecidedhmmm...may God help us!
Re: Fayose Don Go The Dariye/alamco Way by Lisa1: 10:31am On Jul 08, 2012

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