Sina ODUNTAN
I don’t think I can do
this much longer: it is too dispiriting, too confusing, and lacking in altruistic.
When I crack my brain for ways to understanding this clueless, lackadaisical,
and inept government of Prince Dapo Abiodun in Ogun State I get short-circuited
as to the direction of his government. It is all motions heading to nowhere.
Dapo Abiodun administration has the penchant to traveling in obscurity and
pernicious recalcitrance. And each time Dapo Abiodun’s lackluster regime gazumps
me by doing something so fabulously absurd that any attempt at satire is
rendered otiose.
What could it be said
of the recent cacophony between the President’s order for lockdown and Dapo
Abiodun’s counter orders? It’s like Governor Abiodun was in competition with
President Mohammed Buhari. I saw the State government enmeshed in its own diabolic
approach to governance.
Without going through so
many sins and ineptitude of the incumbent administration in Ogun State two
incidents occurred consecutively within last week that suggest that the
governor was trying to assert his authority and power over Ogun State.
Unfortunately, it is needless. On Sunday night, March 29, President Mohammed
Buhari addressed the nation over the Coronavirus pandemic, a speech that had
received commendation and condemnation. The President had ordered the “cessation
of all movement” in Lagos, FCT, and Ogun State. The lockdown was to last 14
days in the first instant. He further pointed that the governors of those
States had been consulted before the decision was arrived at.
There was nothing new,
novel about the speech. The order is not also new. It is one of the measures
applied to prevent the spread of Covid-19. All Nigerians had been expecting
their President to address them, which was considered belated. The lockdown was
to commence at 11:00pm Monday, 30 March. Every citizen of those States and FCT
had geared up for the challenge. They had gone to the markets to stockpile food
that would last them for 14 days of lockdown. They were only expecting their
governments to bring palliatives to cushion the effects of the disruption in their
socio-economic life.
In order to tell the
whole world that President Buhari never consulted him, and buoyed by Professor
Wole Soyinka and some Senior Advocates of Nigeria who argued that the President
had usurped the power of the two governors of Lagos and Ogun States, Prince
Dapo Abiodun, through his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Somorin, summoned his selected
media organisations (the supposed “boys working for the State”) and left the
other critical media organisations, to attend opening of two Isolation Centres
at Ikenne, Ikenne Local Government of Ogun State. The programme that was
supposed to commence at 11:00a.m. on that same Monday never took off the ground
until about 4:00p.m, full five hours behind schedule, perhaps with no apology. By the time the subsequent press briefing that
followed could be concluded it was about 5:00p.m. By the time the news could
get to the people of the State they were already returning homes to face the
lockdown the following Tuesday.
I watched him on the
State television station, OGTV, booming garrulously before the glitz of cameras
like a canon in the desert struggling to assert his power. His media handlers
also posted the clip of his address on his official Tweeter handle. I felt
giddy and ashamed as he failed to match his cool, urbane look with the anger in
his voice. The first thing that crept into my mind was that who was this
governor angry with. He was addressing the State combatively perhaps to prove
he is the governor of Ogun State. The high pitch of his speech left no one in
doubt that he might be taken his pound of flesh from the Presidency. It also
proves that the President must have lied to the nation that the governors were
consulted before imposing unilaterally lockdown on the Ogun State and the other.
Governor Abiodun in his
resplendence of power now shifted the lockdown till Friday, April 3.
I could not believe that
the people could be tossed from and to between the President and the Governor. If
the governor thought the lockdown order did not give the people enough room to
plan against the lockdown why did he take him the whole day to announce his
amended plan? If Dapo Abiodun administration had acted fast, it would have
taken the trouble from the people to stockpile food on Monday. It would not
have caused the prices of food commodities to skyrocket exponentially. A kongo
of Garri that hitherto sold for N150
went up by 125% to N350 per Kongo; rice and beans also went up by 150%., which
remain same till today. While the governor was flexing authority with the
Federal Government he inadvertently inflicts more pains on the people than he
had envisaged. Poor thinking.
As if that was not
enough. When the Presidency Friday, April 3, relaxed the lockdown that markets
should open between 10:00a.m. and 2:00p.m. daily from Monday, April 6 our
governor again gathered his “media boys” leaving large number of journalists
representing other media organisations, rushed them to Iperu, the seat of his
government, where he addressed the State, saying that as far as he was
concerned market should open between 7:00a.m. and 2:00p.m.
Why should the governor
wait for the federal government to make its move before he counters the former?
Why the rivalry? What is Governor Abiodun trying to establish? The governor of
Ogun State has succeeded to bring the President to ridicule, disrespect and
disgrace. He has exposed the President to the world that he runs a clueless,
directionless and weak government. It is innocuous demonstration of a governor at
war with his president.
What Prince Dapo Abiodun
and his Cabinet fail to realise is that people are being encouraged to obey the
State law to the detriment of the federal law. In this case, however, the
federal government adjusted lockdown time is easier to obey than the state
government new order. Though, it is not likely that most people would get to
their houses by 2:00p.m. Thus the rate of compliance with the new federal
government order would be higher than the State’s; more so, within two to three
days people would be able to adjust to 10:00a.m. to 2:00p.m. daily from Monday,
April 6.
The governor has put
his people in more difficult positions to adjust to 7:00a.m. to 2:00p.m. every
order day from Tuesday, 7 April. The people would not be able to key into the
zig-zag situation until the end of the lockdown on April 14. Secondly, both
governments have succeeded to dirupt the normal life of the people without
really achieving the essence of lockdown. By relaxing the “cessation of all movement”
the interaction of people in public domain has failed. It is double jeopardy
for the people of Ogun State. The failure to commence the lockdown at the same
time with Lagos State has put the people of the State in difficult position.
When Lagos opens its inter-state borders, Ogun State still shuts down her
borders with Lagos State. Instead of spending 14-day lockdown, the Ogun state
people would observe lockdown for 18 days, giving that the first five days supposed
free in actual fact were not normal days in the lives of the people.
Consequently, the
lockdown has failed. It would be a classical example of making law/order that
is unenforceable. It is a deliberate disruption of people’s lives. No amount of
palliative could compensate for the loss of incomes, loss of businesses and
wastages of resources invested into very many social events and parties that
have been cancelled as a result of the lockdown.
The point is that why
should Governor Dapo Abiodun counter the order of the Federal Government. Are
they having some misunderstandings? Is the governor fighting somebody’s cause?
Is he paying President Buhari back in his own coin for not differing to him as
a State governor in making appointments from the State? There are still more
questions to ask to unearth the underlining cold war between the governor and
President that the Coronavirus pandemic has brought to the open.
The exclusivity of the
governor’s administration is becoming something unknown to Ogun State, whereby
the government identifies some persons or group to accommodate in his
administration to the exclusion of the majority of others. It only shows that the
slogan of the government is simply a lipservice. It is unprofessional to
segregate, marginalize and discriminate against journalists in the State. It is
disproportionate and discriminatory to identify some certain journalists as “the
boys that work with us”. Such a description does not only undermine the
credibility of a good government, it shows the government is parochial and
underdog.
Comment coming from an uninformed mind about responsibilities in government.
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