How
ex-president, former state helmsman prevented me from being governor, minister,
by Adeyeye
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The People’s
Democratic Party (PDP) has called on the federal and state government to
reconsider their stands on the discontinuity of projects embarked upon by their
predecessors, saying the development of Nigeria should be seen as a collective
effort instead of some personal aggrandisement.
The party
also condemned the ongoing anti-corruption crusade in the country, describing
is as an exercise fraught with partiality, witch-hunting and a desperate
attempt to malign the reputation of the PDP.
The PDP,
through its Publicity Secretary and a former Minister or State for Works,
Prince Adedayo Adeyeye, said Nigeria would have made more progress if the
completion of abandoned projects were made a focal point by successive
governments across all the tiers of government.
Speaking at
the Town Hall of London Borough of Hackney, United Kingdom, at an event
organised by the councillor representing Stoke Newington, Susan Fajana-Thomas,
to deliberate with Ekiti State indigenes in Britain, Adeyeye described abandoned
projects as colossal waste of resources.
Adeyeye, who
is an aspirant in the forthcoming gubernatorial election in Ekiti State, said
if elected, his government, would ensure all the abandoned projects would be
completed. According to him, they resource used to start these projects belong
to the country and shouldn’t be allowed to go to waste.
Adeyeye
noted that a report of an investigation conducted by a group of researchers
during the tenure of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala estimated the worth of the
country’s abandoned projects to be over 17 trillion naira, which is a “wasteful
and unfair squandering of our resources.”
He also
stressed the need for well-meaning Nigerians at home and in the diaspora to
join forces with the party to develop the country. He said the party is being
transformed to be more democratic and to ensure the interests of everybody is
protected.Adeyeye encouraged Ekiti people in the diaspora to come home and
contribute their quota in the development of the state. According to him, his
government, when elected would ensure an office would be created for indigenes
in the diaspora, which would be headed by one of them.
Although, he
did not write off the achievements of the state’s present and previous
administrations, he said a lot still needed to be done to upgrade the people’s
standard of living. He stated that the coming election in the state would be
about personalities, rather than political parties as the people of the state
now know exactly the type of leader they desire.
Adeyeye, an
accomplished journalist, lawyer and the Pro-Chancellor of Ekiti State
University, emphasised the need to invest in education as this would turn out
to be a major internally generated revenue (IGR) for the state.
However,
Adeyeye, who expressed lack of confidence in the country’s Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC), said he did not foresee any challenges as the
parameters to choose competent leaders favour him.
“I cannot
say INEC would do a good job going by the reports of the previous elections
they have conducted but we are sure the election will favour us as the people
are already connecting with our ideals,” he said.
In Ekiti,
Adeyeye also alleged that a former prevented him from becoming governor and
minister.According to him, the former leader had also asked the late President
Umaru Musa Yar’Adua to drop his name as a ministerial nominee, which made him
to defect to the then Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).
Adeyeye
further alleged that a former Lagos State helmsman stopped his gubernatorial
ambition when he supported ex-governor Kayode Fayemi (now a minister) against
him.
He promised
to make “Ekiti the hub of higher education and health tourism, where people
from across the world would visit to contribute to its economic development.
“Over $1
billion is contributed to the Indian economy through medical tourism. We had
some of the best facilities at the University College Hospital (UCH) in the
1970s. At that time, members of the Saudi Arabian royal family used to go there
for treatment,” he said. He pledged to revive agriculture, particularly cocoa
plantation, adding that he would serve the people and attract investments to
the state, if he becomes governor.
He lamented
that the textile factory in Ado-Ekiti, which was established in 1967 had become
moribund.While promising to build a centre for Ekiti people in the diaspora, he
added: “Fayemi buried the textile industry five years ago when he converted the
site into a shopping mall.”
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