About one million voters in Osun State
will today elect a new governor to pilot the affairs of the state for
another four years, but this will be done amid tight security and
tension.
The last one week has seen an
unprecedented influx of security operatives in the state and the number
keeps rising in the build-up to the poll.
Heavily armed security operatives from
the Nigerian Army, the Department of State Services, the Nigeria Police
and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps have been arriving in
Osogbo, Osun State capital and other major towns in the state in large
numbers.
Meanwhile, the presence of the security
operatives, particularly military personnel, at major junctions and
entry points into the state has led to apprehension among residents.
A resident, Mrs. Bunmi Ogunkeye, told Saturday PUNCH
that many voters would shun the poll because of the heavy security
presence in the state. She said the activities of the security
operatives had been creating fears in the mind of people.
She said, “Sometimes when the security
operatives are passing in their convoy of vehicles with sirens, they
harass motorists on the roads and shoot into the air for no just reason.
It is good to have adequate security during elections but there is a
limit. We all know the excesses of military men.”
Another resident, Mr. Oladeji Okanlawon, said he would not vote for fear of being hit by stray bullets.
Okanlawon said he would pray for his preferred candidate in the comfort of his room.
He said, “With the way things are going, I
will not go out to vote and I will tell my family members to do the
same. With many guns around, anything can happen. A bullet that is not
targeted at you could hit you even if you have done nothing wrong.”
However, there are some residents who
have described the heavy security presence in the state as better than
having touts take over the electoral process like it has been done in
the past.
Twenty candidates are vying for the Osun
State governor’s seat and last minute preparations were in top gear
ahead of the election on Thursday and Friday.
Some of the candidates include the
incumbent governor, Rauf Aregbesola of the APC; a former Deputy Governor
of the state, Senator Iyiola Omisore of the PDP; and the Labour Party
candidate, Fatai Akinbade.
According to the residents, the three
candidates are considered the strongest and the ones with biggest shot
at the keenly contested seat.
On Thursday morning, the Independent
National Electoral Commission began the distribution of electoral
materials to local government areas ahead of the election.
INEC Public Relations Officer, Mr. Kayode Idowu, told Saturday PUNCH
that the “law provides that a candidate must have 25 per cent in at
least two-thirds of the state and have the highest number of votes to
emerge the winner.
Meanwhile, on the streets of Osogbo, the
main subject of discourse was often centred around politics and the
chances of the candidates in the poll. Often, residents were sighted in
clusters discussing their preferred candidates.
Findings by Saturday PUNCH showed that Aregbesola had a stronghold in Osogbo but Omisore was expected to keenly fight for votes there too.
Findings by our correspondent who felt
the pulse of residents there showed that Aregbesola had an edge over
Omisore in the capital city, also considering that his deputy, Grace
Tomori, is from the city.
Aregbesola is also said to be strong in his hometown of Ilesha, which has two local governments, Ilesha East and West.
Omisore’s strongest areas are in Ife
town, which has four local governments – Ife Central, Ife North, Ife
East and Ife South. His running mate, Rafiu Bello, who is from Ede town,
is expected to deliver Ede North and South to the PDP.
In spite of Aregbesola’s suspected
stronghold in Osogbo, residents expect the final results in the state to
be close, considering that Osogbo and Ife have the largest numbers of
registered voters.
While Osogbo has 110,670 registered voters, the four local governments in Ife have a combined figure of 266,891.
Akinbade is said to have a stronghold in his hometown of Ogbaagba and the neighbouring Iwo town.
The dynamics of Nigerian politics played
out on Tuesday with the defection of a former governor of the state,
Olagunsoye Oyinlola, an indigene of Okuku in Odo-Otin Local Government
Area, from the PDP to the APC. But generally, Oyinlola’s stronghold is
in Osun Central Senatorial District. His influence also extends to
Osogbo.
However, the PDP has been playing down Oyinlola’s influence in Osun politics in the build-up to the election.
The Zonal Chairman of the Peoples
Democratic Party, South-West, Chief Ishola Filani, on Thursday dismissed
the defection, saying it would not affect the party’s fortune in the
state.
Speaking at a news conference in Osogbo,
Filani said, “He left the PDP in Osun State, but the question is what
effect will this have on us on Saturday?
“And our submission is this. It will have
no effect whatsoever on the fortunes of Omisore becoming the next
governor of Osun State. Where Oyinlola is coming from, there are many
people to fill whatever gap, if any, that he is leaving behind.”
Filani expressed confidence in the PDP’s
chances in the election, saying the party had gone round “the 30 local
government areas in the state”.
He also said Osun residents were tired of the current government and needed change.
Filani said, “Aregbesola’s government has
no touch with the people. There is nobody in Osun State who feels the
impact of the APC government just like it is everywhere, in Oyo, Ogun
and Lagos states. And there was a demonstration of the rejection
recently in Ekiti State.”
He described the PDP candidate as a
person with a track record of success as a former deputy governor of the
state and as a senator.
Filani said, “We want to be in the
mainstream of Nigerian politics and that is why we have started
recovering our lost grounds. We started in Ekiti State and we are now
going to Osun.”
At a separate news conference in Osogbo
on Thursday, Akinbade urged security to pay more attention to areas he
considered hot spots in the state. He said such local governments as
Atakunmosa East and West, Ife North and South usually witnessed violence
in past elections.
He said, “I want to appeal to the
security agents to monitor flash points to prevent violence there.
Places like Atakunmosa East and Atakunmosa West, Ife South and Ife North
should be monitored.
“The security agents should also concentrate on villages where hoodlums used to rig elections.”
Efforts to reach the spokesperson for
Osun State Police Command, Folasade Odoro, for comments were not
successful as she neither picked her calls nor responded to text
messages sent to her mobile phone.
However, the Acting Inspector-General of
Police, Suleiman Abba, has vowed to crush attempt by mischief makers to
create problems on the election day. He also defended the deployment of
huge security personnel in Osun State ahead of the poll.
He, however, created fears among
stakeholders when he asked them to beware of the numerous electoral
offences they could easily fall into.
Citing relevant sections of the Electoral
Act, Abba said, “There are many offences that can easily be committed.
You must beware so that you don’t fall victim of any of these offences.”
He noted that security agencies would be
on the look out to arrest electoral offenders who within 300m radius of a
polling unit, breach any of the laws.
“Three hundred metres is a wide area and
you may handle a stone in your hands and it could be interpreted as
being armed, so beware.”
Meanwhile, there has been an influx of people into Osun, particularly Osogbo, giving hotel business in the city a major boost.
In the build-up to the election,
customers scramble for accommodation as most hotels in the town are
fully booked or occupied. The visitors range from journalists to the
Independent National Electoral Commission officials, election observers
and officials of non- governmental organisations.
The manager of White Plain Suites and Towers, Ogundipe Bamidele, described the increase in patronage as a “drastic change”.
He said, “For the past one week, our
rooms have been fully occupied. We are fully occupied in terms of indoor
and outdoor activities. Today, we have served over 200 people in our
banquet hall.
“Normally, our hotel is one of the highly
patronised facilities in Osogbo with an average booking of 60 per cent
of our rooms, but now we are fully occupied. People have been begging us
for rooms in the last one week but we cannot manufacture rooms. We wish
we could give them rooms.”
Bamidele added that the hotel management had maintained its room prices in spite of the pressure.
“Our room prices range from N8, 000 to N20,000 and that is what we still charge,” he said.
At Yetty Hotel, Odi-Olowo, also in
Osogbo, where some renovations were ongoing in some of its 25 rooms, all
the available rooms had been occupied during our correspondents’ visit.
The hotel manager, Mr. Akin Oyerinde, regretted that the management picked the election period for the renovations.
He said, “We are the new managers,
previous people didn’t manage the hotel very well for the owner. It was
in a very bad shape when we came in. But all the available rooms have
been taken by some officials who are in Osogbo for the election.”
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