DEMOLISHED AYEFELE FM RADIO
Twenty-four hours after he hosted ace musician and
CEO of Fresh FM Ibadan, Oyo State, Yinka Ayefele, at the Government House, the
state Governor, Abiola Ajimobi's men in the early hours of Sunday moved in
bulldozer and pulled down a section of the station to the chagrin of the owner
and unsuspecting members of the public.
It authoritatively gathered that Ayefele had
met Ajimobi last Saturday morning to plead for the understanding of the
governor as threats by officials to reduce the multimillion naira station to
rubble festers.
The musician was said to have left the meeting
fulfilled as Ajimobi reportedly said what profit would he gain from pulling
down the structure, but with a caveat that the station owner stop programmes
capable of undermining his government and in return, get more government's
patronage to earn better resources to run the station better.
According to a source, "A visibly happy
Ayefele felt relieved and assured the governor of better working rapport with
the state government. Ayefele was said to have told close aides that Ajimobi
meant well but was grossly misunderstood by many.”
The other assurance Ayefele secured from Ajimobi
was when the latter featured on a live programme in the station and made
startling revelations that some people had been tagging Ayefele as
anti-government and wanted him to demolish Fresh FM.
Ajimobi did not only assure Ayefele of bearing no
animosity against him, he went ahead to describe the station as the best,
comparable to the ones in Lagos State, and prayed for the prosperity of Fresh
FM."
But Sunday, like a thief in the night, officials
of the state government made real the threat of the government to demolish the
radio station for allegedly contravening town planning law of the state.
Notwithstanding the notice of the state high court
in the matter filed by Ayefele against the government, praying it to stop such
demolition and coupled with the spirited appeals made to the governor by a
cross section of eminent Nigerians, the state officials, backed by armed
security agents, in a commando-like operation defied the pleas and went ahead
to carry out the partial demolition of the edifice which left the station off
the air for about four hours.
Reports revealed that the men arrived at the
station around 6 a.m. and fired several gunshots to scare workers and passersby
from disturbing the operation which lasted for just few minutes.
According to the reports, moments after the station
went off the air, photos of the demolished structure went vital on social media
and the people trooped out to protest against the development. By 7:30a.m., the
road from Challenge and the toll gate bridge that connects Lagos to Challenge in
Ibadan became impassable as the surging crowd filled the expressway and chanted
unprinted songs to condemn the action of the government.
Many left their church services to sympathise with
Ayefele, a popular gospel singer. The station is situated at Lagos-Ibadan
by-pass at Challenge.
The state government had last week issued a
three-day ultimatum to the radio station and threatened to demolish it. But the
station owner had since approached the court. The case comes up today.
Vehicles heading towards Lagos and coming into the
city of Ibadan were held up in the traffic that lasted for over 8-hours on
Sunday while many going to their respective places of worship made u-turn.
Many youths seized the opportunity to destroy some
posters and bill boards belonging to some gubernatorial aspirants of the All
Progressives Congress (APC) to register their displeasure against the
demolition of the station.
Director of Ayefele Nigeria Limited, David Ajiboye, who told journalists that the
station has all the documents obtained from the state government for the
establishment of the radio station on the plot it was built on, regretting that
the station had lost a new equipment worth N28million to the demolition.
Other areas affected, according to him, are the roof, reception, Ayefele's main
office, a section of the studio, canteen, spiral stair case, parking space, and
office equipment like computers among others.
Ajiboye said the Challenge-Lagos-Ibadan axis was
approved by the stater government as a business premises but was surprised that
the government could say it was not meant for radio station.
He said the government in its claims said the
canteen and spiral staircase in the building were not in the building plan.
The director of the station further identified a
commissioner in the state government as being behind the crisis, saying he had
approached the station to stop certain programmes on the FM.
He noted that the station had to reply him that it
was only Nigeria Broadcasting Commission (NBC) that has the power to sanction a
radio programme on air or close the station in totality.
Ajiboye believed that the station was fair to all
the political parties in the state as against the claim that the station was
working for a certain political party in the state.
When journalists arrived at the station around 7:30a.m.
yesterday, the protesters were raining curses on the people behind the
demolition, while many sympathizers were wailing.
Some side-talk showed that many of the protesters
traveled from neighbouring states to witness the action taken by the state
government.
One of the protesters, who doubled as a resident of
the area, Akeem Jabaru, told journalists that the state government proved that it
has no respect for the rule of law.
He noted that the demolition was inhuman because he
knew that over 200 widows are on pay roll of the FM station while 150 workers
are receiving salaries from Ayefele monthly.
Another sympathiser, Lanre Babatunde, said going by
his profession as a surveyor, he had observed that there are plots of land that
was supposed to be demolished without getting to the radio station.
Some politicians in the state also used the
opportunity to vent their grievances against the state government as they all
condemn the development.
A gubernatorial hopeful of the Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP), Seyi Makinde; stalwarts of the African Democratic Congress (ADC),
Senator Femi Lanlehin, Chief Sarafadeen Alli; serving House of Representatives
member, Dapo Lam-Adesina; state lawmaker, Segun Olaleye; former Deputy
Governor, Alhaji Taofeek Arapaja, and others were the earlier callers at the radio
station to sympathise with the owner.
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