Former Governor of Oyo State, Senator Abiola
Ajimobi, on Sunday called on his successor, Governor Seyi Makinde, to beam his
searchlight on the activities of civil servants and those working in his government
instead of accusing officials who served in his administration of carting away
government properties after the expiration of their tenure.
He said the advice became imperative because of the
repeated claims of the present administration and its efforts to allegedly
tarnish his (Ajimobi’s) image and that of his aides over missing government
properties, especially vehicles.
The former governor made the call while speaking
with journalists at his Oluyole, Ibadan residence, after observing the
Eid-el-Kabir prayer at the Ansar-Ur-Deen prayer ground at Oke Ado area of the
capital city.
There had been accusations and counter-accusations
between the immediate past and present political administrations in the state over
missing government vehicles.
Ajimobi, who recounted that he did not meet home
appliances, furniture, kitchen utensils among others at the Government House in
2011, said he tried to avoid a repetition of the same because he worked till
the last day of his tenure in office on May 28, 2019.
He added that, the lessons he learnt which
necessitated the move was that government workers took advantage of former
Governor, Christopher Alao-Akala’s leaving the Government House few days before
the expiration of his term as a governor to loot and plunder the official
government residence.
However, he said: “Like it is done all over the world,
even in corporate organisation where people are allowed to leave positions they
occupy with their official vehicles, he also allowed his predecessors in office
to leave with their official vehicles, adding that his administration took the
decision to advise people to pay for such vehicles before leaving with them.
According to him, “Again, if we are talking about vehicles,
I think papers have been documented. When you are in government, there are
policies and decisions to be taken. We’ve taken the decisions that anybody
using government vehicle at that time should pay and take it away. And that was
what we did. Go to every state of the federation, there is nowhere in the world
that people will work and not take away their vehicles when they are leaving.
“Bayo Adelabu, our governorship candidate, who will
still be the governor by God’s grace, was given 14 vehicles by the corporate
organisations that he left. I left my last corporate organisation with eight
vehicles, and that is not even in government. So what is all the noise about
vehicles? When I got there, did I meet any vehicle?
“My brother Alao-Akala took his vehicles and I didn’t
talk or make any noise about it, so what is this noise about it? More so, they
are all old vehicles for that matter.
“So, let them go and check many of those people (civil
servants) in government. When I moved into the Government House, I didn’t meet
any furniture; they took the whole curtains, chairs, tables, televisions, other
home appliances even table spoon. Ask Governor Makinde if they took anything
from the Government House when he got there-even spoons and knives-I left them
there, because it was because I worked up till the last day in office.
“But Akala left few days before I came, so the civil servants
cleared everything. So who took all those buses they show on television to
mechanic workshop, if not civil servants?
When asked if he had any regrets after leaving
office, he said his only regret was that he tried to be perfect in an imperfect
world, but that if given the chance again to govern, he would take the same
decisions he took.
Ajimobi also used the opportunity of the season to
call on all aggrieved members of the party to return and start the rebuilding
ahead of next election, noting that although some of those who left had genuine
reasons, many others left the party for selfish reasons.
To ensure the reconciliation yields the desired
results, he said he had made efforts to reach out as well as called personally
those he felt were genuinely aggrieved, but that for others, he would expect
that they come on their own.
Ajimobi, however, used the opportunity of the
celebration to solicit for support for the Makinde-led government, assuring the
governor that he would give him support to succeed, saying: “I pray that he
(Makinde) succeeds. His success is our progress in our state. If he succeeds,
it is good for us, if he doesn’t succeed, what do we gain? I am ready to
support him to succeed because in supporting him, we are helping the state.”
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