Ekiti State Governor, Mr. Ayodele Fayose, has insisted that
the school feeding programme of the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led federal
government must be done without the proposed 40 per cent counterpart funding
from the states.
He said: “The federal government is already looking for
excuse for the impending failure of the programme by asking states to
contribute 40 per cent to the scheme.”
The governor, who said the school feeding programme was
purely a contract between the APC-led government and Nigerians, asked that:
“Were the states consulted before the APC made the promise during the
presidential campaign? How can you make a promise and win election on the basis
of that promise and now expect states to help you to fulfil the promise? That
to me is a fraud!”
The governor said in
a statement issued yesterday by his Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere
Olayinka, that Ekiti State and other states deserved to benefit from the
programme without assisting the federal government with any 40 per cent
counterpart funding.
Fayose said the
federal government should rather blame itself for failing to do proper study on
the practicability of the scheme before promising Nigerians instead of looking
for who to blame for not fulfilling the school feeding promise.
According to him,
“Apart from the fact that Ekiti State lacked the wherewithal to provide
counterpart fund for such a programme, it is
the duty of President Muhammadu Buhari and his party that won election
on the basis of their promise to give free meal to school pupils to fulfil the
promise without placing any burden on other tiers of government. “Nigerians should
come to term with the reality that the federal government is already looking
for an alibi for the impending failure of the school feeding programme.
The group lamented that the hardship being faced by the
workers was “worrisome, embarrassing and uncalled for” and consequently gave
the state governor, Fayose, a 72-hour ultimatum to pay the workers or face mass
action.
Speaking through his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Idowu
Adelusi, in
The governor said the strike had been politicised because of
his criticism of the bad policies of the federal government and his fight
against tyranny.
Explaining further,
the governor said when he assumed office on October 16, 2014, he negotiated
with the creditor commercial banks for moratorium of nine months which enabled
him to pay salaries regularly.
He said when the moratorium expired, coupled with monthly
deduction of N1.2 billion and the dwindling monthly allocations, three months
allocations became grossly insufficient to pay a month salary, subventions and
other services.
According to the governor, “A state like Ekiti without any
industry, Fayemi administration said that it realised between N600million and
N700million monthly from IGR whereas in the actual sense Ekiti State IGR had
never gone beyond N300million or N350million monthly.”
Fayose said he was
surprised that the labour which praised him for transparency was now
blackmailing him as if he had kept the state money somewhere.
He continued: “Immediately I was sworn in, I constituted a
committee which shares allocations coming to the state. I made the Head of Service
to head the committee. The labour leadership are members of the committee. I only sign recommendations brought to my
table by the committee. I wonder why the labour leadership is now pretending
not to know the finances of the state. “The labour is asking
me to go and look for money to pay them. From where? The state has nothing to
stand as collateral. What I don’t have, I cannot give. You don’t give what you
don’t have. From day one, I made open the finances of the state because I had
envisaged a period like this.”
Fayose advocated for
a law which would prohibit any governor from borrowing beyond his tenure,
saying: “During my first term, I did not borrow a dime to run the state, I paid
salaries on 22nd of every month. When I was going in October 2006, I left N10.4
billion in government coffers.
for fish and the father will give him stone. I have been
sounding the warning about the nation’s economy since last year. When the
monthly allocations started to nose dive, I took labour leaders into confidence
and explained the situation to them. We even agreed to go
round the 16 local government areas last year where we told
everybody what was happening.”
“I appeal to workers to know that Ekiti State is our own and
that there are states with worse situation as per salary payment and their
workers are still on their jobs. Some states which earn oil derivation funds
are not better than us. I appreciate Ekiti workers and I urge them to also see
reasons with me.”
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