Full Speech Of Seyi Makinde; The 8th Oyo State Governor

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“Ají ṣe bí Òyó làárí, Òyó ò kí ṣe bí baba ẹnìkan.” Oyo leads and others imitate. We are a state
proud of our many firsts. 

In 1965, just five years after Nigeria’s independence, the first skyscraper was built in the
Western region, in an area that later became part of our beloved Oyo State. Well before
independence, this same territory hosted the first TV station in Nigeria, the first university,
the first housing estate in Nigeria, the first government secretariat and the first modern
parliament. Let me also add that we host the first stadium in Africa, the first dual carriage
road and more recently, the first private TV station in Nigeria.
Reflecting on these firsts makes you realise that there must be something special about this
region. The legendary Oyo greatness, the Pacesetter State, lives on.
I am greatly honored to stand before you today to assume the overwhelming mandate you
have given me.
This inaugural address will not dwell on the past but look to the future because of the urgency
and the magnitude of the task ahead of us. We want all of you to be a part of the
implementation as we work together to move our state forward. We may make decisions that
are sometimes uncomfortable but we will try our best to always be just, fair and act with the
fear of God.
I am here as your governor to serve you. I will work tirelessly and take responsibility for the
workings of every sector. While I will delegate effectively, the buck will stop with me. I want
you to hold me accountable and I will also hold you accountable as we work as partners to
bring Oyo State to glory.
We will be a progressive administration; building on the programmes of past administrations
that were structured properly and have been beneficial to the masses. When the need arises,
we will consult our predecessors and draw on their experiences. We will put aside partisan
politics for the good of our state.
We will bring in new ideas and explore new initiatives. We will partner with local and
foreign investors, some of whom are here with us today.
I was drawn to politics because I saw the way the wealth meant for everyone was being
siphoned by a few to enrich themselves while leaving the masses in desperate poverty and
dehumanizing suffering, and our land in ruin. We have an opportunity to change this and we
will.
With good governance, we will more than confront poverty, we will usher in an era of
progress and prosperity. To do this, I speak to your consciences; we have to shun the way
things are currently done. Every one of us in every walk of life must embrace accountability

and hard work. I promised the Nigerian Labour Congress during all of our meetings that our
relationship will deal with issues openly and sincerely because we are all in this together.
We have already started working on our campaign promises. In the area of investments, we
promised that our administration will be pro-private investments, that we will make Oyo
State the preferred investment destination in Nigeria.
We recognise that one of our areas of comparative advantage is agriculture. I am excited to
tell you today, that we have already taken steps to market our potentials. Our farmers will be
happy to know that we are in talks with Botswana to export our maize to them. Our African
neighbours have in the recent past, imported from Central America, but they are ready to give
us a chance. We welcome the delegation from Botswana led by Business Botswana President,
Gobusamang Keebine.
During our campaigns, as we moved from one local government to the other, we listened to
people discuss their concerns. I know that the people of Oyo State are not asking for too
much. We spoke to the businessmen who are hurting under multiple taxations, who are
pained because the ease of doing business is so bad that Oyo State ranks thirty-five out of the
thirty-six states in Nigeria. More businesses are shutting down than are being opened.
We spoke to farmers in settlements at Ipapo, Ilora, Eruwa, Ogbomosho, Iresaadu, Ijaiye,
Akufo and Lalupon who complained about inability to access credit facilities, poor rural
infrastructure especially feeder roads, difficulty in processing harvests, and lack of storage
facilities. We listened to leaders and members of the Joint Farmers Association and
agropreneurs talk about the challenges in the agriculture sector and proffer solutions which
we will implement. Our administration will make providing infrastructure a priority.
We spoke with parents of children in public secondary schools who out of their meager
resources still have to scrounge N3,000 per child so that their children can get an education
and increase their opportunities. Our region that housed the first university in Nigeria now
has a state with the seventh highest number of out-of-school children. Over 400,000 children
in Oyo State are out of school.
Effective immediately, the school fees of N3,000 in state-owned secondary schools is hereby
abolished. We want enrollments to go up, we want our children off the streets and in the
classrooms. We are throwing the school doors wide open. Whoever opens a school door,
opens an opportunity. We are opening opportunities for a brighter future.
We also know that education standards in Oyo State are poor. Oyo State recently ranked
twenty-sixth in Nigeria in WAEC performance. While we invite the students to come in, we
will focus on raising the standard of education in Oyo State. We will work on providing
needed infrastructure and man power by increasing Oyo State’s education budget to 10% of
our total annual budget, increasing yearly until we match UNESCO’s recommendation of 15-
20%. We will be a pacesetter state in education.
We know that quality education is not possible without quality teachers. Quality emoluments
and benefits attract quality teachers. We are not ignorant of the plight of our dear teachers.

We know the state of the teacher’s pension scheme. During my campaigns, I promised to
donate my entire salary as governor to the Teacher’s Pension Fund. I stand by that promise.
We will seek practical ways to reposition the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology,
Ogbomoso. You are aware that the university is jointly owned by Osun and Oyo State. We
will reach out to our sister state and share ideas on how to move the institution forward. Our
priority is a total takeover.
We spoke with people living with disabilities; successive governments have not paid
adequate attention to our people who live with disabilities. We talked about the challenges
and neglect they face; the lack of access to healthcare, education, work opportunities and
stigmatisation. To people living with disabilities in our state, I say, your relief has come. We
will establish a Commission for People Living with Disabilities. The mandate of this
parastatal will be to improve the lives of people living with disabilities. In addition, we will
develop an institutional framework for enforcing compliance with our equal opportunity
principle. We will also encourage the private sector to hire persons with disabilities by
offering them tax incentives.
We spoke with people facing health challenges. We are planning interventions in the sector
under two main headings: providing primary health care and making health insurance more
accessible to the people of Oyo State.
Access to good healthcare is non-negotiable. It is the responsibility of government to ensure
there are adequate medical and healthcare facilities for all persons. Therefore, in the first two
years of our administration, no new healthcare centre will be built. The focus will be to
upgrade the existing ones by renovating and equipping them.
In the same vein, our strategy for implementing the health insurance scheme will involve
updating existing interventions and making them more accessible. By November, we would
have completed a needs assessment and identified local associations willing to participate in
the health insurance scheme and use them to get insurance benefits to the most vulnerable in
the state.
We will also embark on extensive reformation of the Hospital Management Board for more
effective service delivery in our hospitals.
The biggest issue facing the people of Oyo State is poverty. We need money to confront
poverty. Oyo State needs money. Right now, Oyo State’s income stands at 33% from
Internally Generated Revenue and over 60% FAAC allocations. This is why we are
constantly in a cycle of debt and liability. This model is unsustainable. It has to change.
We will reduce government overheads, increase the efficiency in tax collection, simplify the
tax payment system and cut down on debt accumulation without concrete repayment plans.
We cannot do this without your support.

I am taking this opportunity to solicit your support. We are going to be taking decisions that
may be tough in the immediate but will have long-term benefits. We want you to look at the
big picture. We want you to focus on the goal.
For example, I have always said that the Oyo State civil servants deserve to earn a whole lot
more for their dedication and service to the state. Recently, the Federal Government
announced a new salary scheme in which the lowest cadre of civil servants are expected to
earn at least N30,000.
I know how access to this type of money will improve the lives of many of the families that I
have had direct contact with. However, with the way the Oyo State account currently stands, I
will be deceiving you if I said we are capable of taking on this burden.
I believe in true Federalism. I believe the states should decide the minimum wage of their
workforce based on individual realities. All states are not created equal, so it is against the
principle of fairness to apply a blanket rule to govern them all.
That being said, our plan is to make Oyo the first state to pay above the national minimum
wage. We know this is possible. We have already set our plan in motion to make this
possible. But, this requires time. We propose staggered increments. I met with organized
labour during my campaigns and made a pledge to an open relationship. I intend to stand by
that promise. We will have a sincere conversation and arrive at the best possible decision.
Rest assured that the decision will put your overall best interests first.
We will set up a committee in due course to look into all cases of those who believe they
have been wrongly dismissed from the civil service, including those whose cases have been
decided in their favour in court who have not been reinstated.
We have interacted with students, workers, artisans, young and elderly people; the story is the
same. Everyone wants something better.
Our focus as a government will be to implement policies which will give our people the tools
they need to lift themselves out of grinding poverty and lack. We published our Road Map
for Accelerated Development, 2019-2023, three months before the elections. We want you to
hold us to our promises.
In that document, we set forth our policies for tackling the infrastructure deficits, enabling an
efficient health sector, improving security, youth empowerment, social inclusion and
protection. Our policies reflect an understanding of the magnitude of problems Oyo State
people face and our determination to use the instruments of focused leadership to tackle
them. We are not promising miracles, we promise that results will happen if we work
together, and that you will see the results, some in a matter of weeks.
I cannot end this address without expressing my gratitude to God and the good people of Oyo
State, the leaders and members of our great party, the PDP as well as the coalition of parties;
ADC, SDP and ZLP who worked together to ensure we were successful. I also thank
members of my campaign organisation including volunteers all over Oyo State who believed

in our vision and worked tirelessly to achieve success. My darling wife, Ominini has been a
pillar of support, thank you so much.
As I promised in my open letter to the people of Oyo State in December 2018, I will be the
people’s governor. I will run an all-inclusive government for the benefit of everyone in our
dear state regardless of their tribe, religion, social class or political affiliations.
I believe that being a leader should not be seen as a leeway to dominate and dictate but as a
privilege and opportunity to serve, leaving a lasting legacy of positive change and continued growth.
Oyo State is the pacesetter state. We are determined to continue setting the pace. We are
poised to continue moving forward by focusing on the right priorities. As governor, my duty
is to create opportunities for all Oyo State citizens, regardless of where they live, and that
starts with education and jobs. A good job and a great education are not rural or urban issues;
they are Oyo State issues. As governor, I will not rest until good jobs, thriving businesses,
and quality education are the standard in Oyo State.
Together, we can do this!
I promised ‘omituntun’ it is time to experience ‘omituntun.’
Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria
Long live Oyo State.

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