THISDAY

Fayemi: I'll No Longer Allow Babalola Control Narrative about MyTime in Office

Says legal giant indulging in failing memory Worries he’s suffering narcissist­ic personalit­y disorder

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Former governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, yesterday, said he would no longer allow elder statesman and fellow Ekiti man, Chief Afe Babalola, control the narrative regarding his time in office, because it was obvious his constant attacks were intentiona­l.

Fayemi, in an exclusive chat with THISDAY, said while he might grant the legal luminary the indulgence of failing memory, he was worried Babalola might be suffering from a narcissist­ic personalit­y disorder that prevented him from seeing the good in others.

Reacting to a recent news report, where Babalola was quoted as saying all former Ekiti State governors did nothing to develop the state, Fayemi said he was the target, as that was not the first time the elder statesman would be going all out against him.

Fayemi stated regarding Babalola, “If you have followed events in the state very closely, you'd know that this is not the first time he has done it. But I've restrained myself for a long time. First, he is an elder whose first child is older than me and I'm quite friendly with his children.

“Second, my wife has begged me not to respond in the last one and a half years that he has been on the attack. Even now, she will not be happy with me, but Chief Babalola has been relentless in his attack. I'm sorry, I won't allow him control the narrative about my time in office.

“It is important for people to know this is malicious and not a dispassion­ate and objective assessment. The only thing I brought to public service is my name and I won't let people take my silence as consent as far as Chief Babalola's opinion is concerned.”

The former governor, who said he had never earned Babalola's support, stated, “He never supported me, he supported Segun Oni in the 2007 election. But that's fine. He has a right to support anyone. I don't begrudge him for that.

“Even when I challenged the stolen mandate in 2007, he was Segun Oni's lawyer in court. So, as far as he was concerned, this little David defeated the giant Goliath of Ekiti. In spite of that, I embraced him as governor and asked him to chair the Airport Viability Committee, which he was keen on during my first term in office.

“If you ask him, he will give you a cock and bull story about how President Jonathan wanted to build an airport in Ekiti and I stopped him, which is an untruth. The truth is that Tunde Omotoba, an Ekiti man, was aviation minister under President Yar'Adua.

“He seized that opportunit­y to put in the aviation ministry budget about N300 million for explorator­y work on Ekiti airport. That money was in the budget but it was never released. Do I control federal budget? How unfair can a person be?

“In spite of the fact that the federal government did not do anything, no government before mine took any concrete step on the airport, apart from acquiring the land. No compensati­on was even paid for the land until my government paid those land owners. In spite of our limited resources, we went on to build the airport.”

Fayemi alleged, “His main problem with me was because he offered to construct a terminal building for the Ekiti airport, and I explained to him that the funding we had for the airport included the constructi­on of a terminal building and we had to fulfil the obligation of the bond.

“I then appealed to him to take on other items in the airport since an airport has many components to it. He was very unhappy about that and there is nobody he has not reported me to for this. We finished the runway, taxiway, apron, all the internal roads and the terminal building and had a test flight before I left office.

“He now returned to my original suggestion of supporting another project at the airport and helped with the procuremen­t of navigation­al aids and the constructi­on of the car park for the airport. I'm glad he did, but it is so difficult for him to appreciate the good in others.

“He wants to give the credit of the airport to Oni, who did not put up a single brick at the airport and take every opportunit­y to demonise Fayemi, who, according to him, did not do anything for his university and the state. Well, that's for posterity to judge, not for him to say with an air of finality.”

Arguing that Babalola's hatred for him was entrenched, Fayemi stated, “He carried his hatred to the point where he even approached King's College London if, indeed, it's true that they made me a Visiting Professor. Haba!

“How can an old man behave this way? And my counsel to him has always been that he should see himself as the father of all and refrain from partisansh­ip when it comes to issues of governance and developmen­t in Ekiti.

“Age is supposed to imbue one with a level of circumspec­tion in what one says, but not this old man who believes he owns Ekiti and any governor who chooses not to grovel before him and shower him with sycophanti­c adulation of the Almighty Afe Babalola must be brought down. Unfortunat­ely, I will not grovel before any human being. Only God is Almighty in my books.

“Chief Afe Babalola has always been unfair to me personally, and to Governors Adebayo and Fayose equally. I can say categorica­lly without any fear of equivocati­on that every governor that has occupied the exalted seat in Ekiti performed well in the circumstan­ce they operated in.

“They all handed the baton to their successors who took the state further than they met it. Chief Babalola's prejudiced view can never be the final word on their times in office, certainly not on my time in office because I know and the record is crystal clear that I improved the state on every developmen­tal indices than I met the state.”

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