Skip to main content

GROUP CONGRATULATES ALHAJI YAHAYA BELLO ON THE OCCASION OF HIS HUNDRED DAYS IN THE OFFICE

By Rekiya O. Sanni

A hundred days ago, the Governor of Kogi state was sworn in. Our people and the whole country marvelled at what has been variously characterised as a miracle and an epoch-making event.

The Bello Support Group (BSO) wishes to thank God for the victory of having Change instilled in our beloved State; we are grateful to God for giving us a Governor of our dreams. Indefatigable, detribalised, focused and highly motivated towards excellence.

In the light of this, and the many landmark and impact feats ongoing, we congratulate His Excellency, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, on his one hundred days in Office, as the Executive Governor of Kogi State.
We have seen the delight in the faces of the entire workforce in the state – both Local Government services, State Government services – as you have taken up the Augean task of sanitizing the Civil Service; plus the recent gesture geared towards ameliorating the working conditions of the Labour union at large state-wide.

We are also aware of the magnitude of infrastructural projects on-going in the state capital, and especially with impact on the Primary Health Care Services to the benefits of grassroots; we are sure many more are in the offing.

We use this medium to seek your blessings over our dear State; we desire a State void of animosity, and grounded in unity. We believe "together is better", and a Kogi State with Citizens who see themselves as one big family, will be a "dream-come-true"

Our confidence is in the fact that we are knowledgeable of your thoroughness with regards to execution of projects and plans. We are therefore eager to celebrate victories from the results of your many plans and designs put in place over these hundred days period.

May your reign continue to be prosperous and full of positive and people oriented changes; changes to take the state to a new apogee in all sphere of life.

We at Bello Support Organization (BSO) wish you greatness and more record of successes as we journey with you through the lifespan of your administration and beyond.
Many opportunities have opened up for Kogi State to exceed even beyond our expectations and this requires that we all take up the cudgels and consciously change our paradigms.

We restate our confidence in your leadership, and reaffirm our loyalty to you and your vision of a New Direction for Kogi State.

Long live Kogi State.
Long live your Excellency.
Long live the Citizens of Kogi State.
Long live Bello Support Organization.

Signed
Rekiya Onayivo Sanni
Team Leader
Bello Support Organization
Twitter: @bellosupportorg
Like our page: https://m.facebook.com/bellosupportorg/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ebira Names and their meaning, Names, Meanings, Sex

Asimi: If mankind will allow me the survival of this child. F Ajimituhuo: Spare me today till tomorrow, which day metaphorically continues till eternity (since tomorrow has no end). M Avidime: The initiator who work is subsequently perfected by those following him in life. M Asipita: A child of History. M Amewuru: The harbinger of confusion, or the man who causes chaos. M Adeku: Father of masquerade. M Adabara: Father of the  compound. M Adajinege: The tallest of them. M Adavize: Father is wealth. M Adeiza: Father of fortune/gift/kindness. M Adomuha: Father of able body man. M Adooro: The one that is a stumbling block Ahovi: A chief custodian of the traditional Oracle. M Aduvo: Father of hand. M Ajooze: The one standing on the way. M Adinoyi: The father of the multitude who serves as a protective umbrella shielding others in need of such protection. M Adaviruku: Name usually given to the heir of the family. M Ajinomo: In memory of Ebira war with the Fukanis where Ebi

The case of Ahmed Awela, Murtala (Eti Bobo) among other Ebira youths

Ismail M. Kabir, Lagos. Between controversial existence and a contentious exit. There are various sides to a story. For an event that happens with few or no significant eye witness, the news come in different versions; some partially correct, others completely cooked up. In some cases, such non-witnessed event pass round as rumour until eventually confirmed. Rumour it was, when a phone call from Okene announced the death of two famous Ebira youths! They were killed by the Police, reported the news. Being on a Sunday when nothing too special should ensue save for the usual church services and social functions, the news sounded as the most unexpected, as a matter of fact, incredible! The thought of losing such youths on an ordinary day like Sunday undoubtedly was the reason for the astonishment. Not a single person of Ebira origin, within or outside the soil would believe such shocker upon first hearing. Text messages, phone calls and of course physical enquiries lingered, all in an atte

The Obege legend

In the earliest generations when the art of magic was yet a myth to the people, there was born a boy into a family of hunters in the village of Eika - one of the six communities that comprised the ancestral groups. He was believed to have been born with a leaf in his hand and to the elders of then, that was prognostic of what he would be - a native healer. And had grown up performing wonders. His kinsmen were all hunters, they would deny the boy the opportunity to follow them hunting, purely on age ground - and he was really too young to go hunting in the forest. They would leave him in the house with the women as they set out on their hunting expedition. But they had meet the young Obege in the forest roasting a fair member of the forest’s game, all alone - and unarmed! The elders had to defer to this wonderful boy. Obege as an adult was more than human. His fame had spread all over the land: he was a healer of most seemingly incurable diseases, he was a rain maker, assumed more divin