Cross River, paradise lost  

Cross River

Cross River State under Ben Ayade, the self-styled “digital governor,” has recorded a terrifying level of abysmal failure. The state has retrogressed since he became governor in 2015. Dubbed “The nation’s paradise,” ironically, it has become the lost paradise. The state capital, Calabar, widely known as the cleanest city in Nigeria, has its streets littered with heaps of garbage. From one roundabout to another, a terrible eyesore.

Insecurity has reached the crescendo. C.A.L.A.B.A.R, the acronym for “Come And Live And Be At Rest,” is now a hotspot for cultists, kidnapping and all sorts of security problems. The serenity and tranquility of the city have been washed away. Insecurity has metastasised to all corners. The beautiful nightlife of Canaan city is gone. Commercial activities are crippled. Businesses were brought to a halt. Some are relocating to Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital.

For over 60 days between March and May, there was a total blackout in parts of the state. The price of a block of ice skyrocketed to N500 from N150.

What are Ben Ayade’s achievements as governor for seven years? We can only point to fanciful, stylish and highfalutin budget titles laced with big grammar and humongous amounts, and yes, his one million aides including special assistant on ‘waste disposal’ and special assistant on ‘waste control’ separately.

In 2018, Cross River broke Nigeria’s budget record by becoming the first state to hit a 1 trillion Naira budget after Ayade presented a N1.3 trillion Budget to the state assembly. He tagged it “Budget of Kinetic Crystallization.” He gloated and boasted that the budget will “shift Cross River from a third world to the first world.” Unfortunately, Cross River fell to the last world. This barren boast was akin to an epileptic fit.

In this budget, N18 billion was allocated for the Odukpani Spaghetti Flyover. In his 2019 “Budget of Quabalistic Densification,” N16 billion more was allocated for it; and in his 2020 “Budget of Olimpotic Meristemasis,” N8 billion was again allocated for the same project.

Yet, this project is still in its skeletal phase despite N42 billion (in total) spent. The project was estimated to be completed in 2019, but was shifted to 2020 and now shifted to 2023. Findings revealed that the company handling the project has no traceable address. And the contract details and processes have been top secret.

His infrastructural gusto is a facade. His media foofaraw on projects is clearly a mirage. His appetite for industrialisation is a humbug. The 38 factories he boasts with are still undergoing construction or have hardly taken off. Some of them have been abandoned and left uncompleted without efforts to complete it. Just empty skeletal structures.

Obudu Mountain Resort is in ruins. Tinapa is dead. Former Governor Donald Duke brought in a bright idea to marry business and tourism in the city of Calabar through Tinapa. Over $450 million was spent to develop it. Today, this master idea has become putrid with a fetid stench due to lack of maintenance and complete neglect by successive governments. While Imoke neglected it, Ayade neglected, killed and buried it completely. With the vision of Duke, Tinapa would have been competing with top world leisure resorts like Naladhu in Maldives, Amanpuri in Thailand, or L’ Horizon in California, United States. It was a big dream—a big dream that was wrecked.

Workers are hungry. They swim in penury. Salary owed, months without pay. Mothers wail. They cry; they lament. They’re the ad-hoc staff of Calabar Urban Development Authority (CUDA). They wake up at 5 am to sweep the streets for a monthly salary of N7,500. They were not paid for 6 months. They protested in October 2021. They were teargassed and manhandled by special forces at the Old Secretariat complex, Calabar. They are widows. They’re the breadwinners of their home. 90 percent of them are aged. They only do that for survival.

In the midst of all this, Mr. Governor squandered N100 million to purchase the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential form. I wonder what motivated him to think he could secure the APC ticket less than a month after joining the ruling party. I also wonder what or who motivated him to nurse the idea that he can govern a country like Nigeria if he couldn’t tidy up a state with 18 Local Governments. This is the height of self-deception. N100 million will clear the salaries of 13,333 CUDA ad-hoc staff at N7,500 each or 10,000 staff at N10,000.

On August 8, in a mild drama, the Catholic Bishop of Uyo Diocese, Bishop John Ebele Ayah, rejected a donation of N25 million from Governor Ayade. The governor had donated this during a Thanksgiving mass for Justice Emmanuel Agim Akomaye’s elevation to the Supreme Court. Bishop Ayah asked the governor to use the money to pay salaries. The bishop sees and understands the plight of the Cross River civil servants who are in dire need of this money—money they worked for. The bishop is concerned about the everyday protest rocking the streets, even as the governor and his retinue of charlatans pay deaf ears or blind eyes to them.

While the bad leaders have destroyed the pride of the paradise state, the people of Cross River remain proud of their ever-delicious Afang and Edikang Ikong soups, and other finger-licking delicacies. They still boast of the hospitality of the people—how welcoming and accommodating the people of Cross River State are. How affable and genial they are despite the failure of governance.

Before he entered politics, and during his stint as Cross River North Senator, Ayade sold himself to the people as a man with love for the masses. His ‘Ayade motors’ subsidised transportation costs for Cross River people. For this act, he received praise. He won the people’s hearts and trust. And this increased his chances of becoming a governor. The people were convinced that if he could do all these philanthropic works, he would do even more if elected governor. Those acts were clearly a subterfuge.

The people of Cross River deserve better. They deserve good leadership.

  • Okuta, brightokuta@gmail.com

More posts