Category: SouthEast

  • Storm fury in Ebonyi

    A tempest has wrecked 72 communities in Ebonyi State, leaving residents pleading for assistance from wherever they can get it, reports OGOCHUKWU ANIOKE

    When a rainstorm comes raging, only the lucky is spared. In Ebonyi State a midnight tempest swept through 72 communities, reducing homes to a pile of bricks and woodwork. Elderly ones whose houses were torn down had God to thank for sparing their lives. They may have no hope of building another home but are thankful they are alive to tell the story.

    The people of Afikpo South Local government area, otherwise known as Edda clan, were caught off guard. They had gone to bed after the day’s toil on their farms and businesses when the violent wind swept through their communities.

    Their sleep that night was short-lived as the rainstorm descended on 72 villages in the community around midnight and tore them apart.

    So devastating was the storm that when it was all over many houses had been reduced to rubble while other stronger buildings had their rooftops completely blown away. To say that the people lost valuables worth millions is to put it mildly.

    The rainstorm did not only destroy residential buildings but also such public facilities as schools, churches, and hospitals. It also destroyed economic trees, farmlands, electricity poles, and other valuables.

    An ancient tree said to be more than 40 years located in the village square of Nkelogo Ezi-Edda was shattered by the storm with its branches broken in pieces. Many palms and other important trees were broken in pieces.

    Some of the villages affected, The Nation gathered from Mr Eni Uduma Chima, Chairman of the local government area, include Ikelogo Ezi-Edda, Amoso Edda, Owutu Edda, Itim Edda, Ebe Unwana, Ekeeje, Nguzu, Etiti Edda and Ekoli Edda and so many others all in Edda community.

    Though no life was lost, Mr Eni Uduma said, some residents sustained varying degrees of injuries.

    He said the rainstorm also damaged the chairman’s official lodge at the council headquarters.

    “I got distress calls,” he said, “from my vice-chairman who is from Etiti autonomous community, and also from one of my councilors who represents Omo ward who called to tell me what happened.

    “I saw things for myself the next day as I joined them to move round the communities affected. Even the billboards that were mounted, all of them were affected. The Afo Market in Owutu was affected too. Many residential homes in Amaato, Omo, Itim, Amoso, Etiti and many others were also devastated.

    “Even the chairman’s lodge at the council headquarters was affected; part of the roof of the buildings was pulled off. And as I speak, repair works are ongoing.

    “What I have done was to inform the coordinators of the various development centres in the local government and they are compiling the list of the affected buildings and homes.

    “I spoke with the Coordinator of Edda West Development Centre on that because his part of the local government was worse hit. We are keeping in touch and we will work with State Emergency Management Agency on how to do something to ameliorate the plight of the victims. We have invited them to come and see things for themselves.”

    A 98-year-old woman from Nkelogo Ezi-Edda, Mrs Nwannadiya Agha, whose building was completely destroyed following the downpour, narrated her ordeal.

    She said: “This God is wonderful. I was on my bed when it started. I felt raindrops. I wondered when my roof started leaking. With time, the raindrops intensified. Like play, the wind blew off my roof and carried it far away.

    “I was still struggling to rise from the bed after the roof was blown away, when walls began falling down. They fell outward; if they had fallen inward, I wonder what would have been the story by now. Nobody was with me in the house. I was rescued by a neighbour.

    “My children have all died, only my grandchildren are alive and none of them is living with me. I have no house currently,” she lamented.

    At Etiti Edda Technical Secondary School, Etiti Edda, about five buildings newly built by the state government were seriously damaged.

    A teacher at Etiti Edda Technical Secondary School, Etiti Edda, Mr Onu Kalu Omaka, while conducting newsmen around the school, lamented that many of the buildings damaged by the storm were newly built.

    “Almost all parts of this community were affected. It was in the morning that we came to behold this ugly scene. While we were on our way in the morning, we saw many buildings that were ravaged by the rainstorm.

    “When we entered this school, almost all the classrooms were destroyed except one. This workshop was completed by the contractor just last year. The three new buildings were affected by the rainstorm.

    “Very soon, academic activities will resume. I don’t even know how we are going to handle this because the students will soon return to school. They don’t live here though.

    “Five buildings that were affected, two are classrooms, one is science/technical workshop. The gateman’s office was destroyed; this one behind us is another of the buildings that were affected,” he further narrated.

    Another victim, Mr. David Ufiem, from Nkelogo Ezi-Edda, narrated that they had gone to bed when the rainstorm started.

    “The rain started with heavy windstorm. As at that time, we had gone to bed. We were aroused from sleep by the heavy rain immediately the breeze blew off our roof and flung it far away. The ceilings fell on us while we slept,”  he said.

    The 45-year-old father of eight children narrated that in the midst of the confusion that followed the sudden commencement of the storm, some of his family members sustained injuries while they ran helter-skelter to take refuge in one of their neighbour’s houses.

    “Some of us sustained mild injury. We were still there when the rain pulled down a portion of our house. The rainstorm destroyed many things in our house. Our foodstuffs, documents, soaked our cloths and mattresses and many others,” he said.

    Another victim, Mr. Uche Paulinus Akuma, 56, disclosed that given the force with which the rainstorm started, he ran out naked in the midst of the confusion.

    “The rain destroyed so many things in my house. The rain started around 8pm. We were about going to bed when it started. I was about changing my cloth when it started. In fact, I was caught in the midst of the whole thing and had to run out naked,” he said.

    The residents called on the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FERMA) to come to their aid with relief materials to cushion the effect of the storm.

  • Evangel varsity, six years after

    Six years after it was founded, Evangel University Akaeze, Ebonyi State, has continued to wax strong despite challenges which threatened to kill it at infancy. The institution survived a leadership crisis which rocked its proprietor, the Assemblies of God Church, as the church led by General Superintendent Rev Chidi Okoroafor was locked in a leadership court battle with sacked General Superintendent Rev Paul Emeka.

    The tussle spilled into the school as it was shut down for some months and later re-opened following Dr Okoroafor’s recognition by the courts as the authentic General Superintendent of the Church.

    Those challenges notwithstanding, Evangel is still waxing stronger, churning out well-bred graduates. This is in spite of the fact that it charges arguably the cheapest fees among private universities in the country,

    Indeed students of the institution attest to the fact that it not only offers quality mentorship, but also seeks to improve the spiritual lives of its students and staff alike.

    Recently it held its sixth matriculation ceremony at its temporary sight in Okpoto, Ishielu local government area with a pledge to continue raising God-fearing future leaders of the country. Its second graduation is expected to hold later in the year.

    The revered former General Superintendent of the church Rev Charles Osueke had set up the school to provide an alternative to the moral decay in the country’s universities where offering money for marks, sexual harassment and cultism were the order of the day.

    Six years on and despite the baton changes in the leadership of the church and the school, the university has not deviated from the vision and principles of its founding fathers.

    Instead, it has improved on them as the institution led by the vice chancellor Prof Iche Ukpai Kalu has concluded arrangements to float the College of Health Sciences next year.

    The new college shall take off with; Nursing Science, Physiotherapy, Radiography and Radiology, Public Health and Medical Laboratory Science.

    Prof Kalu said the institution is in a hurry to catch up and beat competition from its peer group and also to be at par with the nation’s first generation universities within a short time.

    Shedding more light on why the Assemblies of God Church founded the institution, The VC said the university is not an accident.

    “It is a well thought out measure to arrest those pristine values that are fast vanishing from contemporary human interactions. Satan, bent on taking the shine from God, has since unleashed untold warfare on humanity by deploying every scheme to steer especially young people from good”.

    “And the world was meant to be the worse for it, unless something was done urgently to check the menace. The entirety of man had to be re-educated on the right path. So, Evangel University is a tactical strategy to counter the long-running plunder of God’s estate by his opponent”, he said.

    Prof Kalu noted that though the then General Superintendent of the Church, Ogbonnaya Osueke and other founding fathers had a lot of challenges, they trusted God to see them through in their expansive mission to redeem humanity from palpable doom.

    “So since 2012, this university has consistently partnered with God and government in its task of educating the total man. And we are to say indeed, that both God and government have been pleased with our conduct and result; as we have time and again been rated as one of the few top-of-the-range institutions in the country that have maintained their original missions and visions”.

    The VC also said the institution was conceived as a spiritual/moral foundry where the hearts of its products would be hammered from that of stone to that of flesh- through the unfailing anvils of God’s word, academic discipline and mentorship.

    He said the school’s primary guidepost is the ethos of its motto ‘education for the total man’, which he noted aims at winning the battle against sin and ignorance by refining our products’ minds and spirit through inculcation of godly values as requisite tools for professional and ,oral excellence in public and private lives.

    “So, we do not make pretenses here. We are discipline-prone and so do not tolerate even the slightest modicum of indiscipline, regardless of who is involved; member of management, lecturer, administrative staff, or student”.

    The Vice Chancellor said despite the high academic, spiritual and moral standards of the institution, it is one of the cheapest private universities in the country.

    “For us at Evangel University, quest for untainted, uncompromised teaching and learning has since the past five years, become our comparative advantage in the cut throat competitions among Nigerian Universities. It is for this that we tend to be preferred to our peers. Our emerging high academic standards therefore, stems from our habit of uncompromised attention to details-no matter how minute”, he said.

    The VC said despite these high standard the school’s school fees have remained N250,000 which includes lodging thanks to the Visitor/Chancellor of the school and General Superintendent of the Church, Rev Chidi Okoroafor.

    He said Rev Okoroafor and the Church’s determination to not increase the school fees is to make it affordable and within reach of every parent/guardian.

    214 students were officially admitted into the 21 departments in four faculties of the institution at the event.

    One of the new students, Miss Nnenna Idika Ukpai admitted that the school so far has lived up to the hype that inspired her preference for the school. She urged students seeking higher education to apply for the school.

    She said: “I chose the University because unlike other universities, it is secure to a very large extent. Immorality and vice are not tolerated here. It’s a school that builds the students both spiritually and academically. It doesn’t just build you on one side.

    “They don’t do sorting here. And they have a good environment that motivates you to study. There are no distractions here. So, if you’re distracted, it’s entirely your fault. If you want to concentrate and make it, it all depends on you.

    “I heard about the university before I came and I have also experienced its good sides”.

  • ‘I was dehumanised, forced into exile, woman accused of murder’

    A woman leader of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Amuda, an Abia Community has gone into hiding after she was stripped, lynched and almost set ablaze for alleged murder of another woman.

    The victim, Eukeria Okoma, her attackers alleged, was seen in a native doctor’s mirror where they had gone to find out who killed one

    Esther Onyeagba, who passed on in Calabar, Cross River State on March 28.

    It was gathered that the incident occurred on April 11 and Okoma has not returned to the village after a few community members whisked her from her attackers.

    According to the woman, she was dehumanised, tortured, stripped and almost lynched for a crime she knew nothing about.

    She said her attackers were sponsored by a politician, who felt she was supporting Abia State Governor, Okezie Ikpazu for a second term against their wish.

    Okoma said: “Trouble started after the governor visited Amuda community and gave women a token in appreciation of the warm welcome he received. As I was sharing the token (bags of rice) among the women, a lawmaker came and demanded to know where the largesse came from and why I must be the one sharing it? “She threatened to deal with me and replace me as woman leader. She said she would use a member of the Amuda Women Town Development Union against me to ensure I either die or leave Umu Nneji.

    “Before I knew it, they said I was responsible for the death of Esther Onyeagba, who died on Good Friday in Calabar. They said that my face appeared in a native doctor’s mirror as the killer. The women came to my shop at Ejifeji and damaged things there. They went to my house destroyed and took some properties away, took my money. “They said that I must come out and dance round the village as customs demand to prove my innocence. When I showed up, they started beating me, stripped me and took me round different communities. They put a tyre on my neck and poured kerosine on me. “But for one Chinedu, who rescued me from them, I would have been set ablaze for an offense I know nothing about. As I speak, I have gone into hiding.

    “My crime was supporting the governor Okezie Ipeazu, who is not their preferred candidate. I am crying out to Nigerians and the law enforcement agencies to come to my rescue.”

    Speaking to our Correspondent on telephone, a member of Amuda Women Town Development Union, Roseline Eke, said those responsible for the attack on Okoma have been arrested and charged to court.

    She denied the lawmaker had anything to do with the incident, adding that it was mischievous to drag her into the issue.

    Eke denied the victim was stripped, dehumanised, adding that she only joined the women to dance round the villages to prove her innocence.

    According to Eke, the culprits were charged to court because at no time did any native doctor tell them Okoma was responsible for anyone’s death.

    She said: “The female lawmaker had nothing to do with this issue. It’s a plough to tarnish her name.

    “As I am talking to you, those Amuda women are already in court because they were arrested over frivolous petition. At no time did anyone check in any mirror and they saw Chimezie  (Okoma). No such incident happened.

    “Okoma is a member of Amuda Women Town Development Union and she is a neighbour to the deceased. The deceased’s widower called members of the union that Okoma threatened that she would finish his family and that one month after the threat, his wife died.

    “The kinsmen gathered and invited her to come and say her own part of the story. When she came, she said she was sorry for whatever that happened. The kinsmen insisted she must explain what she was sorry for. They threatened to stop her from attending any gathering in the community for five years if she did not explain what she meant.

    “The kindred reported the matter to the larger Umuogene community, which summoned Chimezie five times but she did not show up. At that point, Umuogene reported to Amuda, where she (Eukeria) is a member and Amuda women invited her twice to come and explain her side, but she did not honour the invitation.

    “So, the women staged a protest to the traditional ruler, who was not around. They went to her husband to produce his wife. He promised to but did not. Two days after, the women gathered and threatened to destroy Eukeria’s house if she did not show up. That was when she honoured the invitation.”

    Spokesman for Zone Nine Police Command in Umuhia, Janet Eguchukwu, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), confirmed a case of mob attack was reported, adding that it was under investigation.

    She said some women were arrested but were later released to Amuda Community Leader, adding that a meeting had been scheduled between the parties and the Assistant Inspector-General of Police (AIG) Hosea Karma.

  • Ex-INEC REC heads community NGO

    Francis Chukwuemeka Ezeonu, a Professor of Environmental Biochemistry and Toxicology, the INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner for Imo State, and the immediate past Vice Chancellor, Hezekiah University, Umudi, Imo State, will now head Alor Development Initiative (ADI), a non-governmental association of select Alor patriots in Idemili South Local Government Area Anambra State, for the next three years.His election followed the expiration of the second three-year term of Dr. Chris C. Oyeka-led executive.

    Prior to his election as Chairman, Prof. Ezeonu served the ADI as the Secretary. During a smooth election conducted by Sir. Nnamdi Oyeka at the residence of Engr. Christian Edebeatu, at Umuolum, Ide village of Alor, the following officers were also elected to serve in the new executive were Vice -Chairman – Dr. Nnaedozie Paul Obiegbu, a retired permanent secretary in the Anambra State Ministry of Health, now a practicing physician, Secretary – Dr. (Mrs.) Chinwe Anunobi, University Librarian, Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Assistant Secretary – Dr. (Mrs.) Anthonia Ngozi Umezulike, Senior Lecturer, Department of Vocational Education, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu University, Igbariam, Treasurer – Mr. Jachike Ojukwu, a banker now in private business, Financial Secretary – Sir. Ifeanyi Obiora-Okafo, a banker now in private consultancy business, Publicity Secretary – Engr. Alex Mbaekwe, a Port Harcourt-based Civil Engineer, Legal Adviser – Hon. Bona Oraekwe, an Awka based Legal Practitioner. Provost – Sir ( Engr). Emeka Mbaekwe, a Lagos-based Civil Engineer.

    In a brief handover ceremony the former Chairman, Dr. (Engr). Chris.C. Oyeka, congratulated Prof. Ezeonu on his election and described him as the right man for the job.

    He promised to cooperate with the new EXCO in ensuring that the objectives of the association continue to be met. In his response, Prof. Ezeonu thanked members for the trust reposed on him and assured that his EXCO would live up to expectations.

    He sought the cooperation of all members of ADI in the tasks ahead. With the election Prof. Ezeonu becomes the 4th Chairman of the Association formed in December 2002 with Chief Sam Ojukwu as the pioneer Chairman followed by Chief Emeka Ngige, SAN, and Engr. (Dr.) C.C. Oyeka. The Association was formed with the aims and objectives of serving as a springboard of ideas, inspiration and motive force for the physical, cultural, educational, human and material development of Alor. Since its inception the ADI has awarded university scholarships to scores of indigent but intelligent Alor indigenes.

    In 2011 the Association published a landmark tome titled Alor: An Anthropological Source Book embodying multifarious reference information to serve as a model for students, historians and researchers on cognate pastoral community settings.

  • Kings gather for Buhari’s 2nd term

    It was a scene of royal robes, red caps, beads and staff. In fact not a few thought it was a cultural fiesta as Southeast monarchs filed out in order of ranking. No, it was the kings’ gathering for President Muhammadu Buhari in Okigwe Council Area of Imo State.

    The monarchs attended by over 150 traditional rulers across the Southeast, passed a vote of confidence in Buhari’s administration, describing it as a “salvage mission that has rescued the nation from the abyss”.

    The first class traditional rulers in a ten point communiqué read on their behalf by Eze Dr. Oliver Ohanwe, noted that “the country is on the verge of a new era with endless possibilities of a diversified economy”.

    The communiqué said, “The President was elected on the firm promise to tackle corruption and insecurity and this administration has given a lot of fillip to these agenda, adding, “with the President’s grit and strategic support to the relevant institutions, corruption in our national life has practically reduced by more than 75%. Today, the fear of imminent consequences for graft has become an effective tool in curtailing the previously rampaging and debilitating malaise of corruption which weigh us down, brought anguish and underdevelopment to our nation”.

    The monarchs agreed that the President deserves a second term in office to consolidate on the good programmes he had initiated, which they corroborated has justified the “huge magnitude of the mandate freely given to him in 2015”

    The traditional rulers said their support was hinged on the visible changes in the polity and infrastructure development since President Buhari took over in 2015.

    The communiqué read in part, “we thank the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari, for his selfless and dedicated service to the nation, his commitment to ensure common good for all and his unwavering drive for peace, unity and progress of the country”.

    It added further that, “the President is on a salvage mission that has rescued the nation from the abyss no matter what the professional naysayers and compulsive agitators might be up to. The President has demonstrated an uncommon resolve to sustain the peace and security of the country and has taken bold steps and measures that will certainly restore faith and health in our nation. Our country is being gradually transformed into a modern state with best practices in the conduct of public affairs.

    “That we are completely convinced that the policies and templates of developments already laid down by President in the last three years based on critical thinking, careful and strategic planning are sure enough to catalyse rapid national development in his second tenure”.

    The monarchs however unanimously urged the President to use his “good will and reach to support the Southeast region to produce the next President of Nigeria after completing his tenure in 2023”.

  • 2019: Unical pro-chancellor backs the president

    The pro-chancellor and chairman of the University of Calabar, Cross River State Governing Board Council, Senator Nkechi Nwaogu has backed the second term agenda of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Nwaogu speaking in an interview with our reporter in Aba, the commercial nerve of Abia State said that she was convinced that Buhari will emerge Nigeria’s President in 2019.

    According to Nwaogu, her decision to support Buhari’s second term was because the President has been able to surpass the 16years achievements of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) within 2years and 10months of his administration.

    “Under two years and ten months, I think that President Buhari has performed credibly well. I rate him 85percent. For 16years that PDP government has being in power under two presidents, they have never done what the President Buhari has been able to do in two years and ten months.

    “Look at Enugu-Port Harcourt Expressway, Enugu-Onitsha Expressway it has taken President Buhari to begin genuine rehabilitation work the road which is over 70percent done. These roads have been there since 1999 with budgets that entered into individual’s pockets.

    “Look at the second Niger Bridge which was promised by President Shehu Shagari, Obasanjo and later Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan who went to Onitsha to perform groundbreaking and abandon the project.

    “Second Niger Bridge is over 50percent completion under 2years and 10months. Under the same time, President Buhari has revolutionalized agriculture. For 16years, Nigeria was spending N34billion importing foreign rice.

    “By next year, we will not be importing rice. This country will be self-sufficient. Under 2years and 10months, the APC led government has been able to complete some of the uncompleted rail lines that were there but never done. From 1999, Obasanjo to Jonathan’s era, today, the railway lines are being constructed less than two years and ten months.

    “Under two years and ten months, Nigeria’s reserve has increased from $2b to $23billion. You know that the nation’s reserve tells externally of how healthy the economy of the country is.

    “I think that what is happening in this country is because PDP never knew that they would lose the election. Look at the avalanche of monies they looted before and during 2015 election.

    “I know that things are a bit hard. Change comes with some stiffness. After a while, there will be relaxation. The economy will run on auto motion after a while.

    “In 2001 when GSM came into Nigeria, the GSM sim card used to cost N50, 000, but today most companies are giving it out free. But it didn’t happen in three years. It is a process, it is not an event.

    “I believe in President Buhari’s administration. I know that he is on the right track. When Jonathan was in power, he initiated the TSA (Treasury Single Account) but didn’t have the courage to implement it. Buhari implemented it to begin to reduce corruption which was one of the major essences of having TSA.

    “I believe in the administration of the APC led government and I know that without politics or rhetoric that we are on the right track. It may be painful now or may look as if we are hopeless now, but I know that we are on the right track.

    “We just need a time and that’s why we must vote him into power for the second time to complete this mission and set a solid standard for others to follow,” Nwaogu stated.

    On the one-sidedness of the war on corruption, Nwaogu who represented Abia Central in the senate said “I rate his anti-corruption war very high. In every democracy, there is a tripod; the executive, judiciary and legislature. No one arm tramples on the other. If you see that these cases have prolonged for years and there are evidences that there is misappropriation or mismanagement of funds. It is not the fault of president Buhari. It is not the fault of his anti-corruption process of prosecuting people.

    “He as executive has done his beat by ensuring that those people that they have identified of having being corrupt have been handed in for prosecution. As a president, he cannot arm-twist or intimidate the other arms of government to do it his way.

    “These are the things that his detractors have failed to realise. I don’t equally believe that the president is shielding APC members from being prosecuted. When the SGF (Babachir Lawal) was found culpable, he was shown the way out and it is eventually the work of the EFCC to prosecute. The director of NIA (Nigeria Intelligence Agency) was found to be compromising position, he was shown the way and it Is up to the EFCC prosecute.

    “Somebody like Orji Kalu is a member of the APC. He is going through his trials. So, how would you say that he is not prosecuting APC members, it is not correct.”

  • Imo new markets subdue complaints

    With enough space, tight security, water, a bank, among other facilities, the new Imo State markets have won over traders who once opposed them. OKODILI NDIDI reports

    A few months ago when the Imo State government embarked on the relocation of markets in the Owerri metropolis in line with its urban renewal programme, the traders kicked, cursed and protested, calling the action anti-people. Some of them, emboldened by the comments and action of opposition politicians, who fought to blackmail the government, went as far as dragging the state government to court, while very many others vowed to resist the demolition of the old markets.

    No explanation of the government, not even the obvious benefits that will accrue from the relocation of the markets, which were impeding developmental efforts, could sway the adamant traders.

    Security experts had also warned about the high rate of crime within the areas the markets were located, justifying the action of government but this was also dismissed by the traders.

    But today the story is different. The traders are better for it and words alone cannot convey their gratitude to the state government.

    Reasons for their joy and change of attitude is not farfetched. In place of the demolished markets are brand new ones complete with a bank, central security system, water and enough space, among other facilities.

    As if that is not enough, most of the traders now own expansive shops at subsidised rates.

    At the new markets, economic activities have got to fever pitch. It is a whole new beginning, and the traders are fast settling down to business in their new environment. The host communities where the new markets are located are also counting their gains and thanking their stars.

    Some of the new markets include the Egbeada Market Ubomiri, Alaba International Market at Naze, New Market Avu, the Arugo Modern Market, among others.

    Despite all these benefits, some of the traders were still adamant to relocate to the new markets, preferring instead to be shopping on the road and atop the ruins of the demolished markets with the attendant risks.

    It took the Task Force on Market relocation to force the traders to go to the new markets, where vacant shops are waiting to be occupied at no cost for a start.

    The state governor Rochas Okorocha was irritated by the traders’ reluctance to comply with the urban renewal project.

    According to his chief press secretary, Sam Onwuemeodo “the criticisms by some elites in the state on the implementation of the relocation of the traders and artisans to their permanent sites built for them by the state government noted that such people do not want a change for the state”.

    He said, “They are enemies of the state. They have no good intention for the state and her people. They are allergic to positive changes. They want the state to remain as it was when it was created in 1976.  But the governor is repositioning the State for posterity and we thank God for that”

    The final relocation of the traders was however greeted with mixed reactions from residents of the State. While some applauded the state government’s commitment to the Urban Renewal programme, others lamented that the relocation of the Market will impose hardship on the residents of the metropolis as they will have to travel far distance to go to market.

    A resident, Mr. Stanley Owuamanam, said, “The city is clean and we like what the state government is doing but that has also created another problem. We now have to go far distance to buy stable items”.

    A trader, Izu Moses, while commenting on the final relocation of the traders, said, “Yes the urban renewal is one of the greatest thing that has ever happened to us, but we traders have abused the privilege given to us by the governor, I have to tell you the truth, some of us have moved into the new market but because some have refused to go, so we have to join them, now that they have forced all of us, we will all now go at the same time”.

    Another trader, Chinazo Ufere, had this to say, “I am a proud owner of a shop at the Alaba Market in Naze and my business has picked up. Initially when the government demolished our former market, I thought everything was over but I can now understand better and I am grateful to the state government”.

    Ufere, who sells kitchen wares, added that, “the allocation of the new shop is done in a way that the traders have six months grace to stay without paying a dime after which you start paying for a period of time and the shop becomes yours”.

    Madam Nwakaego Ubochi, who almost committed suicide when Eke Ukwu Owerri was demolished according to her, now thanks the state government, “I thought they were just trying to pursue us away from the market. I wanted to kill myself because it was from my little trading to I take care of my family since my husband is bedridden. But today I now own my shop and I have rest of mind. In this new market we have enough space unlike in Owerri. Touts don’t harass us anymore.”

  • Church women feed Aba inmates

    People behind bars in Aba, Abia State, have been given what all inmates cherish: love. They have been visited, fed and provided with fresh supplies of toiletries and other daily needs.

    Their benefactors were women of Christ Holy Church International as part of activities marking this year’s Mother’s Day celebrations.

    The delegation was led by Snr. Deaconess Christiana C. Umeh, who heads Women and Children’s Department of the church.

    Apart from donating some relief materials including toiletries and detergents to the inmates, the women also used the opportunity to preach the Word of God and equally pray with them.

    The female and male inmates of the facility were also fed by the visiting women who handed over 100 loaves of bread to the prison authorities to be shared among over 600 inmates of the facility.

    Speaking on behalf of the Assistant Comptroller of Prisons Aba, ACP Samuel Anekwe, CSP Anyalewechi Egbe said that they were happy for the visit at the correctional facility by the church’s women group and the magnanimity that they have shown to the inmates.

    Speaking further, they added that the visit of the church was in fulfillment of the biblical injunction to feed the downtrodden by those that could afford to do so.

    Egbe, who praised the women for feeding the inmates and still make the donations regardless of the effect of the harsh economic condition of the country, said that by the feeding, the church has assisted the federal government in feeding the inmates. This is even as he expressed hope that the Word of God which was preached to the inmates would go a long way in meeting their physical and spiritual needs and to make them become better citizens of their families, church, state and the country at large.

    He called on other churches and organisations to emulate the footsteps of CHC Int’l women as there are other areas of needs that they can come to assist or partner them.

    Deaconess Umeh said, “The visit to the Aba Federal Prison by the women of Christ Holy Church International (aka Nation Builders), Aba Superintendency  is in fulfillment of Scriptural injunction which urged Christians to remember those in incarceration and as part of activities to mark this year’s Mothering Sunday celebration in our various church branches.

    “Last year we visited Motherless Babies Homes in Osisioma, Obingwa, Aba North and South Local Government Area of Abia State respectively and also assisted some indigent people around us through finance and donation of some relief materials to them also.

    “But our General Deaconess (Ngozi Okoh) suggested that this year, we should visit the prison yard in our domain or neighbourhood to preach the Word of God, feed the inmates and donate some relief materials to them because we haven’t been there before.

    “While at the female section of the prison facility, I told the female inmates that they need the Word of God and persistent prayer in their lives.

    “I told them that without prayer and the Word of God, nothing will happen in their life. Quoting Psalms 1:1-3, Joshua 1:8, Luke 18:1-5, I mentioned the power of prayer in their lives. I told them that in Acts of the Apostles 16 Paul and Silas gained their freedom while in prison because they worshiped God and prayed as well.

    “I also reminded them that in Acts of the Apostles chapter 12, Apostle Peter was able to gain his freedom because he was meditating on the Word and persistent prayers. I told them not relent or hopeless but to believe that with God, all things are possible. Through prayers and meditation of the Word of God, the Spirit of God will be nearer to them and whenever that they call upon the name of God, He will answer like He did when Paul and Silas prayed to Him from their cell room.

    “I told them also that Joseph was able to come out of the prison because he was nearer to God. I told them that if they shall confess their sins and turn a new leaf, that through prayers and constant meditation of the Word of God, God can through any means He wants to do it, turn things around and vindicate them from any accusation that brought them to the prison facility because God is a merciful God. For people that were in the prison over false accusation, I believe that when they accept Christ as their personal Lord and saviour, when they pray, their cries will get God and He will do something because I know that He will not just keep quiet and silent about their condition; He will find one way or the other to ensure that they secure their freedom.

    On what the church is going to do to further assist the inmates with bail able cases, Snr. Deaconess Umeh added, “We are a department in the church. Since we have gone there to interact with them and have been able to know some of their problems and situations, it is left for us now to discuss it with the church to see if there are other ways we can be of help to the inmates and officials of the prison.

    “As a church, it is also our duty to remember these inmates in our individual and collective prayers daily as we pray because some of them in the facility did not commit any crime, but suffering the crimes of others.

    “My visit to the prison has taught me a lot of lessons. To be in prison means being deprived of so many things, including freedom and rights to personal liberty. To move out and come back to your house at any time that you want to come back is the greatest freedom and blessing. If I can have the chance to write about my experience during the visit at the prison, I am sure it will be a voluminous work.

    “I want to advice my members to pry hard, be watchful and careful to avoid anything that will lead him or her to be in prison because it is not a place where someone will be. Let them also find time to pray for inmates of the prison and pay them visit at their own time within the year.”

     

  • Dumpsite location triggers epidemic fears in Aba

    Residents of Emelogu Road and Federal Housing Estate in Aba North and South local government areas of Abia State have raised the alarm that they may soon be hit by an epidemic emanating from a dumpsite in their area.

    Some of the respondents, who spoke anonymously for fear of victimisation, lamented the foul odour issuing from the dumpsite, and the inability of the authorities of Abia State Environmental Protection Agency (ASEPA) in Aba to fumigate and properly treat the refuse site.

    They said it poses health risks to residents and shop owners in the area.

    They also feared that the situation could get worse as the rainy season sets in. In the wet season, the stench worsens, making life more unbearable for the residents.

    A resident said the situation forced him to relocate his family to a relative’s house in the commercial city.

    A resident businessman in the area, Mr. Joseph Obi described the negative effect of the dumpsite to the health of the residents as a time bomb that would soon explode, adding that the effect could result in a major health crisis in the area.

    “The problem we have here is the case of irresponsible government agency and ignorant citizens. There is absolutely no way the Abia State government under the current administration will claim that they don’t know about this place and its health implications. I said so because, the incumbent governor used to be the leader of ASEPA.

    “It baffles me that this place is still getting worse on a daily basis. Most of the people you see here will always shy away from complaining openly, but within them, they are dying. That is where their ignorance is killing them. Yes, the dumpsite has been here for a long time, but a responsible government, a health-oriented government cannot allow a refuse dump to be so close to residential homes.

    “If Emelogu was to be turned into a perpetual refuse dump, then the government should compensate all the landlords to vacate the place and them demolish all the buildings and make it known that this place is a refuse dump. If not, I urge them to stop this situation because killing is killing. Whether you killed with gun, machetes or hazardous refuse dump, all are killings.”

    Personnel of Abia State Environmental Protection Agency (ASEPA) were spotted on duty at the site, while the stench from the dumpsite is threatening which residents said was fair now that the rain has not fully set in.

    Mr. Rowland Nwakamma, ASEPA, Aba General Manager of ASEPA could not be reached for comments, but a staff of the agency told our reporter that efforts were being made to relocate the dumpsite to a suitable place.

  • Aba tricycle operators protest extortion

    Commercial tricycle operators numbering over 200 operating in parts of Aba, the commercial hub of Abia State, have protested against alleged extortion by government revenue collecting agents and security agencies.

    The tricycle operators went round the city in a peaceful demonstration, though their protest was felt most in Aba South local government area of the state, where they attracted the attention of passersby and residents including their counterparts plying other routes in the state.

    Some of those other tricycle operators told The Nation that their colleagues were fighting a just cause as they equally experienced the same fate along various routes.

    Addressing journalists at St. Michael’s Road, Aba, leaders of the protesters, Pastor Donatus Augustine and Kenneth Chimezie Nwokejiobi called for the removal of the incumbent government revenue collector in charge of the welfare of tricycle operators in Aba, ASATOA (Abia State Amalgamation of Tricycle Operators Association), Mr. Eugene Eze-job who they accused of not being concerned with the welfare of members.

    According to Nwokejiobi, a graduate of Building Technology from the Abia State Polytechnic Aba, the protesters want government to lift the ban on the use of the detachable trampoline, ban on operational hours of the tricycles, repair of deplorable roads in Aba, ban on illegal fees collected by “Pit owners” (loading bay owners), reverse to N150 daily ticket from the current N230 daily ticket and among other demands.

    The operators feared that things could get worse if the state government and heads of security agencies fail to address the extortion by its contractors and agents who would anything to rip them off.

    “Aba is a commercial city where markets close by 6pm or thereabouts and you are asking us to stop operating by 7pm when we are supposed to help in conveying traders home.

    “We don’t want to take the law into our hands because we are law abiding citizens of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. We are responsible people and not criminals.

    “As you can see, we are suffering. It is sad and appalling in Aba particularly, able-bodied men who are supposed to engage themselves in other legal means of livelihood, but out of their laziness, you see them positioning themselves at strategic places, extorting tricycle operators all in the name of route and pit owners. This is rubbish and enough is enough. Abia State belongs to all of us and I see no reason why some lazy miscreants would lord themselves over us. The other day, they (government agents) stabbed one of us along Port Harcourt road because he refused their extortion.

    “We have gone to our so-called union to complain and he paid us deaf ears because he is benefiting from those people. Enough is enough. While the keke operators on the streets languish in pain. We want government to do something. We don’t Eugene to be removed as our chairman,” Nwokejiobi stated.

    Corroborating Nwokejiobi, Pastor Augustine said “The owners of the pits are operating illegally. They said that they were being sent to do what they are doing by Governor Okezie Ikpeazu, but we don’t think that the governor is aware of what they are doing.

    “We want the governor to do something. We want him to react and address the anomalies. This year alone, we have paid for 5 emblems amounting to N2,500 for each tricycle. Before you register your tricycle, you pay about N10, 000 including MOT.

    “They are not doing anything for us, but rather sit and feed fat in their offices while we lavish in pains. We are protesting because we normally pay ticket of N180 per keke, each day. Unknown to us, yesterday they government released another ticket which amounted to N230.

    “It is too much regarding to the economic situation of the country. Our passengers are also complaining about the high tariff that they pay. We also pay for tickets on Saturdays. We also pay for the one they call welfare which is not accounted for. We pay N20 to pit owners when we carry four passengers and N10 when we carry three persons.

    “At the end of the day, we can pay up to N2000 depending on the number of turns the keke man will go per day. We pay more to them than we pay to the government. We are tired of this and at the end of the day, they ask us to close work by 7pm and resume work by 6am.

    “We have been pressed to the wall and there is nothing that we can do than to hold this peaceful demonstration. We are now approaching rainy season, if you go to another town, keke has cover. We need to protect our passenger from the rains and that is why we want government to allow us use trampoline.

    “We want them to remove the ticket. Let them also reverse the operating hour to 24hrs. they said that they have made efforts to reach the government to no avail.

    In Aba, keke riders are regarded as criminals, refracts, hooligans. The police and other security agencies also molest us. We pass through a lot of things. We want them to allow us manage our resources by ourselves.