Tag: Anambra

  • Anambra Catholics, Anglicans clash over school premises

    Anambra Catholics, Anglicans clash over school premises

    There is tension in Onitsha, Anambra State’s commercial capital, following the boiling over of the rivalry between the Catholics and the Anglican Churches in the state.

    There was a clash by their faithful over a school premises being used for worship during last Sunday service.

    The incident took place between St Michael Catholic Church and St Faith Anglican Church both in Onitsha, during a church service at Lafiaji Primary school in Fegge.

    Though there was no record of casualty, it was gathered that the crisis started when worshipers of St. Faith Anglican Church, Fegge were allegedly attacked by the members of Men of Order (MOD) from St. Michael’s Catholic Church.

    The Priest of St Faith Anglican Church, Rev Canon Obiora Uzochukwu, told reporters yesterday that the cause of the incident was not unconnected to the lingering crisis over the ownership of the land where the school was built.

    According to him, the Lafiaji primary school saga started when the state government gave the Anglican Church the space to be conducting their church service.

    He alleged that the presence of the Anglican Church did not go down well with the Catholic Church whose members began moves to unleash mayhem on their members.

    Obiora said “the Anglican Communion has been worshipping at the Primary school, Lafiaji, for more than 40 years now and the recent attack by the Roman Catholics who were apparently acting scripts written by unknown persons was to intimidate us because the governor is a member of their church”

    “They came to the open space where we normally have our weekly church activities, but what broke the Carmel ’s back was the Sunday incident where the MOD members swooped on our members and destroyed two canopies we set for our Sunday service.

    “They attacked us with daggers and other dangerous weapons and it took the intervention of the security agents to save the situation” Rev. Obiora said

    The Priest further alleged that despite the pending court case over the ownership of the school premises, the Roman Catholic faithful refused to abide by the court injunction that ordered a return to status quo ante.

    This, according to him, was for the Anglican Communion to go ahead and have their service in the field since it does not belong to the Roman Catholic Church alone.

    “The members of St. Faith Anglican Church, Fegge, Onitsha, observed some men who are taking measurement at our church premises being the Lafiaji Primary school, Fegge, and Onitsha.

    “On enquiry, they claimed that they were contracted by a government agency to execute an MDGs project. It will be recalled that the same agency had earlier given us the approval to build a church at the said school before it was viciously opposed by unscrupulous individuals”

    But the Parish Priest in charge of St. Michael’s Catholic Church, Rev Fr. Celestine Aniofor, denied the allegations.

    He described it as devillish on the grounds that the school in contention does not belong to either of the denominations, but it is a government school.

    According to him, “Lafiaji Primary school belongs to the state government. What happened that day was that the members of MOD, a para military body in the church got approval from the Headmistress of the school to do their camping programme in the school from Friday to Sunday.

    “ When they came to report to me that the Anglican people had used canopies to block the field where they were doing parade, I quickly pleaded with them to give peace a chance but when the Anglicans were trying to use force on them, they resisted it as a para military group. That was the only thing that happened

    “The government agency had earlier barred all churches from having service there.

    “So when the MOD men came, the Anglican people came to make trouble and went as far as inviting the soldiers to arrest the MOD commander, it took us several efforts to get him on bail. On Sunday again, they came with the police.

    “This is pure madness because nobody is dragging anything with them” Rev. Aniofor said.

  • Boko Haram victims protest in Anambra

    Boko Haram victims protest in Anambra

    Victims of Boko Haram insurgency in the North, who were resettled in Okpoko, near Onitsha, Anambra State, yesterday protested what they called “forceful ejection from their petty trading points—kiosks”.

    The over 500 protesters lamented that the make-shift structures between the plastic market and Okpoko junction where they traded were demolished by the government.

    They said they relocated to private compounds only for their goods to be destroyed by the government again without providing them alternatives.

    The traders in a petition to the Catholic Archbishop of Onitsha, Rev Val Okeke, urged him to prevail on the government to give them an alternative place.

    They added that the government instead of assisting them as victims of Boko Haram, was worsening their condition.

    Their spokesman, Charles Orji, said: “We constructed make-shift structures between the plastic market and Okpoko junction but that joy was short lived as the government stormed the market and demolished the structures, saying that we blocked the expressway with our wares.

    “We were forced to move into compounds within the private site. But on June 24, we were forced out of the private sites and all our goods worth thousands of naira destroyed, mostly perishables.

    “Our temporary stalls were pulled down with bulldozers without an alternative place.”

    The Commissioner for Commerce and Industry, Okonkwo Robert, could not be reached for comments.

     

  • Scramble for grassroots power in Anambra

    Scramble for grassroots power in Anambra

    It has been 15 years since the last local government elections were held in Anambra State. October 5 has been fixed for the elections. NWANOSIKE ONU reports that stakeholders are skeptical about the possiblity of the polls.

     

    The last local government election in Anambra State was conducted 15 years ago by the military in 1998. It was followed later by the governorship election that brought Governor Chinwoke Mbadiuju’s administration into office

    Once the tenure of that set of elected council executives ended in 2002, successive administrations in the state have constituted one caretaker committee or the other for the administration of the councils.

    On few occassions, however, such duties have been entrusted into the hands of the heads of service of the councils.

    There are 21 local government areas in the state with a total of 326 wards. An additional ward was created to bring the total tally to 327.

    During the tenure of Senator Chris Ngige, preparations for the conduct of the council elections got to an advanced stage in 2004. All the materials were ready, but hoodlums, who were alleged to be members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), disrupted the process.

    The incident occured during the infamous November 2004 mayhem when the headquarters of the Anambra State Independent Electoral Commission (ANIEC) was set ablaze and vital electoral materials destroyed.

    It was alleged then that the onslaught was perpetrated by those who wanted Ngige out at all cost, following the failed bid to abduct him at the Choice Hotels in Awka.

    Soon after, in February 2005, another attempt was made by Ngige, but former President Olusegun Obasanjo allegedly threw a spanner in the works. He was said to have advised Ngige not to go ahead with it on the ground that security reports did not favour the conduct of local government elections.

    Last year, it was generally believed that the polls would hold in December. In fact, the chairman of the state’s Independent Electoral Commission, Prof Titus Ezeh, described the proposed December 4, 2012 date as “sacrosanct”. But certain technical challenges came up.

    First, it was discovered that the voter’s register was full of fictitious names from the North, Southsouth and Southwest and it was stopped following a public outcry against it.

    Before then, ANSIEC had carried out large scale sensitisation in all the 21 council areas. And some political parties had collected millions of naira from their aspirants through the sales of nomination forms.

    There was the case of a particular party, which imposed N1 million on each of its chairmanship aspirants for the nomination form. The party allegedly collected millions of naira only for the elections not to hold. That incident remains a talking point and it is causing ripples in the party till date.

    Ever since the failed attempt of last year, the commission and the government have been playing hide and seek on the issue.

    Expectedly, the attitude of the state government and ANSIEC pitched them against some groups and individuals. The government became jittery as civil society groups such as the Civil liberties Organization (CLO) led by Alloy Attah; Intersociety led by Comrade Emeka Umegbelasi; Movement for the Conduct of Local Government Elections, led by Comrade Osita Obi and Transform Nigeria Movement led by Comrade Obi Ochije turned the heat on the government and the commission.

    This forced Governor Peter Obi into making some pronouncements in that direction at some public functions but nothing concrete came out of them all. His common excuse has been that the court cases instituted by those at the helm of affairs in the commission were hampering his plans to conduct the elections.

    Former ANSIEC chairmen, Chief Cornel Umeh who served during the era of Ngige till Obi came in and Prof Titus Ezeh, who Obi had described as the man for the job, had both gone to court to challenge their removals from office by the state government without due process at different times.

    Some of these cases, which the governor referred to, are still pending in different courts till date. And until they are vacated, it would be difficult for the election to hold in Anambra.

    Furthermore, the constitution does not allow an acting chairman to conduct such an election, therefore, the commission, as it is presently constituted without a substantive chairman, may be wary of conducting the election, considering the fact that money, resources and time would have been waisted in no small measure.

    Besides, the chairmen of some political parties in the state, believe that the Governor Obi Administration is not sincere in its quest to get democratically elected individuals to pilot the affairs of the council areas.

    Critics in the state say that the reluctance to conduct local government elections is not just a problem that is peculiar to Governor Obi but a general political malady plaguing the system in the country. They argue that the desire to control allocations from the federal government, was the reason behind the reluctance of state governors to conduct council polls.

    They further claim that governors are more comfortable working with transition committee chairmen and their members because they are more amenable to doing the biddings of state executive governors.

    However, Governor Obi last week told members of the Movement for the Conduct of Local Government Election at the Government House, that he is now ready to conduct the council polls.

    Speaking to over 200 members of the group, at a meeting he held with them at the Conference Hall of the Government House, Obi said that if the money made available for ANSIEC in the 2013 appropriation bill was not enough, he would ensure that funds were made available to facilitate the conduct of the election.

    But in an omnious note, Obi reminded his visitors that he is not the commission that would conduct the polls.

    “I am not the commission, I have become your member today, but go to the ANSIEC and liaise with them to fix a date for the election and you will be assured of my assistance” Obi told them.

    The Nation learnt that ANSIEC was allocated 400 million naira in the 2013 budget, an amount political observers say is too meager for the conduct of council polls.

    Osita Obi, the leader of the group and his members had threatened that if the council polls was not conducted in the state, the governorship election in the state may also not hold. The activist said that he was ready to lay down his life to actualize his campaign, saying that Anambra and indeed, the aspirants had become a laughing stock in the society after 15 years.

    Following the agitation, ANSIEC acting chairman Sylvester Okonkwo, named October 5, 2013 as date for the conduct of the election. However, he did this without releasing the other necessary guidelines as earlier planned by the commission. He postponed that to this week.

    He merely announced that all nomination and completed forms by aspirants should be submitted to ANSIEC on or before August 15, 2013.

    But curiously, what he tagged as interactive sessions with stakeholders was not to be. He moved quickly into his office after the announcement, leaving the state party chairmen.

    Okonkwo’s action sparked instant protests from the party chieftains, who sat glued to their seats, waiting for the acting chairman to come and offer some explanation. But when he failed to turn up, they left in anger.

    The Nation learnt that what the acting chairman of ANSIEC did was a mere smokescreen designed to deceive the party leaders. It was alleged that the acting chairman did what he did under duress. Furthermore, a government source, who spoke with The Nation in confidence, last week said there will be no local government election. He added that “The Governor is planning to put sole administrators at the helm of affairs at the councils”.

    The tenure of transition committee members expired on June 12, 2013, and The Nation learnt also, that the aim of giving lawmakers 12 million naira each as constituency funds by the state government was to have its way on the plan.

    Anambra State PDP chairman Kenneth Emeakayi, told The Nation that as far as he was concerned, their mission at ANSIEC office was a jamboree. “The aim of the meeting, according to ANSIEC, was to have an interactive session with the stakeholders; rather, what we saw was a different thing. The acting chairman of the commission just refused to speak with us”.

    Chairman of the Labour Party (LP), Hon Sam Oraegbunam said the date of the election as announced by ANSIEC is not feasible. He told The Nation after the meeting that ANSIEC was only playing to the gallery and that it lacked focus.

    As for the chairman of the All Nigeria Peoples Party, Chief Pat Orjiakor, the entire arrangement by ANSIEC was “pure deceit”. He said the electoral body was not sincere to the project. “Anybody who holds any office should be a man of honour and integrity”.

    The same argument was put up by the state chairman of Advance Congress of Democrats (ACD), Lolo Oby Okafor. She said that ANSIEC called the party leaders to “ridicule them”. According to her, “the public can testify that there are no plans by anybody to hold council election, we were happy when we were summoned to come for this meeting, but on getting here, it was another thing altogether” Okafor said.

    But the chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Chief Mike Kwentoh and the factional chairman of the party Egwuoyibo Okoye, commended ANSIEC moves.

    The state chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Chief Amechi Obidike told The Nation that the possibility of the election holding is remote.

    According to him, the fact that there are some impending cases in court against the commission that have not been dispensed off, and that the acting chairman of ANSIEC has no powers to conduct council polls and as such the whole project is doubtful.

     

  • Anambra 2014: Group seeks support for Nwandu

    A political group, Progress Forum for Anambra People, has drummed up support for a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship aspirant in the state, Prince ObiefunaNwandu.

    It argued that the architect and interior designer is the best candidate to govern the state.

    The group, which comprises professionals, businessmen and traders, commended Nwandu for hosting the Hausa community in the state in his EnugwuUkwu residence, stating the move ensured inter- ethnic harmony in the state.

    Such forums, if replicated everywhere, would build confidence and promote inter-ethnic understanding, the group added.

    It said with someone like Nwandu at the helms of the affairs, the state will witness economic transformation and general well-being.

    Nwandu promised to meet the yearning of Anambra people for good governance.

    He assured that the state would never remain the same again if he is elected at the November 2013 election.

     

  • Lawmakers seek completion of

    Some lawmakers in the Anambra State House of Assembly have called for the completion of the Obizi Water Scheme in the state.

    The members told newsmen in Awka that the completion had become necessary to make potable water available in the state especially in Aguata Local Government Area

    Mr Ikem Uzoezie, a member representing Aguata I State Constituency, said the completion would also alleviate the sufferings of the people in the area.

    He said that the inferno at Ekwulobia market last week, which destroyed over N700 million worth of property, could have been averted.

    According to him, it was difficult for the traders and inhabitants of town to access water to fight the fire.

    “It is unfortunate that the fire service in Aguata could not save the situation. People around had to battle it with or without water.

    “We wonder why the Obizi Water Scheme which is expected to provide water in the market is not ready. If it is ready what happened on that day could have been avoided.

    “If you look at the damage done by the fire we must have lost over N700 million and this would have been saved if we had access to water supply.”

    The member representing Aguata II Constituency, Mr Ikechukwu Umeh, who is also the House Committee Chairman on Commerce and Industry, described the fire incident in the market as “unfortunate’’.

    “This is very unfortunate and we have contacted the Emergency Management Agency in Anambra on a possible way out.

    “We should have a functional fire service in Aguata and I would reach the Ministry of Commerce and Industry on the incident,’’ he stated.

     

  • Anambra council polls holds Oct 5

    Anambra State Independent Electoral Commission (ANSIEC) yesterday fixed October 5 for local government elections.

    The Acting Chairman, Sylvester Okonkwo, at a meeting with party chairmen, traditional rulers and stakeholders in Awka, said: “Anambra State Independent Electoral Commission (ANSIEC), in accordance with Section 7 of the Constitution of State law, shall hold local government elections on October 5.

    “All nomination and completed forms by political parties and candidates should be submitted on or before August 15.”

    But political parties accused ANSEIC of deceit. They spoke of court cases instituted by individuals and groups, especially the one by the former chairman of the commission, Prof Titus Ezeh,who is challenging his removal.

     

     

  • 2014: Anambra North plans consensus candidacy

    2014: Anambra North plans consensus candidacy

    GOVERNORSHIP aspirants from Anambra North Senatorial Zone may have agreed to step down for one of them to enable the zone win the forth coming governorship election. The zone is yet to rule the state since its creation.

    The decision was reached at a meeting attended by eight out of the 17 aspirants from the zone. Those at the meeting were Mr Oseloka Obaze (APGA); Dr. Chike Obidigbo (APGA); Alex Obiogbolu (PDP); Nnamdi Ekweogwu (PDP); Mr Chinedu Idigo (APGA), Paul Odenigbo and Dr. Emma Okafor.

    In their separate speeches after the event, the eight aspirants announced their readiness to work harmoniously with anyone that emerges as the anionted consensus candidate of the zone even as all indications point to the man with sound education home and abroad.

    The chairman of Oluna Adagbe , Peoples Asssembly, Chief Shedrack Anakwue said each of the parties would present a candidate each, but the Oluna Adagbe has picked one of candidates comnsidered to be the best material and his name written and kept in a sealed envelop. He handed over a sealed envelope to the chairman of Anambra north traditional rulers council and chairman of Oluna Adagbe traditional rulers, Igwe Rowland Odegbo for keeps until the envelop would be opened.

    Anakwue said the aspirants have agreed to step down and endorse a consensus candidates at party primaries in the People Democratic Party (PDP); All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) and All Progres-sives Congress (APC), with a view to ensuring that the zone produces the next governor of Anambra State.

    The Secretary of the Technical Committee, of the Oluna Adagbe Peoples Assembly, Hon. Nchekwube Anthony, has released its result of screening for the most credible candidate to be voted for in Anambra North in all the political parties at Geogold Hotel, Awka.

    He said that the aspirants took the decision after meeting with the Technical Committee so as to ensure that at least one aspirants emerges victorious in each of the three major political parties in the country, which would make it possible for one of them to win the said governorship election.

  • Thugs assault women in Anambra

    •Govt: we don’t control thugs

    More than 200 women traders in Awka, Anambra State, stormed the Central Police Station (CPS) yesterday to protest what they called “harassment and intimidation by thugs” believed to be government agents.

    Some of the women were beaten up by the thugs, following their inability to pay the stipulated N3,000 government tax imposed on them at the market.

    But the Commissioner for Information, Joe Martins Uzodike, said: “Government does not control thugs and we do not intend to have any in the state.”

    He said the government does not run markets, adding that what the government is interested in is people paying their taxes.

    “If the women are saying that thugs are harassing them, the onus is on the police to investigate the claim,” Uzodike said

    One of the women leaders, Mrs. Praise Moneke, said the harassment and intimidation by some boys had become unbearable, which forced them to move to the police station.

    At the Eke-Market yesterday, some 20 thugs were seen harrassing the women and throwing away their goods.

    Some of the thugs were parading the market with weapons, including guns, machetes, axes and empty bottles.

    At the central police station, the women were told to appoint 10 persons to meet with the Commissioner of Police, Bala Nasarawa, today.

     

  • Of Anambra gay community and David Cameron

    There is an Igbo proverb which insists that an unthinkable occurrence is to find a lion feasting on yam. So was it peculiarly strange to read in national newspapers last week that, “ members of the gay community in Anambra State on June 12 disrupted court proceedings at the Atani Magistrate’s Court, while protesting the arraignment of two of them for allegedly having same-sex relationship.” This protest is stranger still because, Anambra, the foremost Southeast state, is not a place known for protesting any official policy or cause. It will be difficult to remember the last time the good people of Anambra carried placards in public show of umbrage. Not when their erstwhile governor was locked up in a toilet by a certain rascal politician who proceeded to torch public properties in the state when he could not have his way; not even during the fuel subsidy nationwide protests January last year did we get any inkling that so many people could shout in unison in Anambra.

    What forest gnome therefore pushed these full-bodied okorobias to dress up like women, come out in the public, on Igbo soil and insist that two men be allowed to co-habit. Eewoo, aru eme! Abomination stalks the land and our lion now eats yam and dog has grown a large horn. A rabbit has burst forth in broad daylight. Is it a daydream or how will the story be told that a full bodied man, onochie, isi obi, who holds the ofor, the totem of his family now plays woman, to be married off by another man? If that day had come when a man would cease to be a groom but a bride to a fellow man, did anyone think it would start from Anambra State?

    Anambra is still among the last bastions of Catholicism in Nigeria as well as the stronghold of Igbo culture and tradition. It is a place where the traditional marriage rite of igba nkwu nwanyi (wine carrying to take the hand of a woman in marriage) is still cherished in Igboland. Perhaps the time has come upon us sooner than we thought to rethink that idea and change it to igba nkwu nwoke (wine carrying to marry a man).

    It must be remarkable that this Atani protest is happening (shortly) after the demise of Chinua Achebe, the great Anambra son who wrote Things Fall Apart which was set in colonial Anambra. The great novel is about how things fell apart in Igboland as the new British masters over ran the primitive people of the lower Niger River and eventually pacified them through the force of arms.

    Incidentally, Atani is right at the bank of the River Niger. If Achebe had lived longer, would he have written Things Fall Apart, Again, with the advent of the Whiteman gay culture on his fatherland as young men seem eager to run off with fellow men in abominable co-habitation spree?

    But wait a minute, British Prime Minister David Cameron has been banging the table and threatening thunder if Nigeria passes the same-sex marriage Bill; these Anambra boys always have one ahead of the rest us. Do you see a chance that Mr. Cameron may ask all Nigerian gays over to Britain? Wow, what huge prospects lie ahead of you should you land at Heathrow announcing you are a gay exile fleeing from Nigerian government persecutors! Well Hardball’s advice is, better be truly gay before you try such stunt for you may well be subjected to unpalatable tests to prove your status.

     

  • Panel to probe market inferno in Anambra

    A Panel of inquiry has been set up by Aguata Local Government to probe the cause(s) of the fire at Ekwulobia market in Anambra State last week.

    The fire destroyed buildings and goods worth N700 million.

    The Transition Chairman, Titus Anigbogu, told reporters that the council is bent on getting to the root of the incident.

    Governor Peter Obi visited the scene to symphatise with the affected traders.

    Obi said such incidents are unavoidable sometimes.

    Anigbogu said: “A committee has been set up to investigate the cause(s) of the fire and find ways of averting a recurrence.

    “Also the panel of enquiry will probe the problems of the fire service in the local government.

    “ I was told that the truck of the fire service got spoilt on the eve of that incident.

    “That vehicle has been on the stand by, helping us.

    “Had it not been the one in Awka that came to our rescue, there would have been more damage.

    The member representing Aguata I State Constituency, Ikem Uzioezie, described the incident as unfortunate.

    He said: “It is unfortunate that the fire service in Aguata could not save the situation.”

    The market leadership appealed to the government to equip the fire station.

    The President-General of Ekwulobia Traders and Allied Workers Association, Ikechukwu Ezeokeke, said: “The fire was like a Tsunami. If the fire station was well equipped, the damage could have been minimal.

    “I have to appreciate the Divisional Police Officer because he called the fire service in Awka but before they could get here, the fire had caused much damage,” Ezeokeke added.

    He said some of the victims were hospitalised due to shock from their losses.