Tag: anti-Amaechi

  • Ikwerre leaders, IYM threaten N2b suit against anti-Amaechi campaigners

    The leaders of four Ikwerre-speaking local government areas of Rivers State and their youths’ movement (IYM) have threatened to file a N2 billion libel suit against a group, Integrity Group Organisation (IGO), for allegedly publishing defamatory statement against former Governor Rotimi Amaechi.

    IGO, a non-governmental organisation (NGO), published on August 3 an advertorial that the former governor allegedly embezzled billions of Naira belonging to Rivers State.

    The group is said to be supporting Governor Nyesom Wike to fight his opponents.

    The four Ikwerre-speaking local government areas are: Obio/Akpor, Emohua, Ikwerre and Port Harcourt City.

    They share the same cultural identity.

    Reacting yesterday in Port Harcourt, the state capital, to the advertorial, leaders of the four local government areas and IYM said they had asked the NGO to produce the evidence on the allege fraud within seven days.

    On behalf of the four local government areas, Emohua Local Government Area’s Chairman Lucky Worluh said the Ikwerre would file a libel suit against the NGO to prove Amaechi’s innocence.

    The spokesman said the action would be taken against the NGO and its sponsors, if it failed to back the libellous publication against Amaechi with a genuine document before the expiration of the ultimatum.

    He said leaders and elders of the four local government areas and the leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) supported the legal action to defend the former governor, who brought honour and development to Ikwerre land.

    Worluh said: “We do not only condemn the unholy allegations against Amaechi but we also challenge the leader of the unregistered NGO, Mr.  Livingstone Nwejie, his paymaster and sponsors to make public all relevant documents relating to the allegation within seven days of this publication.”

    The spokesman noted that Rivers State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its leaders were only interested in how to bring Amaechi down.

    According to him, with his (Amaechi’s) rising profile across Nigeria, especially for leading an armless revolution that ousted former President Goodluck Jonathan and heading the campaign that brought in the Muhammadu Buhari administration to power, it should be expected that the PDP would mount more smear campaigns against Amaechi.

    IYM’s National President Azubuike Wanjoku said the Ikwerre ethnic nationality would not allow what it called a dubious publication to insult and blackmail the former governor.

    He said: “We wish to state categorically that the Ikwerre ethnic nationality, Rivers State and Niger Deltans are indebted to Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi to have offered his life to lead a common sense revolution against the Jonathan administration…”

  • Anti-Amaechi lawmakers shun letter of undertaking

    The six anti-Amaechi lawmakers of the embattled Rivers State House of Assembly are yet to comply with the directives of the police command to sign an undertaking in preparation for the re-opening of the Assembly complex.

    The House has been shut since August.

    The legislators and their leader Evans Bipi, representing Ogu/Bolo, said they would not comply until they were served officially by the Clerk.

    A bloody fight ensued at the main bowl of the legislative chambers on July 9 and continued the next day, following attempt by the five lawmakers not loyal to Governor Chibuike Rotomi Amaechi to impeach the Speaker, Otelemaba Dan Amaechree.

    The development resulted in the takeover of the lawmakers’ functions by the National Assembly.

    However, an Abuja Federal High Court last week faulted the takeover of the legislators’ function and ordered that they (state lawmakers) resume sitting.

    The vacation of the National Assembly from the functions of the state legislators on Wednesday raised another round of tension at the gates of the blocked House and its environs, as each faction of the members made efforts to access the complex and resume sitting in compliance with the Abuja court judgment.

    But each group was denied access by the police.

    They said they were still awaiting the signed copy of the judgment.

    The Nation learnt that the judgment was endorsed yesterday by the chief justice.

    The police command led by Mbu Joseph Mbu, two days ago issued a directive to the members, (31 of them), through the Clerk to approach the Office of the Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of Investigation to sign an undertaking to be of good conduct.

    Police spokesman Ahmad K. Mohammad confirmed this at a news conference in Port Harcourt.

    It was gathered that 23 of the 25 lawmakers loyal to Amaechi, including the Speaker and his deputy, Leyii Kwanee, have complied. However, the press officer to Bipi, Itobo Ofem, confirmed that the group was yet to go for the signing.

    He said they were waiting for the official invitation from the Clerk before they would comply.

    The six anti-Amaechi legislators are Evans Bipi (Ogu/Bolo), Michael Okechuku Chinda (Obio/Akpor 11), Kelech Nwogu (Omuma), Martins Amaewhule (Obio/Akpor 1), Victor Ihunwo (Port Harcourt) and lately Ikuinyi-Owaji Ibani, the chief whip (Andoni).

    An Ahoada High Court on Monday restrained the self-acclaimed Speaker Bipi from further parading himself as the helmsman.

    Police Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) and men have been blocking the entrance.

    Speaking at the news conference, Mbu said the signing of the good behaviour document was one of the conditions to allow the lawmakers access to the complex.

    Mbu, who spoke through the police spokesman, urged the lawmakers to report to the Office of the Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of Investigations, to sign an undertaking that they would conduct the business of the House in an orderly manner.

    The police warned that should the contrary happen, they would re-possess the complex.

    Mbu also said the legislators and workers would be subjected to thorough screening on a daily basis at the gates. He reiterated the police commitment to remain neutral in the crisis.

  • ‘Anti-Amaechi forces after Rivers’ treasury’

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum (Down-Stream), Senator Magnus Abe, has said those fighting Rivers State Governor Chibuike Amaechi are only after the state’s resources.

    Abe, who represents Rivers Southeast, spoke at Nchia, headquarters of Eleme Local Government, during a public hearing on a bill for a bye-law.

    It was organised by the Eleme Local Government Legislative Assembly.

    He said: “The reason, I know all these, is because the governor is vocal, he speaks his mind on issues. Some people are interested in getting control of the Rivers State Government by hook or crook, not because they love the state, not because they even hate Amaechi, but because they want to be the ones to control the state’s resources.

    “For the past six years, we are witnesses to what our resources have been used for. Those things would not have been possible if the Rivers State’s resources are not in the hands of those who think that the people matter more than the big men.”

    While urging the indigenes to be on the alert, Abe said security had been compromised in the state, stressing that the police have become more interested in the politics of the state than in security.

    He lauded the decision of the National Assembly to take over the functions of the Rivers State House of Assembly, saying it was taken so that frayed nerves could calm down while mature minds look for a solution to the crisis.

    Abe said: “Thankfully, the National Assembly has taken over the legislative functions of the House of Assembly. It is done to solve the problems, so that mature heads will look for a solution that will restore constitutional rule.”

    A Commissioner in the Rivers State Civil Service Commission, Chief Bebe Okpabi, thanked the senator for providing quality representation for the people of Rivers Southeast and hailed him for the water projects and bags of fertiliser provided for the people.

    The Chairman, Eleme Local Government, Oji Ngofa, pledged the commitment of the people to Amaechi and Abe.

  • Wobbling and fumbling to 2015

    Wobbling and fumbling to 2015

    Anti-Amaechi crisis exposes the PDP for what it is even as the Presidency plays the ostrich

     

    What ordinarily should have passed as an innocuous election by governors in the country to elect their officers in a forum not known to the constitution has become a reference point for President Goodluck Jonathan’s popularity. And the reason is simple: the President himself has not done much to be detached from the forum that could easily pass for a social gathering where the governors unwind. So, if the President is feeling bad at the turn of events before and shortly after the Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF) election of May 24, it is self-inflicted. The humiliation, if the President sees the developments as such, is the kind of thing a leader suffers when he stoops so low to be involved in mundane things that should not have been his business, considering his exalted office.

    But President Jonathan did not seem to understand the prestige attached to that office. If he did, he would not have been an interested party in who heads the NGF or whether the organisation even exists or not. The only time the forum attracted the attention of Nigerians probably was the time it supported the Federal Government on the withdrawal of fuel subsidy in late 2011. And that was because it wanted more money for its members. Interestingly, both the Federal Government and the forum were on the same page; so, there was no quarrel then, even though subsidy removal was unpopular among the generality of Nigerians. That did not matter, either to the Presidency or the forum, once their own needs were met. But for mass resistance, fuel subsidy removal would have been rammed down the throats of Nigerians while the presidency and the governors would have been smiling to the banks, with their ‘protruding’ treasuries.

    Today, the music has changed. Governor Rotimi Amaechi, as chairman of the NGF in support of fuel subsidy removal who was then a friend to President Jonathan, is now his sworn enemy. But that is what life is all about. There are no permanent friends or permanent foes, but permanent interests. Of course, the story is well known. President Jonathan, despite a lackluster mid-term performance, is still interested in contesting the 2015 election. Apparently the man did not know how badly disappointed Nigerians are with his government because if he knew, he would not have awarded himself a pass mark in his assessment of himself on May 29. Where in the world is the student also the examiner? Or where in the world is an accused the judge in his own cause? This, unfortunately, is what the President has done and he can do that because this is Nigeria. But that is not our concern for today.

    We have been told that Amaechi has been ‘blacklisted’ because he is interested in being vice president in 2015. If this is true, isn’t this a legitimate aspiration? The point is that unless political calculations change, or unless the President changes his style, he will be resoundingly defeated in 2015. This has nothing to do with the fact that he was massively voted for in 2011. The handwriting is becoming clearer by the day. And that explains the desperation to clear all enemies, real or perceived, from the way to ensure there are no formidable challengers, and Amaechi happens to be the scapegoat. The calculation is, once you deal ‘ruthlessly’ with Amaechi, others who might be nursing similar ambition would get the message and queue behind the President, whether or not he has anything to offer.

    But Nigeria ought to have passed the stage where any elected official would breathe down the neck of another. The governor was elected just as the President. But for our warped federalism, nothing should make it possible for either to breathe down the neck of the other. It is obvious the architects of this anti-Amaechi crisis either overrated their own capacity or underestimated that of their opponents. That is why they have found it impossible to beat a retreat despite the fact that they have been fumbling serially and so embarrassingly; unfortunately dragging the Presidency along with them, notwithstanding that the presidency has said it is not a party to the crisis. They should go tell that to the marines!

    Those who are saying that the NGF crisis is between Governor Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State and Governor Amaechi of Rivers State either deliberately chose to amend the truth or simply want to make President Jonathan feel good; a thing that can never be because the president himself knows that the contest is this fierce because he (President) is leading the anti-Amaechi fray. And this explains the desperation on the part of the President’s goons to win by foul means since it is impossible for them to win fairly. The PDP, their party, also badly handled the crisis that should have been nipped in the bud before it festered. Rather than approach the issue maturely, the party’s leaders behaved like a village headmaster with a horsewhip to whip non-conformists into line.

    And when this failed, they contrived all kinds of shenanigans, from the formation of a parallel forum which they called the PDP Governors Forum, to reduce Amaechi’s influence as NGF chair. That failed. They then thought it was better to pull the rug off his feet by slugging it out with him at the forum’s polls. They were sold a dummy which they sheepishly bought; forgetting that there is a difference between dreams and deeds. At the NGF polls, again, they were roundly defeated. And, rather than graciously accept defeat, they have contrived all kinds of things to give the impression that Jonah Jang, Plateau State Governor, their defeated candidate at the NGF poll, won the election. Not surprisingly, from the formation of the PDP Governors Forum to the NGF polls, they always found ready tools for the dirty games. Nigeria is never in short supply of such characters. One of their favourites has God as part of his name but it is doubtful if he is allowing God’s will in this matter. Then the other had a namesake in the Bible who was the problem to other passengers in a troubled ship on the sea; the ship remained troubled until he was thrown into the sea and swallowed by a fish in whose belly he was for three days and three nights before he repented. Now, this second tool in the hands of the PDP went to church to celebrate the victory he knew he never had. If anyone was in doubt that he never had that victory, that doubt must have evaporated with the number of governors (whose votes he purportedly had during the NGF election) that honoured his invitation to their so-called new NGF Secretariat on Thursday. But this must be a different kind of Jonah because the biblical Jonah repented three days after. It is over seven days and seven nights and this Jonah of our time is still swimming in the mud of iniquities.

    Mark my words, the PDP rather than beat a retreat, will want to ‘deal’ with those governors that were absent at Jang’s event, their event. That is the way of Pharaohs. They don’t beat a retreat until they sink. We will start hearing the kind of things we never heard about those governors now that they have made themselves known. Their courage is however soul-lifting. However, those playing God today should know that this is the kind of crisis no one can tell the end. They should go ask those who played God yesterday. But the fact is that this crisis has exposed the PDP for what it is and it is a foretaste of what to come in 2015.

     

  • Presidency steps up anti-Amaechi battle

    Presidency steps up anti-Amaechi battle

    Governors are facing pressure from the Presidency, which is asking them to dump Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) Chairman Rotimi Amaechi, who is interested in keeping the seat.

    It was not sure last night whether the election will hold on Thursday, as widely speculated.

    Governors are being asked to back a proposal that the election should hold at the Presidential Villa, The Nation learnt yesterday.

    Besides, some governors have been coerced into signing a “strange voting sheet” to secure their pledge to vote against Amaechi.

    The Presidency is believed to have agreed to dump Governor Ibrahim Shema of Katsina State for Governor Isa Yuguda of Bauchi State as its anointed candidate to replace Amaechi.

    Unsure of the loyalty of the 23 PDP governors, forces in the Presidency are pushing for open ballot instead of secret ballot system.

    The Presidency is said to have been rattled by the continued support enjoyed by Amaechi among his colleagues.

    A source said: “This unprecedented move of collecting signatures was decided upon after all the pressure put on most of the pro-Amaechi governors to dump him failed.”

    The execution of the plan began last Thursday after the National Economic Council meeting in Abuja when some of the governors were ambushed for the ‘signing ceremony’ in the Villa, the source said. Coordinating the signing were two governors Akpabio – one from the Southsouth and the other from the Middle Belt.

    The strategy is to conduct the voting in the Villa by inviting the governors individually and demanding their signatures in support of the new candidate.

    For their signatures each governor was promised protection from EFCC investigation, patronage from the Federal Government in various forms and assurances that their states be spared from a state of emergency.

    “The 2015 re-election was also dangled before the governors that need re-election,” the source claimed.

    Investigations revealed that the last-minute decision to dump Shema for Yuguda made the Presidency to adopt “unorthodox method”.

    “Shema was dumped after President Goodluck Jonathan was advised that his (Shema’s) candidacy would ‘not fly’.

    A third source spoke of “a governor who reported to his state caucus confirming that some of his colleagues who signed were one from the Northwest; one from Northcentral and the last from the Northeast.

    “Some of the governors pointedly refused to sign and pleaded for some time to reflect on the issues,” he said.

    The said governor reportedly “revealed the details of the circumstances and how almost all the governors have been complaining about the intimidation and harassment and indeed blackmail from the Presidency in order to make them dump Amaechi”.

    Some forces in the Presidency have been trying to persuade Amaechi to accept the Villa option but those in support of the Rivers State governor have opposed it.

    The plan, it was learnt, is to fix a meeting of the governors with the Presidency for the Villa and coerce the NGF to hold its session there.

    But pro-Amaechi governors are insisting on using either the Rivers Governor’s Lodge in Abuja or the NGF Secretariat for the poll.

    A pro-Amaechi governor said: “There is no provision for NGF meeting at the Presidential Villa. We won’t allow anybody to intimidate the governors. Articles 2 and 9 of the NGF Constitution are explicit on the secretariat of the Forum.”