Tag: Bisi Olaniyi

  • PDP chief sad over absence of tangible FG’s projects in Rivers

    PDP chief sad over absence of tangible FG’s projects in Rivers

    The Rivers State Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Felix Obuah, has expressed sadness over the absence of tangible Federal Government projects in the state.

    He alleged that two years into the administration of the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led, Muhammadu Buhari’s government, the Niger Delta state had not benefitted from capital-intensive and people-oriented projects of the Federal Government.

    Obuah, on Wednesday in Port Harcourt, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Jerry Needam, said the ruling party in the state frowned on the alleged obvious indifference towards Rivers.

    The PDP chairman cited the Port Harcourt International Airport, which he claimed had remained abandoned by the Federal Government.

    He alleged that the APC-led Federal Government had failed to complement the efforts of Governor Nyesom Wike in the execution of capital projects,  which he said would have improved the wellbeing of the people of the state.

    Obuah claimed that the APC-led Federal Government deliberately abandoned the Rivers and also accused the Buhari’s administration of treating the state badly, despite all the support Wike was giving to the Federal Government.

    He mentioned the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja and Murtala Mohammed International Airport in Lagos, as projects completed in record time, whereas the Port Harcourt International Airport remained allegedly abandoned.

    Rivers PDP chairman also urged the APC-led Federal Government to have a rethink, by giving deserved attention to the state, described as the treasure base of the nation.

  • ‘APC councillors didn’t defect to PDP in Rivers’

    ‘APC councillors didn’t defect to PDP in Rivers’

    The Rivers State All Progressives Congress (APC) Councillors Forum of the 8th Legislative Assembly has stated that none of its members has defected to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and not planning to do so, describing the claim as mere propaganda to cause confusion.

    The councillors, who were elected in 2015, during the Rotimi Amaechi’s administration, declared that they were intact and still pursuing their suit at the Court of Appeal, Port Harcourt against the Rivers government and would never withdraw the case.

    The forum, through its Chairman, Stephen Deegbara, denied Rivers PDP’s claim that over 200 of its members from across the 23 local government areas of the state had defected or were on the verge of defecting from the APC to the PDP. 

    The councillors also declared that the self-acclaimed leader of a group that allegedly defected to PDP, ‘Tamunoemi Williams, who claimed to be a councillor from Bonny LGA of the state was non-existent.

    Rivers APC councillors’ forum said: “We want to state clearly that none of our members from across the 319 wards of Rivers State is defecting from our party, the APC to any other party. None of our members has defected. 

    “Members of the Rivers APC Councillors’ Forum have no plan whatsoever to seek the withdrawal or the discontinuation of our case before the Court of Appeal, Port Harcourt. 

    “Our case in court is at an advanced stage and we believe justice shall be served in no distance time. Our grassroots’ supporters from across the 23 LGAs of Rivers State are assured that we shall pursue our case to a  justifiable end. 

    “From the records available to us at the state level of the forum, there is no such councillor by the name “Tamunoemi Williams” on the list of our elected honourable members from Bonny LGA. “Tamunoemi Williams” is an impostor.”

    The forum described the false defection claim as a figment of the imagination of the gullible persons behind it and the handiwork of mischief makers, professionally crafted to deceive their supporters and some unsuspecting members of the public, just to cause confusion.

    Members of the forum also pledged their loyalty to the Rivers APC, under the leadership of the Transportation Minister, Rotimi Amaechi.

    The forum said: “None of our councillors is defecting to another political party. We remain steadfast and comfortable in the APC because we believe our future and destinies can be better guaranteed within the progressive family.”

    The APC councillors also urged journalists to always cross-check their facts, before rushing to the press.

  • Ijaw group hails FG’s directive for oil companies to relocate to N/Delta

    Ijaw group hails FG’s directive for oil companies to relocate to N/Delta

    The Ijaw Professionals Association (IPA) has described as a step in the right direction, the Federal Government’s historic directive that oil companies must relocate their corporate headquarters to the crude oil and gas-rich Niger Delta region.

    It noted that the directive, which was conveyed by the then Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State on March 2 this year, during his equally-encouraging stakeholders’ consultation tours to all states of the Niger Delta, would ensure a lasting peace in the region.

    IPA, in an online statement on Tuesday by the Chairman of its Board of Trustees (BoT), Maj.-Gen. Paul Alaowei-Toun; President of Homeland Chapter (Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta States), Iniruo Wills; and President of Lagos Chapter, Elaye Otrofanowei; described the directive as the strongest signal in many years that the Federal Government had sincerely begun to address the age-old challenges of the Niger Delta region from the roots, rather than the usual cosmetic approach of trying to dust off the symptoms on the surface.

    It said: “The presidential directive answers one of the cardinal demands of petroleum host communities over the last half-century. For the oil producing and heavily oil-polluted communities and states in the Niger Delta, this might be the most authentic evidence of the Nigerian local content policy that was recently enacted into law but is yet to be of much practical value to our people’s lives and local economies in the region.

    The effects on the water of an oil spill which occurred in mid 2007, near the community of Goi, Ogoniland, Nigeria, photo taken 28 January 2008.

    “Hopefully, the directive will also mark a departure from the mutually counter-productive tactics of seeking to suppress agitation and its regrettable ramifications by military might.

     

    “Although the Federal Government’s directive, even upon complete implementation, will not be the final solution to the Niger Delta question, it will be of tremendous benefit to Nigeria and to the Niger Delta, due to the significant impact it will have on the region in terms of social and economic empowerment, restoration of the crucial peaceful atmosphere for smooth oil and gas operations and the consequent sustainability of the substantial national revenues flowing from the region and its coastal treasures.

    “The speed and commitment with which the directive will be implemented and facilitated by all stakeholder segments are matters of critical national importance and urgency. The momentum must not only be maintained but maximised as well.

    [quote font_size=”18″ bgcolor=”#e8e820″ arrow=”yes”]”It is highly incumbent on all key stakeholders and drivers to act promptly and decisively towards immediate implementation of the Federal Government’s directive.”[/quote]

    The Ijaw professionals also looked primarily to the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Emmanuel Kachikwu, in his usual energetic manner, to drive an accelerated process for the relocation of all oil and gas companies to their areas of operation.kachikwu

    IPA noted that the relocation should affect the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), its various subsidiaries (NAPIMS, NETCO, HYSON, IDSL, etc.) and the relevant regulatory/monitoring and capacity building agencies such as the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), the Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) and the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), which it said had all curiously remained at a dysfunctional distance far from the geographical centres of their operations and mandates.

    It said: “We trust that the industry operators, especially but not restricted to the multinational oil companies, will cooperate fully and swiftly on this declared thrust of the Government of Nigeria.

    “It is also our minimum expectation from the indigenous operators that they will follow suit, moreover as they are all beneficiaries of the petroleum industry indigenisation or Nigerian-local content policy and in particular recent divestments of oil mining leases and marginal fields.

    “The people of the Niger Delta region and the rest of Nigeria look forward to this.”

    IPA also admonished home governments of the oil companies to take all measures to actively encourage their corporate nationals to comply with this directive of the government of Nigeria.

    The oil firms were asked to start to address the grave and intolerable hardships and losses they had continuously inflicted on the people and communities in the Niger Delta region for about sixty years.

    Ijaw professionals said: “We urge, as a matter of urgent responsibility, the governors of the affected states in the Niger Delta, the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, the Niger Delta Development Commission and the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs to seize the moment now and work together and with the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources and the Minister of Budget and National Planning, to facilitate the actualization of the directive.

    “This should include an immediate and mutually coordinated short to medium term infrastructure and amenities plan, with clearly defined stakeholders’ commitments on funding and other enablers. Such a strategic facilitation plan will be of immense value towards bringing the Federal Government’s visionary directive to quick fruition.

    “Our governors and other key actors, including leading professional bodies and genuine stakeholder platforms, should commit themselves to this opportunity and challenge, with the target of ensuring that the relocation of all oil and gas companies is consummated within the next six to twelve months, while arrangements for perfecting their settling down continue for such further time as may be expedient.

    “IPA commits to collaborating with these vital governmental and non-governmental institutions and mobilising its wide membership, expertise and leverages towards the fulfilment of this potentially-redefining and transformative-presidential directive.”

    Members of the association also stated that they were studying with keen interest, the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) that had just been released by the Federal Government, in its bid to revitalise the Nigerian economy.

    IPA added that part of the proceeds of the planned divestments should be to fund and underwrite the critical infrastructure needs of the Niger Delta.

  • Rivers rerun: Army, Police warn troublemakers

    Rivers rerun: Army, Police warn troublemakers

    • APC, PDP disagree on rigging plot
    The 6 Division of the Nigerian Army, Port Harcourt, Rivers State, has warned thugs and troublemakers to steer clear of Etche and Omuma Local Government Areas during the rerun election, on Saturday.
    It also assured of peaceful elections in the two LGAs, while urging leaders of political parties fielding candidates in the polls to call their supporters to order, thereby refusing involvement in violence and thuggery.
    The 6 division, through its Deputy Director, Army Public Relations, Col. Aminu Iliyasu, in an interview on Friday in Port Harcourt, disclosed that enough soldiers were on Thursday deployed in Etche and Omuma LGAs to give the necessary support to the police and other security agencies, declaring that the Nigerian army was very prepared for the elections.
    Acting Rivers Commissioner of Police, Ahmed Magaji, who is the Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) in charge of Operations, promised adequate security during today’s polls, to ensure free,  fair and credible rerun.
    The leaders of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the state and the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) also disagreed on a plot to rig the polls.
    The PDP, through its Publicity Secretary, Samuel Nwanosike, accused the members and leaders of the APC of conniving with security agencies and officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to massively rig the crucial elections.
    The Publicity Secretary of the APC in Rivers, Chris Finebone, on Friday evening in Port Harcourt, however, declared that Governor Nyesom Wike, his allies and members of the PDP had perfected plans to rig the elections again through violence, thuggery and bribery while urging security agents to be vigilant and avoid a double standard.
    Finebone stressed that candidates of APC for the elections and members of the party in Etche and Omuma LGAs vigorously campaigned, which he said would make them to record landslide victories, provided the polls were free, fair and devoid of violence/thuggery.
    The rerun in over 200 voting units across 8 registration areas will be for House of Representatives’ Etche/Omuma federal constituency, which will hold in 147 units in Etche LGA & one unit in Omuma LGA, while the election for Rivers House of Assembly’s Etche constituency 2 will hold in 74 units.
    The Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) of INEC in Rivers state, Aniedi Ikoiwak, stated that the polls would hold in areas where access to polling units is blocked by suspected thugs during the December 10 last year’s rerun, where election materials got to, but for violence and disruption, elections were not collated and results not declared at the appropriate venue and where elections were held, but the results were rejected and cancelled by the Electoral Officers at the ward level, because of certain malpractices.
    Ikoiwak noted that with all the adequate arrangements made by INEC and assurances given by security agencies, he expressed optimism that the elections would be free, fair and credible.
    APC’s Ogbonna Nwuke is for Etche/Omuma federal constituency in the House of Representatives, while Golden Chioma is the main opposition party’s candidate for Rivers House of Assembly’s Etche constituency 2.
    PDP’s Chief Jerome Eke is for House of Representatives, while Mr Tony Ejiogu is the ruling party’s candidate for Etche constituency 2 in the House of Assembly.
    INEC’s National Commissioner supervising Rivers, Edo and Bayelsa states, May Agbamuche-Mbu, had earlier revealed that over 700 staff of the commission, within and outside Rivers state, would be deployed for the elections.
    It will be recalled that the Rivers Coordinator of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Mr Omotayo Adewoye, stated that the 300 invited youth corps members would not be participating in today’s elections, to avoid being killed, since a youth corps member was earlier killed by hoodlums during a previous rerun in the state.
    Adewoye noted that the approval for the youth corps members not to take part in the polls was given by the Direcror-General of NYSC, Brig. Gen. Sule Zakari, since nobody would be able to guarantee the security of lives of the youth corps members.
  • ‘Investments in youths are for future of Nigeria’

    ‘Investments in youths are for future of Nigeria’

    The Legal,  Public Affairs and Communications Director of Nigerian Bottling Company Limited (NBC), Mrs Sade Morgan, has stated that any investment made in the youths is an investment into the future of Nigeria.

    She also admonished other companies in Nigeria to find sustainable ways of giving back to their host communities.

    Morgan stated these on Thursday in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, at the graduation for twelve pioneer beneficiaries of the Oginigba Youth Maritime Technical Skills Training.

    The colourful event also had in attendance the paramount ruler of Oginigba-Port Harcourt, King Garshon Odum, and two top officials of NBC: Ademola Richards and Ekuma Eze, among other eminent personalities.

    In her keynote address, Morgan said: “The future will be shaped by today’s young people, hence NBC’s special attention to supporting young persons to realise their full potential.

    “One of the focal areas of NBC’s Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) framework is youth empowerment. In addition to women empowerment, water and environmental stewardship.

    “The NBC-sponsored maritime skills acquisition project for Oginigba youths is an initiative designed to equip youths in Oginigba community with skills sets required to secure employment in the maritime industry.

    “This will enable them to compete favourably with their counterparts locally, regionally and globally, and connect them with opportunities in the Nigerian and international maritime industry, based on the skills that were acquired during the project.”

    The NBC director also stated that the first twelve beneficiaries of the maritime training had all it would take to compete favourably in the maritime Industry, having been provided with the requisite employable skills sets to operate in the industry.

    She encouraged the beneficiaries to make the best out of the opportunity and inspire other youths in the community to participate in initiatives that would enable them to develop their careers in their chosen fields of specialisation.

    Morgan assured that NBC would work through its consultant on the project, Kasher Consulting, to scan for employment opportunities in the maritime sector and provide the relevant information and advisory services to the beneficiaries, to ensure they secured employment that would match their training and skills.

    NBC boss disclosed that the project was designed to be sustainable, with their beneficiaries already subscribed and were committed to contributing to a “Pay It Forward” community fund,  with a monthly stipend, upon securing employment.

    Morgan stressed that the community fund, which would be supported by NBC, would be used to take more youths through the programme.

    She said: “As more beneficiaries contribute to the fund, more opportunities will be provided for the teeming youths. This is an awesome way the beneficiaries will give back to the community.

    “In the last five years, NBC has made steady investments in improving the socio-economic well-being of youths in Oginigba community.”

    The NBC director also stated that the company, as a key player in the Nigerian economy, was committed to partnering with government and communities to realise one of the Sustainable Development Goals: to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger.

    Morgan assured that NBC was equally committed to investing more in the youths in the future, in locally-relevant initiatives, while noting that the company was happy to empower and position the young ones for the leadership tasks ahead of them.

    The monarch, in his remarks, lauded NBC for the initiative, while admonishing other companies in Oginigba, which covers part of Trans-Amadi Industrial Layout, to emulate the firm and also employ people of the host community, especially the teeming qualified youths.

    Two of the twelve beneficiaries: Steven Amadi and Julia Echeonwu, while responding on behalf of others, described the opportunity as memorable and awesome, which they said would enable them to empower other people, thereby commending NBC for giving them hope.

  • N’Delta Avengers: Stakeholders call for urgent cessation

    N’Delta Avengers: Stakeholders call for urgent cessation

    The South south stakeholders have called for immediate cessation of hostilities and violence in the crude oil and gas-rich Niger Delta region, especially with decision of members of Niger Delta Avengers and other militant groups to continue to bomb pipelines and other facilities of oil companies.

    They also condemned the disruption of oil pipelines, crude oil exploration and exploitation, as well as the emergence of various groups making one agitation or another.

    The stakeholders, comprising top government officials, other eminent personalities, security chiefs, human rights activists, members of civil society organisations and representatives of the private sector, on Friday at a summit in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, declared that end must come to militancy in the Niger Delta, to pave the way for commensurate development in the hitherto neglected region.

    The summit on towards achieving peace and sustainable development in the Niger Delta, with the theme: “Promoting Peace, Democracy and Stability in Nigeria through the Media, Socio-Cultural Institutions and Youth Driven Community Based Groups,” was organised by the Journalists for Democratic Rights (JODER), with the support of the Ford Foundation (West Africa Regional Office).

    Emphasis at the summit was placed on capacity building, conflict prevention and management, as well as peace building.

    In a nine-point communique, signed by the Executive Director of JODER, Mr. Adewale Adeoye, who is also a foremost journalist, it was stated that the summit was to strengthen a people-driven process for conflict prevention, conflict management and peace-building in the Niger Delta.

    The programme also targeted primary and secondary beneficiaries, cutting across faith-based groups, community-based organisations, women groups, civil society organisations, security agencies, youth groups, organised labour and the informal sector, as well as representatives of various ethnic groups, including Ijaw, Isoko, Ikwerre, Ndoni, Ogoni, Urhobo, Efik, Ibibio, Itsekiri and non-indigenes in the Niger Delta, among others.

    The communique read in part: “Participants demand deliberate urgent attention and actions in addressing the growing poverty rate, growing drop out of children in schools, due largely to poverty and economic misery, disruption of oil pipelines and the emergence of various groups making one agitation or another.

    “Participants demand immediate cessation to all forms of violence in the Niger Delta and that critical stakeholders must embrace peaceful resolution of all the lingering crises in the region, through advocacy and necessary follow-up action.

    “Participants noted that there is the urgent need to resolve the crises in the Niger Delta region in a honest, transparent and open manner, with the view to addressing the fears of the communities, the authorities, the multinationals and business community, as well as the agitators themselves.

    “Participants condemn the invasion of indigenous Ijaw and other Niger Delta communities by armed security agents and frown against the gross human rights violations against the people by the military and other security agencies.”

    The stakeholders also stated that the ongoing clean-up in Ogoniland of Rivers state’s four Local Government Areas of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme, should be extended to other lands polluted in the Niger Delta, without further delay.

    They resolved to set up a working group on the Niger Delta, in order to constantly bring community leaders and civil society organisations together, towards finding people-driven solutions to the problems of the Niger Delta.

    The communique also noted that: “Participants call on the Nigerian authorities to recognise the right to self-determination, as entrenched in the United Nations charter and other obligations of the UN on the rights of Indigenous people, including the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Convention 169 on Biological Diversity.

    “Participants demand speedy passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) by the 8th Session of the National Assembly.

    “Participants call on the government, communities and other stakeholders in the Niger Delta to see the need to explore the potential of working together, remove suspicion and mutual distrust, in order to deal with the hydra-headed problems that confront the people of the oil producing communities.”

    The executive director of JODER, earlier in his welcome address, stated that the forest reserve of the Niger Delta had remained largely depleted and at present to an all-time low, with land utterly polluted, natural streams almost extinct and means of living under sever attacks, thereby posing a serious threat to generations unborn.

    Adeoye said: “Previous efforts of governments at various levels to address the situation have not led to appreciable results, in spite of the huge resources committed to the process.

    “Such efforts include the introduction of the 13 per cent revenue derivation, the setting up of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), the establishment of the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs and the recent adoption of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report on Ogoniland’s environmental assessment, which the Nigerian Federal Government has promised to implement, leading to the  recent kick-off of the Ogoni clean-up.

    “Regrettably, the Niger Delta narrative has been consistent stories of violence, desperation and various vices associated with legitimate agitations of the people; “Irrespective of the various efforts of the governments, the Niger Delta remains fundamentally poor and vulnerable, with limited opportunities for the people to transform their lives in their own way, through self actualisation.”

    JODER’s executive director also stated that notwithstanding the challenges facing the peace-loving people of the Niger Delta, they had the infinite ability to aspire to a greater future, founded on justice, liberty and respect for the dignity of the human person.

    The Niger Delta is home to indigenous ethnic groups that have lived in their territories for thousands of years, while the region is a great ancestral homeland of many forest-dependent people, with a rich heritage of amazing culture and civilisation.

    The Niger Delta is by far the second largest mangrove forest in the world, rich in natural resources, including but not limited to land and sea animals, the fauna, and hundreds of plant species, which add value to the diverse tributaries and estuaries linked to the vast ocean and the great River Nun and Niger.

    The region has no fewer than 16 distinct ethnic nationalities, with history of shared heritage and cultural identities, including social and trade relations, long before the advent of colonial rule.

    As with any other natural setting, there were a history of conflicts and strives among the nationalities, but the Niger Delta, however, remains one of the most critical nerve centres of the Nigerian economy, owing to its rich natural endowments and resourcefulness of the people.

    The social and economic activities of the nationalities that make up the Niger Delta are linked to the environment, which supports the survival of the people, who depend on livelihoods generated by land and forests resources.

    For half a century, the people of the Niger Delta have been facing various challenges to their survival, due to various adverse factors, including disruptive oil exploration, lack of opportunities, national malaise of corruption, forest devastation, depletion of sea and land resources, gas flaring and environmental pollution; the Niger Delta produces the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy, which is crude oil and gas, but without equitable sharing/allocation of the resources, which remains a major source of conflict in the country.

  • Wike to grant tax holidays to serious investors

    Wike to grant tax holidays to serious investors

    The Nyesom Wike’s administration in Rivers State has indicated that it is willing to grant tax holidays to serious investors, in a move to attract international investors to the state.
    While speaking on Friday at the Government House, Port Harcourt, when he granted an audience to the South African High Commissioner to Nigeria, Lulu Mnguni, the Rivers governor stated that international investments would create employment opportunities for Rivers people and generate revenue for the state government.
    He noted that the Rivers government was particularly interested in investments in the agricultural sector, to ensure diversification, while calling on South African companies to invest in some moribund companies in the state.
    Wike said: “We are ready to give tax holidays to attract international investors. We cannot continue to rely on crude oil. That is why we are exploring the agricultural sector to generate revenue and create employment.”
    The South African high commissioner had earlier called for a partnership between South Africa and Rivers state in the areas of agriculture, tourism, health and construction, stressing that South Africa had the technical expertise and finance to develop Rivers state.
    While lauding the Rivers governor for his developmental strides, Mnguni assured that many South African companies would invest in the state.

  • Wike launches urban water sector reform in Rivers

    Wike launches urban water sector reform in Rivers

    The Governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike, has launched the state’s urban water sector reform, the Port Harcourt water supply scheme and the sanitation  project.

    Performing the  launch in Port Harcourt yesterday, Wike said the project would create women entrepreneurs, youth employment and provide safe drinking water for the inhabitants of the state.

    The Rivers governor, who was represented by the state’s Commissioner for Agriculture, Mrs. Onimim Jacks, stated that the project was key to the development of the state.

    Wike said: “The project is in line with our promises to the people of the state, as clearly spelt put in our blueprint, that we shall provide safe drinking water for the inhabitants of the state.”

    The Rivers governor also stated that within the first 100 days of his administration, the potable water scheme was launched in Abonnema, the headquarters of Akuku-Toru Local Government Area of the state.

    He laudded the Federal Government for selecting Rivers as one of the pilot states for the scheme, noting that the state government would pay its counterpart funds as and when due.

    Wike maintained that his administration would always collaborate with the Federal Government in areas that would benefit the populace.

    The Rivers Commissioner for Water Resources and Rural Development, Chief Ibibia Walter, earlier in his remarks, pointed out that the project was part of a wide sector institutional reform embarked upon by the state government, as coordinated by the National Urban Sector Water Reform Office of the Federal Ministry of Water Resources.

    Walter revealed that funding for the project would be sourced from the World Bank and the African Development Bank (ADB), stressing that the ADB would contribute $200 million, World Bank to provide $80 million Dollars, while Rivers government would provide $48 million as counterpart fund.

    The Port Harcourt water supply and sanitation project is targeted at addressing the poor water infrastructure in Port Harcourt and Obio/Akpor LGAs, as well as addressing the sanitation challenge in the two urban areas.

  • Two ‘Wike supporters quit’

    The 17 councillors of Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of Rivers State, hitherto loyal to the Minister of State for Education, Nyesom Wike, are now divided.

    Two of the councillors- Linda Wali (Ward 16) and Ndamati Onunwo (Ward 8)- have joined the camp of Governor Rotimi Amaechi, who is also the Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF).

    The 15 others, led by the leader of the Legislative Council, Henry Odum, at a briefing yesterday in Port Harcourt, declared that Wike remained their leader and they would continue to support him and President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Odum said: “Quite unfortunately, two of our colleagues (Wali and Onunwo) have sold out. They could not stand firm as representatives of their people. Onunwo is a member of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). Both of them have been bought over.

    “Initially, we were working together. Wali and Onunwo suddenly decided to abandon the cause and join Amaechi. Truth shall prevail. We want justice to be done. We will soon be vindicated.”

    The councillors described the five anti-Amaechi lawmakers- Michael Okechukwu Chinda (Obio/Akpor II constituency), Kelechi Godspower Nwogu (Omuma), Evans Bipi (Ogu/Bolo), Martins Amewhule (Obio/Akpor I) and Victor Ihunwo (Port Harcourt III)- as heroes of democracy, urging them not to be deterred.