Tag: Enugu

  • 400 firms for Enugu International Trade Fair

    The President of Enugu Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (ECCIMA), Dr Ifeanyi Okoye , has said that more than 400 companies had indicated interest to participate at the 2014 Enugu International Trade Fair.

    Okoye made this known when he visited the Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Mr Ima Niboro, in Abuja.

    He said that the participating corporate organisations would include more than 25 companies from India, China, Indonesia, UK, Malaysia, US and South Africa.

    He added that the visit was to solicit the support of NAN in ensuring the success of the fair, the 25th edition, billed for March 28 to April 7.

    He disclosed that arrangements were being made by the chamber and Enugu State Government for the fair with the theme: “Increasing the Competitiveness of Nigerian Products in Global Market” .

    The fair will be declared open by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Okoye said that agriculture would play a central role at the fair, saying that the fair would specifically help to boost agricultural production and commercial farming.

    He said that new products, prototypes, innovations and research findings would be displayed at the fair.

    He assured that efforts had been made to provide security and necessary infrastructure, including power and water at the fair site.

    Okoye said that the chamber was collaborating with the state government to provide the facilities.

    He said that two 500 KVA generators would also be provided for use in case of disruption in public power supply at the fair venue.

    “We have become familiar with the environment and will use our experience gathered in the past to create more ambience to make the environment friendly, through improved and systematic allocation of space to participants,” he said.

    The ECCIMA President praised NAN’s efforts in advancing free enterprise and sustenance of democracy in the country.

    Replying, Niboro pledged the agency’s support in making the fair a success, especially as the 2014 edition would be the silver jubilee of the fair.

    He urged the chamber to ensure that its activities aligned with the economic transformation agenda of President Jonathan, noting that the administration had supported indigenous entrepreneurship.

    “In the past few years, Nigeria has achieved the impossible in regards to economic development,” he said

     

  • Chime to restore Enugu’s lost glory

    Chime to restore Enugu’s lost glory

    Enugu,  the coal city, clocked 100 years few years ago. Plans to mark the milestone were in top gear by the state government before its abortion. The Sullivan Chime administration planned that the entire former Eastern Region will go into wild celebration to mark the 100 years of the founding of the town by the Colonial Masters. But that could not hold due to political differences among some political personalities in the state. The chairman of the centenary celebration committee was Chief John Nnia Nwodo, a former Minister of Information. Nwodo resigned his appointment in the middle of the intense struggle of who to control the political structure of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) between Governor Sullivan Chime and the then national chairman of the PDP, Dr. Okwesilieze Nwodo, a sibling of the chairman of the centenary committee.

    With everything put in place– billboards, radio jingles, souvenirs among others, Enugu was set to host the world in December 2009. It would have been an opportunity to showcase the natural and human potential which abound in the coal city. But it never took place, and Enugu, the city of coal, thrives on.

    Enugu came into existence in 1909 after the discovery of coal by the Colonial Masters. The discovery of coal in Enugwu Ngwo, one of the 10 villages of Ngwo clan, was incidental. It was from this village that the town derived its name Enugu up till this day. And the story goes that in 1908, a British expedition on its way to the Middle Belt from Awka, sighted the hill at Enugwu Ngwo and reported back to Lagos.  Interest in the hill compelled the colonial government to send a team of mining engineers to the area in 1909 to prospect for silver.  But the team, led by Engr. Kitson, struck coal instead.

    Another team of mining engineers led by W. J. Leck, arrived in Enugwu Ngwo in 1914 to open up a coal mine.  They arrived with a team of African labourers under the headship of one Alfred Inoma from Onitsha.

    The Europeans settled on top of the hill at Ngwo now called Hilltop.  At the slope to the south, they set up another settlement for the African labourers.  The settlement is known as Alfred Camp or Ugwu Alfred.

    Both settlements have expanded.  The hilltop settlement has been modernised and extended to the place where the Enugu State Broadcasting Service has its transmitting station.  The Alfred Settlement, a cluster of mud houses, quaint to behold, can be sighted on a walk along Murtala Mohammed Way (Kingsway Road) as one nears the the old site of the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital.

    With an eye on the plains of the Udi Hills, the government, in 1915, constructed a road linking the hill station to the plains.  Called the Milliken Hill Road named after the head engineer roads, a ride through the 4.8km road is a bend-drive course at a speed of 8km per hour. And soon after the opening of the coal mine in 1915, the management of the colliery embarked on massive recruitment of labourers to work in the mines. The then colonial governor, Lord Fredrick Lugard had, as early as 1912, decided that the Enugu Coal Field would be worked as a state industry in contrast to tin being mined in Jos as a private enterprise. This, he reasoned, was because of the importance of coal in the development of the Nigerian economy, coupled with the difficulty which he thought would be experienced in finding labour to work in the coal mine.

    “I understand that except by compulsion, it is impossible to get labour in Southern Nigeria,” Lugard had said. He argued that since the government would have to provide force to regiment the labour, government might as well work the coal field itself.

    By the first year of its operations in 1916, the colliery had in its register about 800 daily paid labourers, who in addition to the better established technical cadre made up of clerks, technicians, foremen, continued a huge influx of immigrants to thecity at the early stage of development. While these later grade of workers came from districts outside Enugu in such far away places like Sierra Leone, Calabar, Warri, Owerri, Benin, Onitsha, Port Harcourt and so on, most of the labourers were from the neighbouring villages in the then Udi Division.

    Within the next couple of years, over 3,000 men were working in the Enugu Colliery, while the Eastern Railway line that passes from Port Harcourt through Enugu to the North had about 5,000 labourers, majority of who had made Enugu their residence. These immigrant settlers who came with their families and relations constituted a big strain on the young town since there were yet no permanent residential structures there. This posed a new challenge not only to the Colliery Management, but also to the colonial administrative officers posted to the town, who as an interim measure, had embarked on erection of Colliery Villages to accommodate the coal miners.

    In 1917, Enugu was declared a second class Township and divided into four zones viz- the European Reservation Area, the Neutral Zone, the Residential and Business Area and the Native Locations. A township Advisory Board was set up to take care of the political administration of the area. In 1920, the colonial government moved down the administrative headquarters of the then Udi Division to Enugu Township and renamed it Enugu Ngwo Division. But this lasted for a while as the headqarters were again transferred back to Udi 1929 as a result of several logistics problems connected with administering the entire division from the township.

    One aspect of Enugu which most people do not know, even those who now claim authority of the city is that Enugu was once the headquarters of the Southern Provinces. Before transferring back the Udi Division headquarters to Udi, the colonial government had decided to move the headquarters of  the Southern Provinces comprised of Onitsha, Ogoja, Owerri, Calabar, the Cameroons, Ijebu, Oyo, Abeokuta, Ondo, Benin and Warri Provinces from Lagos to Enugu. This was due to mainly the importance of coal to the development of the economy of the country. Enugu remained the capital for 10 years from 1929 to 1939 when the Southern Provinces was split into two – the Eastern and Western Provinces with headquarters at Enugu and Ibadan respectively. While the Eastern Provinces comprised Onitsha , Ogoja, Owerri, Calabar and the Cameroons, the Western Provinces was made up of Ijebu, Abeokuta , Oyo, Ondo , Benin and Warri.

    The citing of the administrative headquarters of the Southern Provinces in Enugu in 1929 had brought about the setting up of various administrative structures with civil servants recruited from different parts of the country to man these structures. There were civil servants recruited from Ibadan , Calabar , Benin , Abeokuta , Warri, Ondo, Aba , Owerri, Onitsha , that took residences in Enugu . Even after Ibadan became an administrative capital along with Enugu , many of these civil servants still elected to remain behind to work in Enugu . This was primarily due to the friendly disposition of the people of the area.

    In 1928, two Africans were for the first time, appointed into the Enugu Township Advisory Board. They were John Anyansi and Lawrence Onwudiwe. The Latter was forced to resign in 1931 following his indictment on corruption charges. He was replaced by A. R. Broderick, a prison contractor from Benin . This was followed by the appointment of Chief Sani, a Yoruba, into the board in 1936. With the death of both Broderick and Sani, C. D. Onyeama from Eke, Udi division and S. A. Strong, a Sierra Leonean, were appointed to replace them.

    The first democratic election into the newly constituted Enugu Urban District Council was held in 1953. Those elected into the council included Samuel Wilson, Dominic Oluka, Lawrence Ezechi, Sam Anyogu, C. O. C. Chiedozie, Michael Ajoku, B. C. N. Okeke,Josiah Agu, John U. Okoro, D. T. Inyang, S. Odume. Walwin Ebreneyin, G. K. Igwe, Gabriel Agbo, Nelson Onwudiwe, Joseph Ogbu, Ezekiel Eze, Michael Onovo, D. A. Nwandu, Hermas Adigwe and Patrick Ozonu. The councilors sitting among themselves later elected Walwin Ebreneyin, an Urhobo man as the chairman of the council with Patrick Ozonu from Ngwo in Udi Division as his deputy.

    And in 1953, Mr. Ebreneyin was succeeded as chairman of the council by Mallam Umaru Altine, a Fulani cattle dealer from Sokoto. Altine later became the first Mayor of Enugu when the City was elevated to mayoral status in 1956.

    In 1967, a committee under the chairmaqnship of the then Attorney General of the former Eastern Region, Dr. Graham Douglas, recommended the creation of 20 provinces in the region and 33 divisions. Enugu in addition to retaining its position as the capital of the region, was as well granted a provincial status with F. O. Iheanacho from Owerri as the administrator. He was later replaced by C. C. Onoh. And in the same year, when Republic of Biafra was declared, Enugu became its capital. And at the end of the civil war in 1970, it became the capital of the defunct East Central State and later the capital of the old Anambra State when East Central state was split into two – Imo and Anambra states. Today, Enugu is the capital of the state named after it, Enugu State .

    At the time the planning of the aborted centenary celebration was on, Governor Chime had this to say about Enugu: “Our city has contributed so much to our lives and businesses and this is the time to show appreciation by supporting the Centenary celebrations.

    “We are celebrating a city with great significance, an enduring and rugged city which has stood tall in good times and bad times, in times of peace and in times of war.”We are celebrating a city which means different things to different people but means one thing to most of us- a home.”I remember with nostalgia growing up in this city, the diverse experiences we had and the many friends we made from far flung places because Enugu was and is still home to all. ”When my father who was a parliamentarian sat in the Eastern Nigeria House of Assembly, he did not only sit with the Nwodos, he sat with the Akpabios, the Emoles, the Imokes, the Okparas and many others. For us children, we neither knew any divide nor did we reckon with tribes, we were simply Enugu boys and girls and we had great fun.So today we celebrate the city that held us all together, a city where I, like many others here today was born.”A city that was home to the great Eyo Ita, the first premier of Eastern Nigeria and the Zik of Africa, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe.  ”A city in its dynamism produced sports legends like Dominic Nwobodo, Emmanuel Okala, Christian Chukwu, JayJay Okocha, Innocent Egbunike and great actors like Chika Okpala-Zebrudaya, Pete Edochie, Nkem Owoh, Patience Ozokwor, Kanayo Kanayo, Zack Orji and many others.”In every facet of human endeavor Enugu has produced notable icons, be it in medicine, law, media or academics and because of these giant strides, we think it is important to celebrate our great past. In doing this we also want to look at where we are now and draw a road map for the future. ”When we mounted the saddle in May 2007 we met a mountain of challenges which we have studiously   confronted, ranging from infrastructure collapse, poor city sanitation, insecurity, incapacitated transportation system and many more. We discovered though sadly that if drastic actions were not taken we were at the brink of losing our dear city hence our aggressive approach to urban renewal and our effort to make Enugu a modern city.”I am glad that today our efforts to renew, reclaim, recreate and restore Enugu are yielding fruits and that millions of people who turned their back to our beloved city are now returning home. Our hospitality industry is booming again and tourists are flooding back. ”One of the things we want to do is to focus attention on the great potentials inherent in our state and zone and the new opportunities available to investors, entrepreneurs and visitors.”

  • Confusion in Enugu over alleged plan to dethrone monarchs

    Confusion in Enugu over alleged plan to dethrone monarchs

    There was palpable confusion in Enugu State during the week as words spread that two traditional rulers may lose their thrones for daring to meddle into the political battle between two leading politicians in the state.

    The two monarchs, from Ezeagu Local Government Area of the State, according to sources, are part of the community leaders who participated in a recent solidarity visit to the Deputy senate president, Senator Ike Eweremadu.

    Stakeholders and Leaders of Thought from the council area recently paid a “thank you” visit to Ekweremadu in Enugu about a week ago. Speaking during the visit, the leaders said they were there to appreciate the Senator’s developmental projects in their various communities.

    “We are witnesses to the construction of rural roads, provision of water boreholes, transformers, rural electrification projects, health centres, youth development and empowerment centres, and a lot more. We have benefitted from you and want to assure you that we the Ezeagu people are solidly behind you; we will not hesitate to give you unalloyed support in any of your future political quests; you can always count on us.

    People should be allowed to make their choice of representatives of their own free will based on the pedigree, antecedents, and integrity of available candidates, the leaders said.

    However, insinuations that the state government is unhappy with the visit and may have resolved to sanction the traditional rulers who were part of the delegation went viral on Thursday.

    Sources even claimed that the monarchs may have already been queried by the government over what they termed as an unauthorised political program. Although the traditional rulers defended themselves by saying they were mandated by their people to lead the delegation, the government, sources claim, are unimpressed by this argument and may have resolved to deal with the monarchs accordingly.

  • 26 die in Enugu accident

    Twenty six persons were confirmed dead on Friday in an accident that occured at the Oji-River junction, Enugu state.

    A police bulletin signed be the spokesman of the Enugu state police command, Ebere Amaraizu said the accident occurred along the old Enugu-Onitsha road.

    Police said the accident “occurred when a lorry conveying gravel allegedly failed brake and lost control thereby killing people within the popular wonderful market.”

    It said investigations have commenced with a view to finding out the real death toll as well as numbers of the injured as well as the likely cause of the alleged incident.

  • Oriaku pledges future to Rangers

    Enugu Rangers central defender Cyril Oriaku has poured cold water on rumours linking him with a move away from the Flying Antelopes.

    “I want to stay here (Enugu) and the truth is that I have made effort to stay, the hardworking defender told a top source from his base.

    “The club is also made an effort for me to stay and I really appreciate their resolve to keep me.

    “Rangers has given a lot. My level of performance is owed to the club and I am grateful to the management and coaching staffs, they have done a great job

  • Glory days to return to Enugu

    Glory days to return to Enugu

    Ada Stephen is looking forward to playing a prominent role with Enugu Rangers, vowing to bring the glory days back to the club.

    The winger returned to the Flying Antelopes fold after a loan spell with Akwa United last season, where he enhanced his reputation with a string of exciting performances. He admitted he went on loan mainly to play regular football and feels he is now ready to help the club challenge for honours in the upcoming season.

    “I am very happy to be back, and hopefully this would be a successful period in my career and with the club. I left for Akwa United in search of playing time and I am satisfied I’ve achieved my aim,” he told supersport.com.

    “I am also happy United did reasonably well while I was there. Now that I’m back with Rangers, I hope to bring something to the team to help win trophies, because it is important looking at the clubs history.

    “The club is loaded with good players, and we are capable of winning either the league or the Federation Cup. We are at present in camp in Onitsha and the preparations are moving well. We’ve played some of the local sides and there is good reason to be optimistic ahead of the start of the season.”

    Stephen also told supersport.com that new coach John Obuh is the right man for the job.

    “I believe the management specifically went for Obuh because of the giant strides he has made in his coaching career over the last couple of years. He is one of the top coaches and has the respect of the players, as well as stakeholders in the game. He was my coach at the national under-20 camp in 2010. We got along very well and I am confident my game will further develop under him,” he said.

    Stephen would face competition for the left-wing shirt from Bitrus Dada and former Sharks and Bayelsa United player, Terry Envoh.

    Rangers are one of the most successful Nigerian sides having won the league six times, and the Federation Cup on five occasions.

    They have also won the defunct African Cup Winners’ Cup in 1977. However, they won their last trophy, the league title, back in 1984.

    The Flying Antelopes finished fifth in the NPFL last season, and got knocked out in the round of 16 in the Federation Cup by Akwa United, with Stephen scoring against his parent club in the 2-1 defeat.

  • Independence Layout, heart of Enugu govt business

    Independence Layout, heart of Enugu govt business

    Independence Layout, Enugu, the highbrow section of Enugu, the coal city, was carved out by the post-independence administration of the legendary late Dr. Michael Okpara, the then premier of Eastern Region. Okpara, after Nigeria’s Independence, expanded Enugu with further acquisitions for physical development.

    Apart from the present Independence Layout which was primarily carved out to mark Nigeria’s Independence, Okpara acquired and developed more areas such as Uwani North, Uwani South and Uwani Central, Bridge Head Layout, Emene Industrial Layout, Housing Estate, Abakpa and the Trans Ekulu Layout.

    The Independence Layout was planned to accommodate the headquarters of the three arms of government viz the Executive, the Legislator, and the Judiciary.

    The official quarters of officers of these arms of government are also located there. The Government House, Enugu, popularly known as the Lion Building is synonymous with the name Independence Layout.  With the exception of Chief Chukwuemeka Ojukwu, all governors, administrators (military and civilian) after Dr. Okpara occupied the Lion Building during their time. Ojukwu as military governor of Eastern Nigeria preferred to operate from the Governor’s lodge, now turned to National Orthopaedic Hospital.

    Although Okpara was able to complete the headquarters of the Executive and the Legislative arm of the government before his ouster in 1966, it was not until  2006 that the Judiciary headquarters was built by the administration of Chimaroke Nnamani.

    Also located at the Independence Layout are the imposing Court of Appeal, the Federal High Court, the Industrial Arbitration Court and other courts concerning the Federal Government.  Also located at the Independence Layout are the state radio and television station, Enugu State Radio and Television Broadcasting Service (ESBS), the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), Enugu and the foremost Hotel Presidential which is now dilapidated.  Highly placed Nigerians, top brass military officers, all have houses in the highbrow carve out.

    It is no secret that former President Olusegun Obasanjo has his house along Independence Avenue within the layout. The house has been there since early seventies. Late M.K.O. Abiola also owns a building there.

    Suffice it to say that no South Easterner worth his salt, that does not own a building in Independence Layout, except the founder, Dr. Michael Okpara. All the ministers that served under Okpara during the First Republic owned houses there.  Also, those that served under the Ukpabi Asika regime as well as the regimes of Jim Nwobodo and Chimaroke Nnamani owned buildings there.

    The only thing to be associated Independence Layout with the late premier is the popular Okpara Square named after him. Almost all important public and private ceremonies are held in Okpara square.

    One addition to the Independence Layout is the unofficial “Fourth Arm” of the government. The Enugu State headquarters of the Nigeria Union of Journalist (NUJ) is firmly located there. The Press Centre which has been there since 1971 was allocated to the NUJ by the then Administrator of East Central State, late Ajie Ukpabi Asika. Asika reasoned that since the other three arms of the government are located in the highbrow area, the “Fourth Arm” must be there too.  Today, Independence Layout is expanding. Parts of the Owo River Layout and the Republic Layout have been acquired by government and renamed Independence Layout Phase II. Under the present Sullivan Chime administration, some areas which had distorted the beauty of the layout have been reclaimed and given a new look.

    These include the present Independence Avenue and Pocket Layout.In addition to being the centre of government business, it is also being inundated recently by 5-star hospitality businesses and bush bars rearing up here and there. At least, built newly within the layout are five 5-star hotels.

    One of the best hospitals East of the Niger, The Niger Foundation Hospital owned by the Opus Dei is also located at Independence Layout. Also located at the Independence Layout are the Eastern headquarters of the anti-graft outfit, the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC), the State Security Service (SSS), the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) and the Federal Secretariat.  Ends

  • Independence Layout, heart of Enugu govt business

    Independence Layout, heart of Enugu govt business

    Independence Layout, Enugu, the highbrow section of Enugu, the coal city, was carved out by the post-independence administration of the legendary late Dr. Michael Okpara, the then premier of Eastern Region. Okpara, after Nigeria’s Independence, expanded Enugu with further acquisitions for physical development.

    Apart from the present Independence Layout which was primarily carved out to mark Nigeria’s Independence, Okpara acquired and developed more areas such as Uwani North, Uwani South and Uwani Central, Bridge Head Layout, Emene Industrial Layout, Housing Estate, Abakpa and the Trans Ekulu Layout.

    The Independence Layout was planned to accommodate the headquarters of the three arms of government viz the Executive, the Legislator, and the Judiciary.

    The official quarters of officers of these arms of government are also located there. The Government House, Enugu, popularly known as the Lion Building is synonymous with the name Independence Layout.  With the exception of Chief Chukwuemeka Ojukwu, all governors, administrators (military and civilian) after Dr. Okpara occupied the Lion Building during their time. Ojukwu as military governor of Eastern Nigeria preferred to operate from the Governor’s lodge, now turned to National Orthopaedic Hospital.

    Although Okpara was able to complete the headquarters of the Executive and the Legislative arm of the government before his ouster in 1966, it was not until  2006 that the Judiciary headquarters was built by the administration of Chimaroke Nnamani.

    Also located at the Independence Layout are the imposing Court of Appeal, the Federal High Court, the Industrial Arbitration Court and other courts concerning the Federal Government.  Also located at the Independence Layout are the state radio and television station, Enugu State Radio and Television Broadcasting Service (ESBS), the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), Enugu and the foremost Hotel Presidential which is now dilapidated.  Highly placed Nigerians, top brass military officers, all have houses in the highbrow carve out.

    It is no secret that former President Olusegun Obasanjo has his house along Independence Avenue within the layout. The house has been there since early seventies. Late M.K.O. Abiola also owns a building there.

    Suffice it to say that no South Easterner worth his salt, that does not own a building in Independence Layout, except the founder, Dr. Michael Okpara. All the ministers that served under Okpara during the First Republic owned houses there.  Also, those that served under the Ukpabi Asika regime as well as the regimes of Jim Nwobodo and Chimaroke Nnamani owned buildings there.

    The only thing to be associated Independence Layout with the late premier is the popular Okpara Square named after him. Almost all important public and private ceremonies are held in Okpara square.

    One addition to the Independence Layout is the unofficial “Fourth Arm” of the government. The Enugu State headquarters of the Nigeria Union of Journalist (NUJ) is firmly located there. The Press Centre which has been there since 1971 was allocated to the NUJ by the then Administrator of East Central State, late Ajie Ukpabi Asika. Asika reasoned that since the other three arms of the government are located in the highbrow area, the “Fourth Arm” must be there too.  Today, Independence Layout is expanding. Parts of the Owo River Layout and the Republic Layout have been acquired by government and renamed Independence Layout Phase II. Under the present Sullivan Chime administration, some areas which had distorted the beauty of the layout have been reclaimed and given a new look.

    These include the present Independence Avenue and Pocket Layout.In addition to being the centre of government business, it is also being inundated recently by 5-star hospitality businesses and bush bars rearing up here and there. At least, built newly within the layout are five 5-star hotels.

    One of the best hospitals East of the Niger, The Niger Foundation Hospital owned by the Opus Dei is also located at Independence Layout. Also located at the Independence Layout are the Eastern headquarters of the anti-graft outfit, the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC), the State Security Service (SSS), the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) and the Federal Secretariat.  Ends

  • Enugu: Misguided diatribe of Nnaji

    In an advertorial published on page 48 in the January 13, 2014 edition of The Nation newspaper, one Ojiofor Nkanu, ostensibly writing on behalf of Senator Gilbert Nnaji threw decorum to the winds and launched unwarranted attacks against Mrs. Ifeoma Nwobodo, the Chief of Staff to Governor Sullivan Chime.

    The mediocre writing, lacking in elegance and communication skills, was a fitting exposure of its ill-educated sponsor and his warped comprehension of issues of state craft. It is very tragic that after a decade in the National Assembly and a stint as a Council chairman, Gil Nnaji, our half-baked lawmaker who represents Enugu East in the Senate, would authorize such a piece which put our dear Nkanu land on the radar for all the wrong reasons.

    Now, hear our senator: “She (referring to Nwobodo) is paying peanuts to Nkanu  sons for them to continue thriving in ignorance as a diversionary tactics aimed at snatching our senatorial zone and add it to NDI AGBAJA”.

    Here lies his fear, myopic as it is. Nnaji is scared to hell that Nwobodo has an interest in contesting the Enugu East Senatorial District elections in 2015 and has continued to employ all manners of smear campaigns to blackmail the hardworking lady. By seeing her as one usurper of his heritage just because she was born to Udi parents and married to a distinguished justice from Nkanu West, Nnaji has exposed his utter disrespect for the institution of marriage and womanhood in general. And for Nnaji and his cronies to talk of pedigree, Mrs. Nwobodo is a daughter of Prof. Uzoh, a renowned professor of Agriculture recognized by the United Nations for his deep knowledge. For a serving senator who should be making laws for the well-being of our country to talk about such parochial lines of nativism is quite lamentable. But that is the lack of intellectual pedigree and small-mindedness of Senator Gilbert Nnaji for you!

    As his fellow Nkanu man, I want to excuse our other brothers and sisters of the possibility of any collective guilt because unlike our senator, Nkanu people do not nurse any such contempt for our wives, daughters, sisters or marriages. We treat our wives who are mothers of our children as part and parcel of Nkanu land, not as outsiders who have no rights whatsoever. If Gil sees his wife in that light, we can only but pity the poor woman!

    It was quite instructive that Nnaji and his hatchet writer are so shameless to call attention to the senator’s failure to organize the stakeholders’ forum when his other 108 colleagues interacted and collated the views of their constituents toward the on-going constitution review. In the said advertorial, Nnaji went a step further from his earlier timid stance to add all tissues of lies as the causes of his inability to hold the event at Agbani. A shadow chaser, he points at the direction of Mrs. Nwobodo and recalled all the meetings held in the aftermath of the event. Again, all one can do is pity the senator over his misplaced indictment of Mrs. Nwobodo rather than bury his head in shame that he would be blaming a state officer for his failure to hold such  a critical national assignment. Was the Divisional Police Officer he mentioned answerable to the woman? Instead of looking for scapegoats, he should bury his head in shame that of all the 109 senators, he was the only one who could not bring his constituents together to discuss certain aspects of the constitution which is being reviewed.

    If anything, the man needs to be called out of his closet and be told some home truths. He must be told in unmistakable words that aside his limited education and whispers of parading a doubtful certificate, Nkanu land will do better with a more productive, not mediocre representation at the hallowed chambers of the Senate.

    We challenge Nnaji to name any significant bill he has sponsored after eight years in the House of Representatives and over two years in the Senate. Rather than play the race emotive card, can he tell us what he has attracted to boost the lives of his constituents these past years? Or is it not shocking, even hurtful that such a zone with its rich array of intellectual and professional talents settled for a crass opportunist only interested in self-aggrandizement?

    Painfully too, he continues to stifle development in his home Enugu East Local Government Area. Can Senator Nnaji tell the whole world what happened to the contracts awarded to Three Favours Company in respect of three comprehensive hospitals some years ago? By the way, who is behind Three Favours Company? Can he tell us what happened to the two transformers purchased to give electricity to his people – one for Alulu Nike and the other for Nike Lake Road? Who hijacked the transformers for his hotel and residence respectively? Are they packed in whose residence now?

    Gil’s blood brother, Hon. Cornelius Nnaji is the current chairman of Enugu East Council and the state chairman of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON) Enugu State chapter. Can Senator Nnaji tell us his relationship with him? Why does he not have a cordial relationship with other past council chairmen like Hons. Cyril Mbah, Eddy Nnaji, Edward Ubosi and Mathias Anike? Who is sponsoring the crisis in Ibagwa-Nike and the other among the women folk in Nike? The answers to the above questions will reveal the quality and character of the man who represents Nkanu land at the Senate.

    This insecure legislator simply cannot contemplate his imminent climb-down from his senatorial perch. The trouble is that he is incapable of any retrospection and too ill-prepared to cope with the complexities of lawmaking that will benefit both his immediate constituents and the larger society. Perhaps, somebody needs to remind Nnaji that he had said in various public and private events that he would do only one term in the Senate after eight years in the House of Representatives. So, where lies the honour? The inescapable truth, however, is that Nkanu land needs a new face at the Senate in 2015, no matter who that person is. A resort to deliberate distortions and ingeniously ascribing despicable acts to presumed opponents will only raise Nnaji’s profile in notoriety.

    His avowed complicity to join forces with a handful of his co-conspirators to “fight” Governor Chime is as puerile as his threat to “use the EFCC to stop that woman (Nwobodo).” Ditto for all the lame talks bordering on the use of thugs to make Enugu state ungovernable!  These threats are as unimaginative as other lies concocted to portray Mrs. Nwobodo as influencing the sack of officers of Nkanu origin or the distortion of facts that the Deputy Governor of the state, Mr. Sunday Onyebuchi has operated these six years and eight months from his private residence. Of course, nobody loses sleep over such falsehood knowing well that Mr. Onyebuchi only moved out of his official residence for some rehabilitation works to be done.

    I want to end by calling on Senator Gilbert Nnaji to imbibe the wise counsel of Gerard Ford, the 38th President of the United States who says, “I believe that truth is the glue that holds government together, not only our government but civilization itself.” We sympathize with his fast-fading grip on power but threatening mortar gunfire, making hateful statements and slandering some state officers who are committed to their jobs and fiercely loyal to their boss, are ineffective deflective tactics that will not guarantee him a return to the Senate.

    •Ani wrote in from

    Maryland Estate, Enugu

  • Enugu’s mystery lake and loomimg epidemic

    SIR: I urge the government of Enugu State to act immediately and prevent the looming epidemic in Nanchi and the surrounding communities in the state. According to an eight-minute video circulating on the internet, miracle seekers are trooping in their hundreds to this village to bath, swim in the so-called mystery lake. The video reveals disgusting images of people diving, swimming, bathing and fetching dirty, stinking water from this lake in an apparent quest for miracles. Personally I wonder if this is a ‘miracle quest’ to live or to die.

    According to a local reporter, some Fulani herdsmen heard an explosion on the evening of November 11. And on getting to the point where the explosion occurred they saw some water gushing out of the ground. The herdsman said it was some ‘miracle water’. They gave some of the water to a blind colleague who reportedly got healed. Since this incident, the Nanchi mystery lake as it is now called has turned to a pilgrimage centre. Hundreds of people visit the dirty polluted lake to bath and swim with the hope of experiencing some miracles. Family members take their sick relatives there for healing. Some testified knowing some people who were healed after bathing in the lake.

    From all indications, people who come to swim in this’mystery lake’ will end up going home with diseases, not cures. Nanchi and the neighbouring communities should brace up for an out break of cholera and other infections in the months ahead unless the government brings this hazardous situation under control.

    Many people are coming from outside Enugu state, so the entire South-east is at risk too. The sight of gullible Nigerians zealously swimming in this polluted mystery lake, not minding the filthy nature of the water, is a clear indication of the decadent state of the mind in Nigeria. Many people are ready to compromise basic health principles in their quest for miracles. And this is a strong sign of how brainwashed many Nigeria are and have become.

    Poverty, ignorance and superstition have turned many ordinary Nigerians into miracle seekers. Lack of adequate health facilities has worsened the situation. The fact that Enugu state authorities have so far turned a blind eye on this shameful episode and refused to intervene is a clear demonstration of the quality of governance and health administration in the country. Both federal and state governments should take urgent measures and restrain people from going to swim and bath in Nanchi mystery lake. They should encourage Nigerians to embrace and seek out evidence based cures. The government should educate and get Nigerians to understand that there is no evidence that Nanchi lake has healing powers, and that anyone who goes to the lake, swims, baths or drinks the ‘mystery’ water will end up contracting diseases, not miracle cures.

    • Leo Igwe

    Bayreuth, Germany