Tag: Etiebet

  • Etiebet backs Buhari for second term

    Etiebet backs Buhari for second term

    Member of the National Caucus/Board of Trustees of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Don Etiebet, CON, has thrown his weight behind President Muhammadu Buhari to seek re-election in 2019.

    In a statement he issued yesterday, the former National Chairman of the defunct All Nigeria Peoeple’s Party (ANPP) tipped President Buhari for an automatic ticket to run for a second term at the party’s national convention next year, adding that Nigerians would return the President for a second term.

    He said: “I am exceedingly pleased to inform you that APC shall give President Mohammadu Buhari the sole automatic ticket to run for a second term at the Presidential Convention next year.

    “And let me tell you also that Nigerians shall return him for the second term with far more votes than they did in 2015 and more votes for him than any presidential candidates in our national history.

    “It will be the most singular act by Nigerians to say that we are more united and that national integration as a nation state is a reality built by this administration.”

    He described another presidential ticket of the APC for Buhari in 2019 as natural, logical and cultural in a presidential system.

    “An incumbent, most importantly and particularly a highly acclaimed performing President, is the pride bearer of his party’s touch. Yes, it’s a right of first refusal for him,” he said.

    “It is therefore natural that he shall bear the APC banner in 2019 period. I can tell you that PMB will be given the honour and respect by his own party, the APC, by returning him unopposed at the convention.

    “We are all grateful to God for restoring his health.

    “Let me tell you the reasons that he merits a second term: his fulfillment of his campaign promises—insecurity, corruption and a rejuvenated economy.

    “It is astonishing the achievements in these key areas in two years. It’s a feat for the administration considering where the country was and was descending to as at 2015.

    “Boko Haram has been significantly degraded, peace in Niger Delta has been stabilising, Nigerians are now afraid to be corrupt, and an economy at the verge of collapse is not not only being brought back and stabilised but gaining growth momentum.

    “So, being on this projectile for the next six years of this administration, we can all be assured that Nigeria will be the hub and centre piece of Africa’s democratic, economic and strategic renaissance.”

    Chief Etiebet recalled that before Buhari’s ascension, corruption was a scourge afflicting the country so much that the country risked descending into a failed state with individual and tribal fiefdoms.

    “In the past, every desk in the public sector was a government with people on the post appropriating to themselves whatever that comes to their table,” he said.

    “So, if not for the policies of this government, TSA, fear of corruption and others, Nigeria was heading to a South Sudan and Zimbabwe situation.

    “The successes recorded in the agricultural sector whereby very soon we will be self sufficient in rice production, among others, will sustain our agricultural aspirations in the medium and long term.

    “In the solid mineral sector, the groundwork for growth has been laid such that its contribution will push our economic growth in the second term above 6 to 7 per cent growth.

    “Our GDP is growing positively with strength and Nigeria’s economic outlook has never been rosier.

    “With a growing GDP, a growing foreign reserves, dynamic economic activity and resurgence, incoming improved living wage, school feeding, poverty reduction programmes all over the country, a secured national security and prosperity, our party is blessed to happily at the next year’s national convention offer without reservations the automatic ticket of our party to our performing President and his Vice (deputy).

    “We cannot loose this continuity and momentum. This is the position of everyone who love and care for our nation. This is the general opinion of majority of our party stakeholders at all levels.”

  • Etiebet @73: Trip to triumph

    He has never been an adherent of the original religion of his nativity in that Christianity, accompanied with Western education and other alluring social amenities, had distinguishingly pushed African traditional religion and some other indigenous practices to darkening corner of relics of history. Although it gained acceptability around the neighbourhood of his birth place at Ikot Ekpuk in present day Oruk Anam Local Government Area in Akwa Ibom, more than a decade before he was born on September 15, 1944. Though his first change agents –family, local church and Government School Ikot Ibritam – had already laid foundation for his firm footing in Christian faith, the authorities at Holy Family College, Abak, where he studied from 1958 to 1962 and obtained his West Africa School Certificate, were not pleased with the name, Obot, which denotatively translates Nature, and connotatively means Destiny. And so, upon his baptism in Catholic Church that owns the school, even without having the Damascus experience like the Biblical Saul, his name changed to Paul. Obot’s first name was changed to Donatus, but for the love of originality and nativity, he could not dump his maiden name in dustbin of history, hence his name, in full, remains Donatus Obot Etiebet.

    The Etiebet household was well-heeled, at least, regarding socio-economic rating around their immediate community yet the family was not alienated from ignorance of modern method of means of making meaningful livelihood. His mother was said to be the first woman in the area to have owned and rode Raleigh bicycle, which was then in that rural hinterland, akin to today’s Roll Royce. With older siblings, particularly his brothers, relatively reigning in robust resources, the then young Etiebet, positioned ninth in his mother’s womb, might have had some sort of rare advantages.

    Notwithstanding his family’s substantial means of living, it could be deciphered that he, like others around him there and then, was not fed with silver spoon but with wooden spoon, and plates and pots made of clay, as those were standard kitchen utensils at his place at the time. It is also not newsworthy that in his elementary school days, he walked barefooted; after all, it was a uniform thing.  Pampering privileges by parents was uncommon as it was perceived as a measure of spoiling children. So, his bourgeois background did not give him immunity from prevalent socio-cultural practices that were antithetical to Western civilization and constituted clog in the wheel of progress.

    Etiebet’s innovative adventurism and sterling strides in private entrepreneurship have no linkage of happenstance. Recognising that destiny lies more in hands of individual persons than reliance on fate of good luck or bad luck presumed to be associated with names, he sharpened his pencil even in the hands of his creator by not resting on oars of his natural brilliancy and silly comfort of his family local championship, but stayed steadfast to his scholarly adventure. He got his Higher School Certificate (HSC) after studying at Immaculate Conception College in Enugu between 1963 and 1964. From 1966 to 1969 he was at Imperial College of Technology, University of London in England, where he obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in Petroleum Technology. He got M. Sc degree in 1971 in Applied Geophysics from University of Western Ontario, Canada.

    Today, besides his age, Etiebet has got to his apogee. Having his hands on a number of voluminous ventures has handsomely paid off for him in volumes of vital returns. When millions of money was millions of miles away from many Nigerians, Etiebet had made milestones through his mogul and ingenious enterprises and made his way to the then mean number of guild of men muscling in millions of money.

    His political pedigree is of presidential clout as he has been romancing and struggling with the powerful at the highest echelon in Nigeria. Remaining unscathed in a murky system is a testament of his strength of character. Etiebet’s exceptionalism lies more in building himself to pinnacle before getting into public office and coming out without traces of pillaging public purses. One of the physical signatures of his affluence, Etiebets Place, a magnificent skyscraper in Lagos, was completed in 1992, a year before he was appointed Secretary of Petroleum and Mineral Resources in the Ernest Shonekan-led Interim National Government.

    He is as an active citizen in the universal human community, but in fairness to his proud ancestral identity, treating him as a village boy peering with men and women in the global arena would be fittingly apt. His illustriousness on account of his inventory acumen and political prowess has given his native Akwa Ibom imposing national identification at a time the state was apparently in obscurity in Nigeria’s map. At a time lobbying for creation of states was only result-oriented when prosecuted by few privileged persons that had the means to ply with military politicians, he played a role, albeit, in privy, along Ime Umanah and few others, materialising in the creation of Akwa Ibom State on September 23, 1987 by Ibrahim Babangida.

    It is, however, worrisome that, perhaps owing to political differences, succeeding political leaders in his state since 1999, including those he had played a father-figure factor to, never deemed fit to accord him befitting recognition. Happily, it deserves pointing out that Governor Udom Emmanuel, who appears the only democratic governor in the state that is not in the category of his benefactor’s deeds is exceptional for not exhibiting enmity of any kind towards Etiebet but personally holds him in high esteem notwithstanding their different political persuasions.

    When this piece was scripted, it was not clear whether the governor has made any formal arrangement to accommodate Etiebet sharing in the celebration of the 30th anniversary of Akwa Ibom. Nevertheless, as he turned 73,  the Iroko tree of many branches, has uncountable reasons to roll out drums with his true loved ones to celebrate his coming out from dimness era and environment with triumph to recognition beyond national boundaries.

  • A’Ibom governorship tribunal: How Attah, Etiebet, INEC delivered the killer punch

    A’Ibom governorship tribunal: How Attah, Etiebet, INEC delivered the killer punch

    As the Akwa Ibom State governorship election petition tribunal adjourned till August 18 to allow the petitioner, Mr Umana Okon Umana, governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), along with the other parties in the case the time to tender a mountain of INEC documents they all pleaded in their filings, it is an appropriate juncture to look at the milestones at the hearing of the petition so far.

    But before going further, let us put the adjournment into context in order to squelch the unfounded rumour that the break was asked for because the petitioner had run out of witnesses. That is far from the truth. The break was discussed and agreed on by all parties who need to sit together and sort the INEC documents, which they had all pleaded, into schedules for presentation to the tribunal at the resumed hearing.  The documents are of such volume that all parties, including the secretariat of the tribunal, have to work together to meet the deadline. Reacting to the motion for adjournment, which was made by Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), counsel to the petitioner, counsel to all the other parties agreed that it should be allowed because the break was needed for a “joint venture.”

    For the milestones, rating easily as one of the critical junctures in the hearing of the governorship election petition were the decisions to relocate all the tribunals to Abuja, following security threats to members of the tribunal and witnesses to petitioners in matters before the tribunals. It is important to mention here that a witness from Onna, home local council to Udom Emmanuel, who was declared winner of the election, Hon. Etebom Christopher Itiat, a governorship candidate of the Democratic People Party in the election, was attacked and his house vandalised after going to Abuja to testify for Umana and the APC.

    Equally momentous also was the decision to move the electoral materials in INEC custody in Uyo to Abuja. In light of the discovery by the team of forensic experts working for the petitioners that INEC in Akwa Ibom was destroying electoral materials intended to be used as evidence in attempt to frustrate the petition, the movement was both significant and right in the interest of justice.

    Another milestone was the day hearing began into the substantive matter before the tribunal. What invested that day with so much significance was not just its rank as the first day in the epic legal battle whose outcome will serve as the reference point for dating history in Akwa Ibom State, but more so for the legal fireworks that fore grounded the lone testimony of the day. The lead counsel, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), for the petitioner had opened the case by calling the first witness, Bishop Samuel Akpan, who was the governorship candidate for Accord Party in the would-be governorship election. Bishop Akpan in the witness box for Umana was an intrusive shock to the respondents, comprising Udom Emmanuel, the Peoples Democratic Party and INEC. They quickly showed it.

    Once they recovered from the shock, they went for the foundation of the case of the petitioner. Their game plan was to truncate the petition at that point with the argument—which could have easily fooled the unwary and the inexperienced—that Bishop Akpan and all the other witnesses that were to come could not testify before the tribunal because they were listed in their initials only by the petitioner in his filings before the tribunal. The trio of Paul Usoro (SAN) for Udom Emmanuel, first respondent; Tayo Oyetibo (SAN) for PDP, second respondent and Dr Onyiechi Ikpeazu (SAN) for INEC, third respondent, contended volubly and for about five hours that it was not allowed in law for witnesses to be identified by initials only, concluding therefore that all the witnesses listed by the petitioner stood disqualified. The petitioner, through his lead counsel, countered with the winning argument that such was allowed for security reasons, namely, possible attacks on witnesses—especially given the manifest truth that Akwa Ibom had been turned into a burning cauldron of violence in the last eight years, the calamity which climaxed in the build-up to and during the elections with some of the most gruesome murders and arsons imaginable. Thirty of the murders occurred on election day. Chief Olanipekun cited authority after authority on the use of initials by witnesses in court until he achieved enthymeme.

    The tribunal, headed by Justice Sadiq Umar, agreed with the petitioner and overruled the opposition. What would have been a fatal blow to the petitioner’s case was thus deftly defused.

    Of all the critical milestones in the hearing so far, Tuesday July 28 stands out as the most significant watershed yet at the tribunal sitting at the FCT High Court in Abuja. It was a day of great moment that lived up to its promise for the petitioner in the election dispute. The day also delivered on its full threat potential to the first, second and third respondents to the petition, namely, Udom Gabriel Emmanuel of the PDP, who was declared winner of the disputed election; the PDP and INEC. The promise and threat, depending on where you stand on the scale of justice, derived from the type of witnesses and kind of evidence that were to be led before the tribunal at the day’s session. They were easily the most ranking witnesses for the petitioner.

    The day’s session began with a back-breaking testimony by one of the high value witnesses, Atuekong Don Etiebet—former minister of petroleum resources, former presidential candidate and former life BOT member of the PDP—against Udom Emmanuel of the PDP, INEC and the PDP.

    Etiebet authoritatively told the tribunal that elections did not hold according to law on 11 April 2015 in Oruk Anam local council area where he comes from and where he was at home to vote on that Election Day. He testified to massive irregularities, including but not limited to ballot snatching, absence of ballot materials at polling units, and bloody violence instituted and directed by thugs and members of the PDP.

    He tendered four materials in evidence, namely, his voter’s card, his press statement condemning the sham elections, newspaper publication of the press statement and a video recording of his visit along with other leaders of the state and members of the APC to INEC head office in Uyo on the night of the election to see whether there was state collation of the ballot as should be the case at the INEC office which was the state collation centre. Etiebet said this was after they could not find INEC collating any results of the “elections” at any local government collation centre in most parts of the state. He said during the visit, they found the INEC head office in total darkness, with no work going on and the INEC REC Austin Okojie nowhere to be found on election night when the INEC head office ought to be a beehive of activities and Mr Okojie was duty bound to be at his post coordinating work. He also told the tribunal that the elders and others in the delegation to the INEC office delivered a written protest letter to the state REC, advising him not to dare call the elections which were irredeemably marred by wanton irregularities and violence. Yet the following Sunday morning, Etiebet told the tribunal, INEC announced the result of the “election” and declared Udom Emmanuel winner.

    Etiebet’s voter’s card, video recording of the visit to INEC head office on the night of the election, and press statement were accepted in evidence by the tribunal and marked as exhibits, but the newspaper reports of his press statement were rejected on the ground that the newspapers were not certified as true copies by the National Library of Nigeria as required by law. The legal team of Umana/APC at the tribunal said the rejection of the newspaper accounts of Etiebet’s press statement was of no legal significance since they were derivatives of the original press statement that had itself been accepted by the tribunal.

    The next witness for the day was HE Obong Victor Attah, former governor of Akwa Ibom State and leader of the Ibibio. Attah, who was magisterial in his deposition and statesman-like in deportment, tendered his PVC to prove that he was a registered voter but could not vote because elections did not hold in his town; he also tendered video recordings and testified orally to the effect that elections did not hold according to law in Ibesikpo Asutan local council area where he comes from. Both materials were accepted in evidence and marked as exhibits. Under cross examination intended to tar the former governor with the brush of partisanship, Attah left the following words on marble for the tribunal and those in and outside its precincts to ponder: “Excuse me my friend,” said Obong Attah to the opposition counsel cross examining him, with a hint of edge to his regal self disclosure, “I was a member of the National Conference and I personally coined the phrase ‘sanctity of the ballot.’ My concern does not lie with a party but with Nigeria. I want everything to be done right in my country. I am an elder statesman.” No one could fail to be struck by the poignancy of an eternal personal hurt in his voice.

    The super star witness for Umana/APC on the day in question was an NYSC INEC ad hoc staff member, an Ibo lady, who told the tribunal how PDP thugs invaded the unit where she served in Mbiabong, Uyo and carted away election materials allocated to the polling unit. She said the hoodlums arrived in vehicles with arms, shouting and hailing the PDP and grabbed the ballot materials under her watch. When she resisted them, she said, they beat her up, tore up her clothing and “threatened to send me to the wheel chair for life.” She said it was one of the good Nigerians who witnessed the attack that brought his jacket to cover her near nakedness. She added that she and her colleagues at the unit had to run for dear lives. She tendered the clothing as evidence, which was accepted and marked as exhibit.

    It was a bad day for the PDP and Udom Emmanuel at the tribunal. The INEC lady’s eye witness account of election violence and the violation of the sanctity of the ballot was so vivid and poignant that those who watched her could see the entire horror movie unfolding before their eyes. But it was also paradoxically so, so surreal.

    Before the adjournment to 18 August, the petitioner had presented his case before the tribunal for eight days out of the 14 days allotted to him to do so, and called 46 witnesses. He has six days left to complete the allotted time.

     

    • Otongaran is the director of media and publicity for the APC governorship campaign in Akwa Ibom State
  • Etiebet mourns Akwa Ibom APC chief Umanah in accident

    Etiebet mourns Akwa Ibom APC chief Umanah in accident

    •Party leaders allege planned ‘accident’ 

    Former Petroleum Minister Atuekong Don Etiebet, has said the death of a popular businessman, Dr. Ime Umanah, was a big loss to Akwa Ibom State and Nigeria.

    The late Umanah was a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Akwa Ibom State.

    He reportedly died in an auto accident.

    Etiebet said: “The news, last night (Monday), that Dr. Ime Umanah was dead hit me so severely that I lost my senses, developed a headache, runny stomach and refused to believe it.

    “I embarked on verification investigations till midnight when finally Hon. Akanimoh Edet, his close ally, said he had actually seen the body at an Owerri hospital and was arranging to take it home.

    “It was shedding of tears, very devastating, hurtful and incomprehensible that Dr. Ime Sampson Umana should die in an accident. It is one too many of our revered leaders and frontline outspoken politicians, particularly from Abak-Five, who have died within a year.

    “As a great and pioneering businessman from that part of the country, he did everything to serve his people, bring recognition to Annang from different capacities and angles. Those of us from Annang, Akwa Ibom State and Nigeria have lost a gem, an outstanding international businessman and a philanthropist, popularly known as Ufan Ndito Ubuene (Friend of the Poor).

    “It is a big loss to all of us. We shall surely miss him in our endeavours. He was a pillar of strength, an inspiration and emulation to all of us.”

    Another APC chieftain, Mr. Ita Awak, said Umanah was killed.

    Awak, a former Commissioner for Information, alleged that the death was an organised accident similar to that of a former Commissioner for Youths and Sports, Oyong Asuquo, on April 13, 2012.

    He added that every death in Akwa Ibom, which is calculated to have been politically motivated, would be investigated.

    APC’s Assistant Publicity Secretary Etim Etim said Umanah was in the court on Monday for a case he had been having against Governor Godswill Akpabio since 2011.

    He recalled that after the court session, he wanted to travel to Lagos by air but because of aviation fuel shortage, decided to go by land.

    Umanah’s vehicle was involved in an accident between Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital and Owerri.

    Also, APC governorship candidate, Umana Umana, last Friday at the burial of the party’s chieftain, Mr. Okon Uwah, who was killed by suspected Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) thugs during a door-to-door campaign, said his death would be investigated until the culprits were brought to justice.

  • Etiebet tackles Akpabio

    Etiebet tackles Akpabio

    THERE seems to be no love lost between former Minister of Petroleum, Don Etiebet, and the Akwa Ibom State governor, Godswill Akpabio. The bone of contention is not unconnected to the 2015 governorship election with the two prominent men allegedly backing different candidates. While Etiebet is allegedly rooting for Umana Okon Umana, a former Secretary to the State Government (SSG), the governor is reportedly backing his current SSG, Udom Emmanuel. In the last few weeks, the former minister and the governor have been trading verbal tackles concerning the 2015 succession, as they appear stuck to their positions.

  • Akwa Ibom guber poll: Etiebet canvasses open contest

    Akwa Ibom guber poll: Etiebet canvasses open contest

    A TUEKONG Don Etiebet, member of the BOT of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has called for an open primary for the selection of the party’s flag bearer for the 2015 gubernatorial election in Akwa Ibom State. Delivering a lecture, entitled “Democracy and the challenge of leadership”, at the 55th birthday celebration of Umana Okon Umana, Akwa Ibom PDP leading governorship candidate, Etiebet advised qualified and interested politicians in the 2015 governorship race from all parts of the state to feel free and contest for the party’s ticket. He recalled that after the initial consensus agreement that produced the first flag bearer of the party in 1999, primary contests in Akwa Ibom PDP have always been open, and called on aspirants to ignore the threat that those who are not supported by the state governor will die because they are “seeking power through the backdoor”. He encouraged all aspirants to go to the “people who are the real front door” for the mandate to run for office. “Go to the people who are the front door and nobody will die, and if anybody dies, we will find the killer,” Etiebet said. Etiebet, a founding member of the PDP in the state, vowed to work with the national leadership of the party to provide a level playing for all aspirants at the party primary coming up in two months’ time in the state. Also speaking at the event, Obong Bassey Albert, immediate past Commissioner for Finance in the state and a PDP governorship aspirant, pledged to work with Umana for the good of democracy in the state. Recalling that it was the bloc votes from Uyo Senatorial District (USD) that helped Ikot Ekpene Senatorial District (ISD) to produce the current administration in the state, Bassey said it was only fair that other senatorial districts should support Uyo to produce the next governor of the state.

  • How military destroyed Nigeria’s education system, by Etiebet

    A former Petroleum Minister, Chief Don Etiebet, has said the long military rule in Nigeria destroyed the nation’s education system.

    Etiebet noted that the lack of regard for education policies of successive military regimes caused a discontinuation of good policies.

    According to him, the military governments, which occupied most of Nigeria’s 52 years of independence, caused several discontinuities which he said “had ruptured so many things, including the country’s education system”.

    He said succeeding administrations need to continue the policies and programmes of their predecessors for the progress and development of the country.

    Etiebet, who is the chairman of the newly inaugurated Governing Council of the University of Jos (UNIJOS), spoke in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, when he visited the Ewi of Ado-Ekiti, Oba Rufus Adeyemo Adejugbe, the varsity’s Chancellor.

    On his entourage were other board members, including Dr. Adamu Jamfalar, Mrs. Uju Uchendu Ozoka, Tunde Akogun, UNIJOS Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Hayward Mafuyai and the Registrar, Mr Jilli Dandam.

    Etiebet said: “Each military government had its own focus, ideas and objectives and these affected many institutions, particularly education.

    “I am bold to say that most of the policies of the past military governments had not been in a continuous arrangement of building on what was achieved by the previous governments. This accounted for the dislocations which are responsible for the problems being witnessed today.

    “Now, we are saying that successive governments should build upon the foundations that have been laid by previous governments so that we can have a common and continuous education policy in our country and for our children.”

    He also noted that the lack of relevance of current university curricular has shown in about 40 million university graduates who cannot fit into contemporary life.

    Etiebet said: “The governments and education policy formulators must equally ensure that degrees being awarded bear useful relevance to the country’s developmental challenges.”