Tag: hostilities

  • 18 feared killed as Aladja, Ogbe-Ijoh indigenes resume hostilities

    Eighteen people were feared killed on Monday at Aladja and Ogbe-Ijoh communities in Delta State, as residents resumed hostilities.

    There was tension in the towns yesterday.

    The communities claimed to have lost nine persons apiece.

    While Aladja indigenes alleged that soldiers supported Ogbe-Ijoh community and shot dead nine people in their community during a protest by women and children, Ogbe-Ijoh residents claimed that Aladja militia killed nine of their people in a surprise attack.

    Police and Army sources debunked the allegations.

    The Army expressed surprise at an alleged blackmail attempt on its

    personnel sent to restore peace and sanity, but who were waylaid and denied access to Ogbe-Ijoh by Aladja people. The Police said there was no report of any death from both communities.

    Police spokesman Andrew Aniamaka told The Nation in Warri: “It can’t be true. The last SITREP I got on it, about 40 minutes to one hour ago, confirmed there was no death. If there was, I would have reported it. All hands are on deck, even my CP is on top of the matter. He is addressing it.”

    The apex Urhobo socio-cultural body, Urhobo Progress Union (UPU), has enjoined the state and federal governments to intervene and end carnage in the area.

    It said they should investigate the allegation of extrajudicial killing of Aladja people against the Army.

    The Nation gathered that the latest violence began on Monday evening with people from Ogbe-Ijoh alleging that Aladja youths stormed their community and injured eight people.

    The Ogbe-Ijoh youths, in what they called a reprisal, also stormed Aladja.

    It was, however, unknown what happened during the reprisal on Aladja, although it was learnt that there was exchange of gunshots between the two sides.

    It was gathered that in an attempt to stop the fight, the Police called for a back-up from the Army and on arrival, the Aladja end had been barricaded by the youth, preventing soldiers from gaining access. That was when Aladja people claimed the Army shot dead nine of their indigenes.

    Reacting to the indictment of its men by Aladja community, the 6 Division, Port Harcourt described the claim of extrajudicial killing by its men as false and an attempt to blackmail the Army.

    Spokesman Col. Aminu Iliyasu, in a phone chat with The Nation, said no soldier from 3 Battalion, Effurun, who were the ones sent to restore peace to the area, fired one bullet, despite provocation and attack by Aladja youths, who barricaded the only access through their town to Ogbe-Ijoh.

    UPU President-General Chief

    Moses Taiga urged the government to find a solution to the crisis.

    He called for investigation into the alleged killing of Aladja indigenes by soldiers.

  • Water Resources Bill may renew hostilities in Niger Delta – IYC

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) Worldwide has said the Water Resources Executive Bill currently on the floor of the National Assembly (NASS), is capable of renewing hostilities between the federal government and people of the Niger Delta region.

    Speaking at a press conference centred on the state of the nation in Warri, Delta State yesterday, Oweilaemi, described the bill as another “neo-colonisation” ploy of the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration against the oil-rich region.

    Stating that the group will do all within its powers to resist the bill, he called on the NASS to either reject it “out rightly or, remove the clauses that seek to control the surface and groundwater resources including river beds and banks.”

    The Ijaw Youths’ president further stated that issues relating to water resources management be left under the control of state governments.

    “On the water resources executive Bill currently in the NASS, the position of IYC is that the said Bill is another neo-colonisation agenda by the federal government to annihilate and subjugate the destinies of the Niger Delta people thereby subjecting the people to eternal colony. We reject the Bill in its entirety as it will only end up causing disaffection between the Niger Delta people and the federal government.

    “We have perused the spirits and letters of the said Bill clause by clause. There is nothing in the proposed law that will benefit the Niger Delta people. This is a clear departure from the sacred constitutional requirements of enacting laws which are for the public good, public morality and public safety. A Bill that is designed to divest the people of natural resources in their domains cannot bring peace and good governance to the people.

    “IYC therefore is of the view that the National Assembly should as a matter of public good and for the sake of our corporate coexistence reject the Bill. The management of the water resources should be left with the states. We on our own part will do everything humanly position within the ambit of the law to resist the passage of the Bill. We do not want a repeat of history in the region. This is a surreptitious means to reintroduce the botched cattle colony. Niger Delta people will resist it even with the last drop of our blood,” Oweilaemi said.

    Remarking on the staggering compliance of the sit-at-home order of the Independent People of Biafra (IPOB), he re-echoed calls for the implementation of fiscal federalism and resource control.

    Other issues the IYC harped on was the quick passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill, with its initial 10% equity share for oil communities and the relocation of oil multinationals’, including Shell Petroleum Development Company, corporate headquarters to the Niger Delta.

     

  • 2019 polls: Wike, Amaechi resume hostilities

    2019 polls: Wike, Amaechi resume hostilities

    Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi and Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike have resumed hostilities ahead of next year’s governorship election. The two leaders trading accusations over the worsening security situation in the Southsouth state. Port Harcourt Bureau Chief BISI OLANIYI traces the genesis of the personality clash between the two former political allies and its implication for peace and harmony in the state.

    The Transportation Minister, Rotimi Amaechi, and his successor, Governor Nyesom Wike, have so much in common. They were former allies in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Rivers State. Both are also of Ikwerre ethnic stock. Ikwerre is the major ethnic group in the state and it controls four of the state’s most populous local government areas: Port Harcourt City, Obio/Akpor, Ikwerre and Emohua.

    Amaechi hails from Ubima in Ikwerre Local Government (LG), while Wike, who was the former’s Chief of Staff when he (Amaechi) was governor, is an indigene of Rumueprikom-Port Harcourt in Obio/Akpor LG. Wike was also the Director-General of Amaechi’s re-election campaign organisation in 2011. After he secured his second term, Amaechi recommended Wike to the then President Goodluck Jonathan for ministerial appointment and was subsequently made the Minister of State for Education.

    That appointment signaled the parting of ways between the two former political allies, as Wike later teamed up with former First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, an indigene of Okrika in the state, to declare war against the then Governor Amaechi. This prompted the former governor and his teeming supporters to dump the PDP for the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The 2015 governorship election in the state was a major battle between the two political heavyweights, Though Amaechi’s name was not on list of candidates for the election, the Director-General of the Buhari/Osinbajo Campaign Organisation in 2015 contested by proxy; as the candidate of the APC, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, enjoyed his support. Thus, the “defeat” suffered by Peterside in the election, which was marred by violence and massive rigging, was a big blow on Amaechi’s ego.

    The two political gladiators have renewed their rivalry ahead of the 2019 elections. The media war witnessed in recent times is likely to resurface later in the year, when the two major parties in the state begin their primaries.

    The killing of 22 innocent worshippers on New Year’s Day, after the crossover service in Omoku, the headquarters of Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LG, which was masterminded by a notorious kidnapper/militant/cultist/killer, Chief Johnson Igwedibia, aka ‘General’ Don Waney, 34, served as a platform for fresh verbal attacks. Igwedibia and two of his lieutenants, Ikechukwu Adiele and Lucky Ode, were on January 6 killed in Enugu, Enugu State by soldiers and operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS), while their bodies were on January 7 displayed to reporters in Port Harcourt by the outgoing General Officer Commanding (GOC), Division Six of the Nigerian Army, Maj.-Gen. Enobong Udoh.

    When Igwedibia’s mansion, camp and shrines were raided by soldiers on November 20, 2017, 10 human skulls and other human bones, among other items, were recovered, while seven suspects, including two women, were also arrested.

    In the morning of January 8, Amaechi addressed the people of Rivers State, as a former governor through a broadcast. In the night of the same day, Wike also addressed the people in a broadcast, where he stated that Igwedibia’s mansion would be taken over by the Rivers government. Igwedibia’s massive terror infrastructure, consisting of a detention facility, an armoury, a shrine and a warehouse for keeping of ransom from victims of kidnappings, was, however, on January 9 demolished by the Federal Government, on the orders of President Muhammadu Buhari, to serve as a deterrent to other criminal-minded persons.

    In his broadcast, Amaechi had asked Governor Wike to protect people of the Niger Delta state or resign from office, adding that Rivers people would no longer tolerate the governor’s inability and/or refusal to protect defenceless citizens. The Transportation Minister said Rivers people have had enough of insecurity and bloodbath.

    Amaechi said: “In the past few years, we have suffered and endured a debilitating state of insecurity in Rivers State. Many lives have been cut short, while many more have been maimed. Hopes and dreams have been dashed, families distraught and destroyed. Murderous cult groups and rival gangs reign supreme. Our once peaceful state has lost its serenity and lustre. We are now being derisively referred to as ‘Rivers of Blood’.

    “However, the killings in Omoku in the first few hours of this new year and the uninspiring, inept, blame-game response of a state government that swore to an oath to protect every Rivers man and woman, should collectively compel us to action and scream that we have had enough of the insecurity and bloodbath.

    “Some 48 hours after the Omoku massacre, the response of Governor Wike and the Government of Rivers State, whose primary responsibility is to protect you from these kind of attacks, was a gabble blather about a N200 million bounty and to launch another round of attacks on me (Amaechi), because I politely advised them to protect Rivers people or resign from office.

    “Like most of you, I was shocked, utterly disgusted to hear the man, who, I must repeat, took an oath to protect you, attempts to justify and casually explain away the cold-blooded murder of innocent Rivers people in Omoku on New Year’s Day. The governor’s attempt to justify and compare the Omoku murders or any other killings in Rivers State to whatever is happening in any other part of the country is a deceitful, poisonous narrative that we must never allow to flourish. The governor’s repugnant attempt at finger pointing, blaming oil companies, opposition politicians and everyone else apart from himself, is a clear indication that he has abdicated his primary constitutional responsibility to safeguard lives and property.”

    The minister also stated that the people of Rivers knew and many people outside the state equally knew that the nature and type of insecurity, violence and carnages in Rivers were unique and peculiar to the state. He added: “The madness in Rivers State since the advent of these NEW (Nyesom Ezenwo Wike) men of power is rooted firmly in the witchcraft politics of those who now preside over the affairs of the state. They lack the political will and have devilishly refused to halt the violence and killings, and restore some level of sanity, because of their mischievous politics and voodoo electoral calculations.

    “Let no one deceive you with a twisted narrative on the origins, causes and solutions to the bloodbath in Rivers State. Most of you can attest to how I battled and tackled insecurity, when I served as your governor. I led the fight against cultists, gangs, thugs and criminals masquerading as militants. They were driven out from hiding, many fled the state. I was able to do that because I was never in bed with the criminals. I never appointed any into political office or crowned any king.

    “The administration I led was able to return Rivers State to serenity, from the horrible state of insecurity and violence we met, when we took over. Rivers people enjoyed peace until the months leading up to the 2015 general elections, when these ‘NEW’ men of power in the state introduced unprecedented violence and killings.”

    Amaechi also stated that his thoughts and prayers were with all the people who lost loved ones in the Omoku attack, as everybody continued to pray for the repose of the souls of those who were murdered, while assuring Rivers people that the Federal Government would begin to protect them.

    On the other hand, Wike in his broadcast said his administration had zero tolerance for crime and criminality and that it would continue to take measures to protect lives and property. To underscore the seriousness that his government attached to the fight against violent crimes, Wike promised that the anti-kidnapping law would be amended to prescribe the maximum sentence for engaging in cultism, robbery and kidnapping.

    Wike, who is seeking re-election next year, said the amnesty programme of the Rivers government generated peace and was largely successful, before it was allegedly compromised by Amaechi, whom the governor claimed, prevailed on the Federal Government and the security agencies to sabotage it. He also alleged that the APC leaders in Rivers worked against his administration’s amnesty programme. He said: “Our decision to offer amnesty to all repentant cultists, militants and criminals was done in good faith and in the best interest of the state. Regrettably, while the programme was on course, some opposition leaders, especially the former governor (Amaechi), unhappy with the successes recorded, dissuaded some armed militants and cultists from sincerely embracing the amnesty.

    “Indeed, they also persuaded the Federal Government not to support the amnesty programme and other security measures we had recommended. This is the reason why we must thank the President (Muhammadu Buhari) for doing things differently and with the support of all, a different result has been achieved.

    “Instead of showing respect for the dead and genuine sympathies to the bereaved families of the dastardly act (in Omoku), the former governor (Amaechi) prefers to further exploit the unfortunate incident for political ends, by making wild, unguarded and inciting statements against the Rivers State government. We leave him (Amaechi) to the judgment of God and posterity.”

    Wike also stated that contrary to the Transportation minister’s claims and posturing, the security challenge in Omoku predated his administration. He insisted that Rivers State was never peaceful when Amaechi held sway as governor and that the same Igwedibia tragically killed 32 persons in Omoku on December 14, 2014 under Amaechi, whom he accused of failing to bring the notorious killer (Igwedibia) to justice.

    Rivers APC Chairman, Chief Davies Ikanya, said Wike’s broadcast on insecurity and bloodbath in the state was full of lies and half-truths. He said: “While some of the lies may be ignored at the moment and dealt with at a later date, however, it is manifestly important to immediately prevent unsuspecting members of the public, critical stakeholders and particularly security agencies from being hoodwinked by a frivolous list of supposed cultists and kidnappers contained in the governor’s broadcast.

    “The truth has come out. Wike merely compiled names of cult groups opposed to his own gang of killers, names of his hit-men known to have fallen out with him and some APC members, while he is asking for their arrests. Since the broadcast by Wike, many are still asking a plethora of questions. Why did the governor know those persons as criminals, as he claimed and he never did anything since he came into office over two years ago? Why did he not make the names of those individuals available to security agents for arrest, investigation and prosecution? Why were those names kept until Don Waney was killed, before he made them public, less than 48 hours after? Were those names given to him by security agencies? Indeed, how were those names generated? Were they generated in Government House, Port Harcourt or by the police?

    “The bravest attempts to answer the aforementioned questions simply confirm the fact that Wike merely want to muddle up investigations by security agents, following the killing of his associate, Don Waney. The governor very well knows that if Don Waney and his boys could be tracked and killed in faraway Enugu, then information from his mobile call logs, text messages, bank accounts, etc. will likely reveal a lot, which may incriminate him or his party leaders, who freely played host to and/or appeared in photographs with Don Waney at various times in the past.”

    The APC chairman also called on Rivers people, other Nigerians and security agencies to look beyond the names, made up of either Wike’s opponents or his ‘boys’ that had fallen out with him, while urging security agents to rely on names independently generated by the various security services over time and clamp down on them accordingly.

    His PDP counterpart, Chief Felix Obuah, who is an indigene of Omoku, however, lauded security agencies and Wike for ending the senseless and unprovoked killings in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LG. Obuah noted that the governor and the security agencies deserved special commendation for their proactive action and gallantry in bringing to an end, the reign of terror in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LG.

    Obuah said: “The visit of Governor Wike to Omoku, sequel to the slaughtering of some worshippers during the New Year crossover service and the promise of a handsome reward N200 million to any person with useful information that could lead to the arrest of the hoodlums, was a morale booster to the success recorded in tracing and killing the notorious criminal, Don Waney, and his gang in Enugu, Enugu State.

    “I give security agencies a pat on the back for displaying the highest professional skills in bursting the killer gang, without taking the lives of innocent people during the gun duel between the soldiers and the bandits. The PDP-controlled Rivers State government is prepared to continue to partner and give all necessary logistic support to the security agencies, in their efforts to make Rivers State cult and crime free.

    “The euphoria occasioned by the news of the death of the notorious kidnap kingpin, Don Waney, believed to be behind most of the criminal activities across Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LG in recent times, is a pointer that the people had lived in fear and always prayed for the end of the dark period, which has come, with the great feat recorded by the gallant soldiers and DSS officers.”

    Obuah also described the killing of Igwedibia and his gang members as God’s answer to the prayers of the peace-loving people Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LG and the bereaved families of the victims. He also urged the security agencies not to rest on their oars until all forms of criminality were wiped out in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LG and other parts of the state.

     

  • Two killed as Cross River communities resume hostilities

    Two killed as Cross River communities resume hostilities

    Two persons are feared dead in a fresh outbreak of hostilities between the Netim and Qua Communities of Odukpani Local Government Area in Cross River State.

    Both communities that have lived together for years have been quarreling over land, often leading to conflicts that result in loss of lives and property over the years.

    At the moment there is heightened tension in the area and a detachment of security operatives have been detailed to the area to forestall further crisis.

    The State Police Public Relations Officer, Irene Ugbo who confirmed the incident said that the Police is working to restore peace in the area.

     

  • Two killed as Ogbe-ljoh/Aladja resume hostilities in Delta

    Two killed as Ogbe-ljoh/Aladja resume hostilities in Delta

    The Ogbe-ljoh and Aladja communities in Delta State are locked in a fresh strife which, at the last count, has claimed two lives.

    Aladja is in Udu council area, while Ogbe-ljoh is Warri South-West council area’s headquarters.

    The Sunday Nation gathered that the fragile cease-fire agreement recently brokered between the two neighbouring communities by the state government was set aside on Wednesday when youths from both communities took up arms again.

    Governor  Ifeanyi Okowa, had admonished leaders of the two communities, especially their traditional rulers, to rein  in their subjects and ensure that terms of the agreement to peace were not breached, warning that he would hold them responsible if the situation deteriorated again.

    Both communities are now trading blames over the cause of the fresh violence.

    While Aladja claimed that it was sparked by Ogbe-ljoh people who harassed their women on their way to the  farm, Ogbe-ljoh claimed the fight broke out when Aladja people barricaded the only access to their community.

    The Commander of the Warri Area of the Delta State police command, ACP Mohammed Muazu, confirmed the death of two persons in Wednesday’s fight.

    He said:”It’s just a small misunderstanding and the devil will just come between them and these guys will start shooting, killing themselves, injuring themselves and destroying people’s properties.

    “Two persons died, I suppose  on the Aladja side.”

    The Chairman, Aladja Governing Council, Dogene Elias, said: “I can confirm that two people have been killed in Aladja, one house was destroyed, that is the one we can ascertain for now.

    “As I am talking to you, we have reports that they are already preparing to attack us again tonight. It is a daily thing. We didn’t block their road, the thing is that road has always been the problem. They have always been preventing our women from going into the bush to harvest their crops.

    “Anytime they see them there, they beat them up, harass them and when we intervene we take them to the police station. This has been the trend and actually we’ve been meeting at the police station, area command, trying to resolve the issue. All that led to this panel of enquiry, which we are working towards. But the immediate one is they depriving our women from going to their farms; harassing them, beating them up.”

    But Friday Deingha, Coordinator of Concerned Members for Peace in Ogbe-Ijoh, denied that his people were the aggressors.

    His words: “”Aladja people are attacking us daily, the MOPOLs sent to Aladja were sent away by Aladja people, they came to Ogbe-ljoh, some of them left. Before then there was a peace accord that nobody should attack each other and the road should be free because that is the only road leading into Ogbe-Ijoh, which is the headquarters of Warri South-West. They have violated the peace accord, they have been attacking. You know when you push someone to the wall, there’s every tendency that the person is going to fight back.

    “I am not going to deny that fact that Ogbe-ljoh is also fighting back. Yesterday, in the process of repelling their attack, our boys went inside there, but they later came back. No damage was done, I could not assess if there was any damage on their side. Before yesterday, two persons from Ogbe-Ijoh were shot before yesterday’s attack and the area command is aware of it.

    “That is the sincere story about it. We don’t want trouble. Now there’s a rumour that they want to wear army uniform to come into Ogbe-Ijoh. That is the intelligence we are gathering now.”

  • Hostilities: Lalong calls for calm in Plateau

    Hostilities: Lalong calls for calm in Plateau

    Following the hostilities on Tuesday night in the border communities of Mangu and Barkin Ladi local government areas of Plateau, Gov. Simon Lalong has called for calm on the part of residents.

    Lalong, in a statement by his Director of Press and Public Affairs, Mr Emmanuel Nanle, appealed to all residents to embrace peace and not take laws into their hands while reporting suspicious movements to security agencies.

    He said the unfortunate attacks, which claimed many lives and properties, took place at the border communities of Kadunu and Fan of Mangu and Barkin local government areas respectively.

    Lalong stated that it was regrettable that as government made efforts to ensure the end of violent conflicts in Barkin Ladi, Riyom and some parts of Jos South Local Government, the state was faced with another communal crisis.

    He, however, commended the security agencies for their prompt response in curtailing the escalation of the situation and also charged them to do the needful to forestall future occurrences.

    Lalong also commended the management of Jos University Teaching Hospital and Comprehensive Centre in Gindiri for providing medical services to the injured.

    The governor directed the State Emergency Management Agency to as a matter of urgency provide relief materials to all those affected.

  • Ali, Anenih resume hostilities in Edo Central

    Ali, Anenih resume hostilities in Edo Central

    Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Board of Trustees (BOT) Chairman Chief Tony Anenih has a mission in Edo Central Senatorial District. The PDP chieftain, fondly called ‘Mr. Fix it,’ wants the PDP to re-capture parliamentary seats in the zone at the general elections. His new strategy, according to the All Progressives Congress (APC), is whipping up sentiments against the party’s presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, by encouraging the daughter of the former governor of Bendel State, the late Prof. Ambrose Ali, to remind constituents about how his father was jailed by the former Head of State, following the December 31, 1983 coup. But, Governor Adams Oshiomhole appears to be smarter. He has reminded the district that Anenih was the Chairman of the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN), which ‘rigged’ Ali out of power in the Second Republic. The comrade-governor has also asked Anenih to stop using Ali’s name to score cheap political capital and concentrate on wooing voters by listing his achievements  in Edo Central as a PDP chief in the last 16 years. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU writes on the battle of wits.

    Twenty-six years after his demise, the Professor of Morbid Anatomy and Second Republic governor of the old Bendel State, Ambrose Folorunso Ali, has become the main issue in Edo politics. His soul resurrected last week at the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) parliamentary campaigns in the Central Senatorial District.

    At Uromi, Anenih’s home town, Ali’s daughter, Mrs. Rosemary Ali-Subaru, was on the podium beside the Iyasele, her father’s political foe during the 1983 governorship election. In a voice tinged with emotion, she urged the people to reject the APC at the polls, claiming that its presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, jailed his father. She said the late Ali’s imprisonment heralded his death adding that the pains of the loss have not faded from the mind of the family.

    Ali was a great politician. He was an Awoist. He was also a performer. He shunned avarice and cravings for ill-gotten wealth. His achievements have remained indelible.

    At the APC rally in Ekpoma, Ali’s home town, Governor Adams Oshiomhole returned the missiles, which he believed were instigated by Anenih, the PDP leader. Paying tribute to Ali, he recalled that the former governor was held in high esteem by the people of old Bendel State, which now comprises of Edo and Delta states. The governor recalled that the people voted massively for the former university don on the platform of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), led by the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, because of his sound pedigree.

    In Oshiomhole’s view, Ali left behind worthy legacies, including Edo State University, Ekpoma, which was named after him when he died. Besides, he implemented the four cardinal programmes of the UPN-free education at all levels, free health, rural development and housing and rural development. The governor said the university opened up Ekpoma and its environs, adding that commercial activities sprung up in the area.

    Oshiomhole was a leader of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) at that time. But, he was not cut off from his roots. He told the crowd of party supporters that Anenih should not be taken seriously because he worked against Ali by conniving with forces in Lagos, the former Federal Capital Territory (FCT), to deny Ali his deserved second term. The governor said that Ali was not happy that he was rigged out by the NPN.  In his opinion, Anenih would not have worked for the political downfall of Ali, if he is a patriot. He wondered why Uromi chief, who connived with others to remove the crown and gubernatorial robes of Ali, has turned around to twist history. “Which disgrace and humiliation of Edo Central is more than that?,” he queried.

    Oshiomhole also raised other posers: As the Minister of Works, what did Anenih do for Edo Central? Which project did he attract to the district? Ali built a university. What has Anenih brought to the area?  “Since 1999, he has been a powerful and influential man. He is labeled as the leader, he has nothing to show for it in Edo Central,” the governor stressed.

    It is not the first time Oshiomhole and Anenih will lock horns. The acclaimed PDP leader, consummate politician and schemer,was the main pillar of support for the defeated governorship candidate, Gen. Charles Airhiavbere (rtd), who challenged Oshiomole at the July 14, 2013 elections. During the exercise, the old political warhorse, strategist and schemer could not spring a surprise in favour of the PDP. Oshiomhole said that  the ‘Mr Fix It’ of Nigerian politics was in a fix. Since then, PDP has been struggling to bounce back in Edo.

    Will the frontline politician from Uromi, sway the votes from the APC to his party during the parliamentary elections?  Will APC candidates kiss the dust before the maverick politician? Is pre-1999 Anenih the same as Anenih of today?

    The gladiator, who had earned a reputation of a cat with  nine lives, is fighting a titanic battle in the twilight of his political career. It is another season of ego war. Many believe that the old warhorse and comrade-governor will resume hostility in this month’s elections.  In the last governorship election, Anenih and  Airhiavbere were  deserted by the likes of Brig-Gen. Sam Ogbemudia (rid), Prof. Oserhieme Osunbor, making the PDP to struggle from a position of disadvantage.

    The odds favoured Oshiomhole, who tendered his achievements before the people, unlike Airhiavbere, who could not convince them that PDP had good plans for them. Unlike Oshiomole who has the luxury of pointing to an array of achievements, especially on-going projects, on campaign campaign  grounds,  the PDP challenger is not a tested politician.

    However, hope is always the elixir for Anenih. Since he has been on the firing line in the Second Republic, he has never deserted the battle field. He relies on old glory as one of the conquerors of the political space. If naive actors underrate his arsenal, they do to their peril.

    In 1981, Anenih came to limelight. His first political battle was fought with vigour and zeal. As a retired Commissioner of Police, he surprisingly displaced the late Chief Tony Enahoro as the Bendel State Chairman of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN). He confronted the UPN governor, Ali, who was facing serious internal crisis in his party by rallying forces to install Dr. Ogbemudia as governor for three months. That marked the beginning of his meteoric rise to fame.

    In the Third Republic, the conservative politician bounced back. However, he found himself among a mixture of leftist and rightist politicians being tossed around by former military President Ibrahim Babangida. The uneasy cohabitation later shaped the diverse response to the critical “June 12” question within the shaky platform.

    When Ambassador Baba Gana Kingibe vacated the SDP national chairmanship, Alhaji Sheu Yar’Adua’s group, the Peoples Front, which later became to be known as Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM), installed Anenih as chairman. He was on that exalted seat when Chief Moshood Abiola and Kingibe defeated Alhaji Bashir Tofa and Dr. Sylvester Ugoh of the National Republican Convention (NRC) at the June 12 election.

    However, when the historic poll was criminally annulled, the national chairman failed to defend the mandate. While political leaders and rights activists were agitating for de-annulment, Anenih and Kingibe looked the other way. Anenih’s aloofness enraged many politicians in the land. But those close to him said that it was his unique style.  For him, the 1995 Constitutional Conference, where he was a delegate, was also an interlude of a sort.

    When civil rule was restored in 1999, Anenih emerged as a founding father of the PDP. He was among the politicians the late Bola Ige saw in the PDP at the formative stage and picked race. When anxious reporters sought to know why the Cicero of Esa-Oke distanced himself from the eminent politician, and indeed, Chief Arthur Nzeribe, he explained that he feared being contaminated by the Abacha virus. Both Anenih and Ige later served as ministers under the PDP administration.

    Anenih was  Gen. Yar’Adua’s campaign manager during the botched presidential primaries. He did more than that for General Olusegun Obasanjo (rtd), who made him Works Minister and member of his kitchen cabinet. In fact, Obasanjo, who held him in awe, called him “My Leader”, to the amusement of other chieftains who nodded affirmatively.  But it is on record that the former Minister of Works combined his ministerial responsibilities with grand politicking. Many have insisted that his passion for high wire politics may have diverted Anenih’s attention from fighting the infrastructure battle. Under his ministry, federal roads became death traps and critics alleged that huge money voted for construction and rehabilitation went down the drain. Anenih objected to the claim. He fired back, saying that he did not steal a penny.

    A dependable ally of Obasanjo, he had declared in 2002 that there was no vacancy in Aso Rock. Other PDP presidential aspirants developed cold feet. He and the late Chief Sunday Afolabi prepared the ground again for the General’s return bid.  Obasanjo had always  relied on Anenih’s  foresight and intelligence in fighting intra-party battles in the PDP. He was powerful; and so also was his wife, Josephine, former Women Leader and Women Affairs Minister. A proof of Anenih’s influence also came in 2007 at the National Stadium, Surulere, Lagos, during the governorship rerun between Mrs. Hilda Williams and Senator Musiliu Obanikoro. The Electoral Officer, Real Admiral Ogundele, declared Mrs. Williams winner. But on getting to Abuja, Anenih reported to the PDP’s National Executive Committee (NEC) that Obanikoro won. His report was upheld and the party announced in Abuja that the senator was its flag bearer in Lagos State. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU writes on the battle of wits.

    But the tide begun to change for the powerful man in 2007. It was certain that Edo was slipping from his firm grip. Although PDP had ruled the state for eight years, 2007 poll was a different ball game. The former NLC President, Oshiomole, had returned home to challenge the political establishment in Edo to a duel. He appealed to the people to halt the dangerous trend of godfatherism in the state. The people pondered on the special request.

    The veteran labour leader faced the PDP candidate, Osunbor, in the ring. While the PDP relied on the strength of his party, the police and Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Oshiomole, who ran on the platform of the defunct Action Congress (AC), ran to the masses for help. Although he won the election, INEC, then a parastatal of the PDP, allotted victory to the loser. When Oshiomole picked up the gauntlet, the battle shifted from the ballot box to the courtroom. Following the restoration of the stolen mandate, it was evident that PDP merely relied on rigging to survive in the state.

    Anenih and his co-travelers were still facing the post-election heat at home when Obasanjo cleverly edged him out as chairman of the Board of Trustees (BOT). Out of power, many PDP chieftains in the Edo State were left in the cold. Anenih, it was said, decided who got what, where and how. Soon, crisis broke out in the fold. Ogbemudia, former two-time governor and former minister, rejected Anenih’s leadership. At a time, the party paraded two parallel executive committees.  Osunbor was even in solidarity with Oshiomole to spite the Leader. In droves, many PDP chieftains, including former state chairman and women leader, dumped the sinking ship for ACN.

    However, Anenih was unperturbed by the decimation of the party in crisis. He is not a warrior that will easily give up a fight. His goal is that PDP, even in its distress, should not fade away in Edo. He is not known to surrender in battle. Suddenly, cracks appeared in the ACN. Some defectors from the PDP, including Eze Iyamu, a priest, ran back. It was evident that Anenih was gathering his forces for battle.  The battle shifted to the House of Assembly. Orbih fired salvos at the governor, saying that his party is no more popular. The governor described the vituperation as the ranting of an ant.

    Now, the parliamentary elections is another opportunity for a supremacy battle. Between Oshiomhole and Anenih, who blinks first?