Tag: Ihedioha

  • Ihedioha names new CPS

    Ihedioha names new CPS

    Former Imo Governor Emeka Ihedioha has appointed Martins Ori as his new Chief Press Secretary (CPS).

    Ori spent almost 10 years at The Sun Newspapers as Assistant Editor, Sports, Assistant Editor, education and Assistant Editor, investigation/features.

    Before then, he had worked as South East bureau chief, Hallmark newspaper.

    Ori transferred his services in 2021 to the News Echo newspaper where he served as Managing Editor.

    He later teamed up with Afam Echi to co-found Oriental Newspaper, a weekly tabloid that circulates in South East and based in Owerri, Imo State.

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    Ihedioha recently dumped the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) after more than two decades of membership with thousands of henchmen and supporters.

    He is yet to formally pitch his tent with any political party.

    Besides consulting with the 2023 presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Peter Obi and the party’s lone Governor Alex Otti of Abia State, Ihedioha ‘s campaign outfit, Rebuild Imo Movement recently announced it was coalescing into the Labour Party.

  • Ihedioha’s fantasy and distortion of history

    Ihedioha’s fantasy and distortion of history

    • By Declan Emelumba

    Sweeping generalisation is one of the dangerous assaults on logic. When a premise is abinitio wrong, no conclusion can make the argument right. And it is a mortal sin to presumptuously claim indispensability when we are mere mortals who can exit the stage in a minute, and the world would move on as if we never existed. For someone, therefore, to condescendingly assume that Imo State can not make progress without a certain Emeka Ihedioha is to dismiss the millions of Imo people, educated, cosmopolitan, intelligent, and wealthy, as morons. That is the highest insult to the sensibilities of the good people of Imo State.

    While everyone is entitled to dream dreams, it crosses to fantasy and even lunacy for the person to borrow the robes of omniscience mixed with indispensability within a crowd that he knows he may be a tiny pebble. And it irritates sensible people when, instead of acknowledging his limitations, he carries on as if he is an ostrich on one obscure island. Anyone unfortunate to read the gibberish entitled, “Emeka Ihedioha: Imo’s last hope opportunity for growth, development,” written by one Kelechi Jeff Eme and published recently in the media, would be stunned that someone seeking the high office of governor would authorize just a toxic publication that ended up exposing his little mindedness and egoistic malady. This foolishness is not entirely surprising because Ihedioha’s bane has been his ridiculous belief that Imo State needs him as the Messiah.

    From the headline alone, the assumption is that without Emeka Ihedioha, Imo would never make progress. Of course, that is a fallacy. Within the body of the essay, it emerged that in their warped logic, the seven months of illegally occupying Douglas House by Ihedioha was the golden era of governance. Again, that is false. The submission that no governor achieved anything in Owerri before Sam Mbakwe emerged as governor was also false. Some of the enduring roads in the capital city today were built by Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu. We should learn not to engage in fiction writing in the name of political campaigns.

    Therefore, it couldn’t have been factually correct even to allude that nothing ever happened in those administrations preceding Mbakwe or after him until the arrival of our “Spiderman and superhero, Emeka Ihedioha.” Life and development went on before Mbakwe. Life and development continued after him, just like life and development have been blissfully going on before and after Ihedioha.

    Now, to the distortion of facts. Firstly, no one expected Ihedioha and his band of cheerleaders to give credit to Governor Hope Uzodimma for his monumental transformation of the state in all sectors; after all, the man punctured his daydreaming of being a governor after he stole a mandate that wasn’t his. Till tomorrow, I blame our system that allowed all those who violated the constitution by declaring Ihedioha governor when he didn’t win the election to walk the streets, still free men. I don’t think it was enough for the Supreme Court to pronounce Uzodimma as the rightful winner without jailing those who engaged in stealing the mandate in the first place. Both the perpetrators and the beneficiaries of the robbery ought to be in jail. If that had happened, none would have had the guts to pollute the environment with their putrefaction of legacies. I still believe that there is a need to erase the period of that illegal occupation by the courts declaring it as not having existed at all.

    The constitution and the electoral act were clear that apart from scoring the highest number of votes in an election, a person cannot be declared a governor except he secures one-quarter of votes in two-thirds of the local government areas in the state. After Emeka Ihedioha used his sister-in-law and colluded with INEC to manufacture the so-called highest number of votes, he met the constitutional requirement of spread in only 12 local government areas and not 18 required by the constitution. Yet a professor of mathematics declared him a winner, and INEC accepted that brazen rape of democracy. If Hope Uzodimma had not fought to reclaim his mandate, Ihedioha would have set a dangerous precedent with that inglorious conduct. The truth is that even in 2015, when Emeka Ihedioha came second after Gov Rochas Okorocha, it was only in his Mbaise enclave that he got the sprinkle of votes in that election.

    Strangely, these same Mbaise people were the first victims of his abuse of power, avarice, and primitive acquisition of wealth and landed property in the seven months he illegally served as governor of Imo State. Did Ihedioha complete one single road in those unfortunate seven months? Of course not. When he was not blaming Rochas for the state of the streets, he was using the rains as an alibi to cover his cluelessness. Yet he dared to suddenly go blind in the face of the road revolution wrought by Hope Uzodimma by grudgingly acknowledging only three roads as the government’s achievement.

    It is essential to remind Ihedioha and his cohorts that within his first 100 days in office, Uzodimma completed nine (9) solid roads, namely;

    1. Oparanozie Street to Edede Street     2. Chhukwuma Nwaoha Relief Market Road,

    3. Assumpta World Bank Road,

    4. Assumpta Roundabout to Concorde Junction,

    5. Dick Tiger – Egbu Junction Road and

    6. Dick Tiger Aladinma Lake Nwaebere Road

    7. Umuaka internal Road in Njaba L.G.A.

    8. Amaigbo – Njaba Road 

    9. Mgbidi – Omuma Road

    As we speak, Uzodimma has 100 solid roads and bridges constructed and commissioned within his first tenure.

    These projects  are verifiable.

    So when a handful of the remaining Ihedioha cronies tepidly talk about his legacies in those illegal seven months, what comes to mind is his vast appetite for self-centeredness. Within seven months, he travelled seven (7) times outside the country. Within seven months, he began the construction of one of the most stately country homes comparable only to Buckingham Palace.

    When his kinsmen accused him of land grabbing, he used state power to intimidate them to silence.

    But their silent prayers led to his eviction from Government House.

    Never in the history of Nigeria had a state governor nursed the imperial taste of Emeka Ihedioha. The official car he ordered for himself was a study in luxury, valued then at over N.2 billion. No president of Nigeria had used such a car because the staggering cost was simply scandalous.

    Luckily, he never used the car because it arrived after he was removed from office.

    Talking of civil servants, did Emeka Ihedioha feel concerned about their welfare? If he did, how come he hired consultants to do their work of preparing a payroll? How come a hefty five hundred million Naira was being paid monthly to the consultants, an amount that could clear pension arrears? How come many pensioners were still owed by the time Uzodimma took over as governor? Indeed, did he pay a single retiree one kobo? What about the civil servants’ offices that snakes and rodents had taken over? Did he work on them?

    He could not have because even the Government House was left desolate. Ihedioha conducted government business in a guest house at Odenigbo. If he had used the same speed he employed in building palaces for himself both in Owerri and his village in renovating the government house, perhaps he would have had one project to show as his so-called legacy. But he left the legacy of imperial inclinations, the legacy of a man who needed power to live like an emperor, a monarch. Nothing more.

    He said he paid attention to youth development by building stadiums in the 27 local government areas. He is angry that Uzodimma didn’t continue from where he stopped. Fair enough that he even acknowledged that government is a continuum. But one can not build anything on nothing. The 27 stadia were on paper, though Ihedioha’s illicit administration had already pulled out the money. Where were they?

    And is it not laughable that Ihedioha’s vision for youth empowerment is to build a stadium in every LGA? What a primitive vision, indeed. Uzodimma has empowered over 40,000 youths by equipping them with digital skills and many others in different other skills. That is what youth empowerment in the 21st century is all about. Assuming he didn’t understand what youth empowerment means, he should be humble enough to acknowledge what Uzodimma has done in that regard. He should also visit every part of Imo State to interview people on what they think of the prosperity agenda of the present administration, which has changed their perception of governance from predatory Ihedioha’s tenure to that of participatory in Uzodimma’s era.

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    Again, the vast agricultural project he claimed remains only in his imagination. There is no evidence that his sordid administration ever conceived such vision.

    Therefore, it is not enough to criticize a performing governor like Senator Hope Uzodimma. You have to develop functional and acceptable alternatives to what he has done. Realistically, you must know that he has a mileage, an unbeaten record that even blind people can feel and believe. Political opposition is not mere rhetoric of seeking to govern a state based on falsehood and fantasy.

    The writer claimed Ihedioha has integrity. I don’t know whether the people of Ngor Okpala Local Government Area, whom he shortchanged for the House of Representatives seat for three tenures, would agree to that assertion. For those not familiar with what happened, check out the facts. The two local government areas comprising the Aboh Mbaise/Ngor Okpala federal constituency agreed on the seat rotation. Ngor Okpala took the first shot with Greg Egu. After his tenure, Egu declined to re-contest in honour of that agreement. Then Aboh Mbaise took its turn under Ihedioha. After the first tenure, he reneged on the deal. The records are there of how Ihedioha became a monkey that seized the cup he was served water with.

    Then, when he started running for governorship, the same scenario repeated itself. He became a serial manipulator of the PDP primaries in 2015 and 2019. It was only last year, when they succeeded in pushing him aside, that he started sulking like a child denied his candy. Most PDP members in Imo State have described his exit from the party as a good riddance to bad rubbish. The tsunami he predicted never came around. That is a foretaste of what awaits him should he try to contest again.

    Meanwhile, while he has the constitutional right to run for office as many times as he wishes, he should refrain from blackmail and character assassination. He should stop presenting himself as a god or messiah who, without him, Imo State, can not be saved. Long after he would have disappeared from the political firmament, Imo would continue to flourish. The charismatic and purposeful leadership of Governor Hope Uzodimma has already assured that. Ihedioha and his cohorts dreamers should wake up to the reality on the the ground.

    • Emelumba is the commissioner for information, public orientation, and strategy, Imo State

  • Ihedioha quits PDP, writes party leaders

    Ihedioha quits PDP, writes party leaders

    • Southeast zonal publicity secretary dumps party

    A former House of Representatives Deputy Speaker Emeka Ihedioha has resigned his membership of main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    In a letter, dated April 23 and delivered to the party’s national headquarters in Abuja, Ihedioha, along-time ally of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, said his decision was the right course of action.

    Ihedioha, who was Imo State governor between 2019 and 2020, said the PDP had failed to live up to expectation as an opposition party.

    The letter, addressed to his ward chairman at Mbutu in Aboh-Mbaise Local Government Area of Imo State and copied to the PDP National Chairman, the Chairman of the party’s Board of Trustees (BoT) and the party’s Chairman in Imo State, was titled: “Resignation from the Peoples Democratic Party.”

    It reads: “Since 1998, I have contributed my quota to the development and transformation of the PDP as one of the founding members.

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    “All these years, I have taken pride in the fact that the PDP is a party that will always look inward for internal reforms and provide credible leadership for the people, whether in power or outside power.

    “I have had the benefit of serving and benefitting from the party at various levels. Regrettably, in recent times, the party has taken on a path that is at variance with my personal beliefs.

    “Despite my attempt to offer counsel, the party is, sadly, no longer able to carry out internal reforms, enforce its own rules or offer credible opposition to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “It is in the light of the foregoing that I am compelled to offer my resignation from the PDP, effective immediately.

    “While this decision was difficult to take, I, however, believe that it is the right one.

    “Despite this resignation, I will always be available to offer my services towards the deepening of democracy and good governance in Nigeria.”

    Also, Ihedioha’s former Chief of Staff ehen he was Imo State governor, Chris Okewulonu, has tendered his resignation to the PDP Chairman at his Avutu Ward in Obowo Local Government Area of Imo State. 

    Also yesterday, the party’s Zonal Publicity Secretary in the Southeast, Augustine Elochukwu Okeke, circulated copies of his exit letter.

    Copies of Okeke’s one-paragraph letter were sent to the PDP National Vice Chairman (Southeast); Imo State PDP chairman and the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Debo Ologunagba.

    It reads: “Due to personal reasons, I hereby resign from office as the Zonal Publicity Secretary of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), South East Zone. Do convey my warm felicitations to the members of the Zonal Working Committee.”

  • UPDATED: Ex-Imo Gov Ihedioha, SSG Okwulonu resign from PDP

    UPDATED: Ex-Imo Gov Ihedioha, SSG Okwulonu resign from PDP

    Former Imo Governor Emeka Ihedioha has announced resignation from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    In a resignation letter addressed to the PDP chairman in Mbutu Ward, Aboh Mbaise Local Government Area, Ihedioha cited personal beliefs and the party’s departure from its core principles as reasons for his decision.

    Having been a member of the party since its inception in 1998, Ihedioha emphasised his significant contributions to the party’s growth and evolution over the years. 

    He expressed dismay at recent developments within the PDP, stating that it has strayed from its foundational values.

    He lamented the party’s inability to enact internal reforms, uphold its regulations and effectively oppose the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). 

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    He highlighted concerns over the party’s trajectory, expressing disappointment that despite his efforts to provide guidance, the PDP has failed to uphold its integrity and offer credible opposition.

    According to him: “Regrettably, in recent times, the party has taken on a path that is at variance with my personal beliefs. Despite my attempt to offer counsel, the party is, sadly, no longer able to carry out internal reforms, enforce its own rules or offer credible opposition to the ruling All Progressives Congress.”

    A former Secretary to the Government of Imo State (SGI) under Ihedioha,  Chris Okewulonu also tendered resignation to PDP chairman of Avutu ward in Obowo Local Government Area. 

    He said he took the hard decision after due consultations with his family, supporters and political friends. 

    “My decision has not been lightly arrived at,  but was rather based on the outcome of due consultations with my family,  supporters and political friends,” he said.

    He served as the SSG from June 3, 2019, to January 15, 2020. He was also Commissioner for works and Housing and Information during Ohakim administration. 

  • BREAKING: Former Imo governor Ihedioha quits PDP

    BREAKING: Former Imo governor Ihedioha quits PDP

    A former governor of Imo state, Emeka Ihedioha on Tuesday, April 23, resigned from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Ihedioha’s exit from the party may not be unconnected with the extended deliberations held by the national leadership of the last week which failed to resolve the party’s internal conflicts.

    In a letter dated April 23, and delivered to the PDP headquarters on Tuesday, Ihedioha, a long-time ally of former vice president Atiku Abubakar who was also a deputy speaker of the House of Representatives, pointed out that he has no doubt whatsoever that his decision to quit PDP is the right course of action.

    The letter addressed to his ward chairman in Mbutu, Aboh-Mbaise LGA, and copied to the national chairman of PDP, chairman of the party’s Board of Trustees, and PDP chairman in Imo state, was simply titled: “Resignation from the Peoples Democratic Party”.

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    The letter read: “Since 1998, I have contributed my quota to the development and transformation of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as one of the founding members.

    “All these years, I have taken pride in the fact that the PDP is a party that will always look inward for internal reforms and provide credible leadership for the people, whether in power or outside power.

    “I have had the benefit of serving and benefitting from the party at various levels. Regrettably, in recent times, the party has taken on a path that is at variance with my personal beliefs.

    “Despite my attempt to offer counsel, the party is, sadly no longer able to carry out internal reforms, enforce its own rules or offer credible opposition to the ruling All Progressives Congress.

    “It is in the light of the foregoing, that I am compelled to offer my resignation from the Peoples Democratic Party effective immediately. While this decision was difficult to take, I, however, believe that it is the right one.

    “Despite this resignation, I will always be available to offer my services towards the deepening of democracy and good governance in Nigeria,” Rt. Hon Emeka Ihedioha, a founding member of the PDP stated in his letter.

  • BREAKING: Supreme Court dismisses Ihedioha’s suit against Uzodimma

    BREAKING: Supreme Court dismisses Ihedioha’s suit against Uzodimma

    The Supreme Court has dismissed an application by Emeka Ihedioha of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) seeking to be issued a certificate of return as the rightful governor of Imo state.

    In a ruling read by Justice Tijjani Abubakar on Tuesday, December 5, the apex court held that Ihedioha’s application lacked merit and was unnecessary and vexatious.

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    The court also awarded N40 million in costs against Ihedioha’s lawyer, Mike Ozekhome, for bringing the matter before the court.

    The ruling effectively upholds the Supreme Court judgement of January 14, 2020, which nullified Ihedioha’s election and declared Hope Uzodinma of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as the governor of Imo state.

    Details shortly…

  • Ihedioha: I have done my best in 100 days

    Imo State Governor Emeka Ihedioha reiterated his commitment to repositioning the state.

    In his address at an event to mark his 100 days in Owerri, the state capital, the governor said he was on course.

    He said the Imo Growth and Strategic Development Agenda plan (G-SDP), a two stage development horizon of a five year economic blueprint conceived by the  Transition Technical Commitee, provided the roadmap for the economic growth and development of the state.

    The governor promised pursue focus on an economic growth and Strategic human capital development, agriculture and food security, infrastructure, industrialisation and job creation as well as security and environment.

    Ihedioha said within 100 days in office, “the State Internal Generated Revenue, IGR, increased from all time low of about 300m in July to 600m in August.

    He added: “This was as a result of transparency and accountability in the governance process with the signing into law, Executive Order 005 known as Treasury Single Account which consolidated all government revenues  under one account.”

    “Imo State is now on track to join open Governance partnership which now qualifies it for performance based grants of the World Bank and other multinational development institutions.”

    Ihedioha said he has paid workers salaries in the State, the backlog of local goverment workers and recalled  unjustly suspended directors, reversed some undeserved promotions and sponsored officers for capacity building programmes.

  • Ihedioha to Okorocha: I am not on vendetta mission

    Imo State Governor Emeka Ihedioha has advised his predecessor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha,  not to see the Judicial Panel of Inquiry to probe land transactions in the state as an attempt to witch hunt him.

    He said the former governor was making petty allegations.

    The governor said he has deliberately avoided the ploy of the former governor to drag his administration into controversy.

    Ihedioha reminded his predecessor that the people had already evaluated his performance, adding that he has a case to answer.

    However, he maintained that he has no intention to witch hunt the former governor.

    Ihedioha explained that the probe was setup, following complaints, petitions and lamentations by indigenes of the state.

    The governor wondered why Okorocha arrived at the unfounded allegations that the panel was set-up to witch hunt.

    He said he could not understand why there was panic in the camp of the former governor when the panel was yet to be inaugurated.

    Ihedioha said Okorocha regresed into the media war to distract his administration and derail his programmes.

    The governor maintain that he was not on a vendetta mission against his predecessor.

    Ihedioha said Okorocah was out of tune with reality, urging him to reflect on his past mistakes.

    The governor  said investors and donor agencies are not looking at the direction of Imo State, following the change of guard.

    He promised to fulfil his campaign promises and ensure that the mistakes committed by his predecessor are not repeated. Ihedioha urged the people to support his administration in its bid to develop the state.

    He said: “My administration is on course and cannot be distracted or derailed by mindless and unfounded allegations, which of course, are poorly rehearsed and diversionary stunts intended to pull wool over the eyes of Imo people and Nigerians.

    “I will subject to judicious scrutiny every action that violated the people and the extant laws of the land. But, the innocent has nothing to fear.

  • ‘Ihedioha is witch-hunting APC’

    The Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Imo State, Daniel Nwafor, has accused the state government of witch-hunting and vendetta.

    He said the few actions taken by Governor Emeka Ihedioha have proved that he was not prepared for governance.

    He said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led administration does not know how to fulfil its campaign promises.

    Nwafor said: “All we have seen in the last two months is vindictiveness and a desperate attempt to demonise the previous administration. It has become obvious that they are not there for the people. Government is a continuous process. they should sustain the achievements of the previous government. trying to erase the legacies of the former administration does not help in anyway.

    “The PDP administration is confused. what they are doing is the reverse of their campaign promises. Imo is becoming unsafe, workers are complaining, people are scared to invest in the state, the interim government should get to work, while we await the outcome of the court.

    “This is nearly hundred days in office and there is nothing to point at, except maligning and pursuing after former governor Rochas Okorocha”.

    But, the PDP Chairman, Charles Ezekwem, said the previous administration destroyed every sector of the economy.

    He said Ihedioha inherited a devastated state, adding that it can only take a man of his experience and prudence to rebuild the ruins.

    Ezekwem said: “the Okorocha administration ruined all sectors of the state, leaving it broke and in a terrible shape. But, the governor is not relenting; he has taken up the enormous challenge of rebuilding the state. If you drive around the state, you will observe that the entire roads are in terrible shape. The state was raped and left broke. The eight years of the APC government were the worst in the history of the state and nothing close to that will ever happen to our state.

    He added: “It might shock you to know that the governor is still operating from a small apartment because the government house is in total ruins.”

    The administration in the last two and half months has focused on the recovery of ‘stolen’ government property and demolition of structures.

    One of the structures was the Akachi Tower, said to be built at a whooping N700 million, according to contract papers released by the government.

    The state government has also been preoccupied with the removal of the iron works on the streets of Owerri, the state capital.

  • Okorocha to Ihedioha: Don’t take Imo backward

    Former Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha has advised his successor, Emeka Ihedioha, to avoid policies that will take the state backward.

    Okorocha urged him to borrow a leaf from his Oyo State counterpart, Seyi Makinde, and desist from attacking his legacies, with the sole aim of getting accolades from his party members.

    The former governor, who was reacting to the setting up of a Judicial Panel of Inquiry to review land acquisition and allocation between 2006 and 2019, described it as another ploy to malign him.

    A statement by his Media Adviser, Mr. Sam Onwuemeodo, said the decision was in bad faith.

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    He said: “Looking at the members of the panel, who are card-carrying members of the PDP, and their terms of reference, one would have no other option than to conclude that the governor has his target or mission, which is to continue his vendetta against the past APC government in the state and the man who headed it, Senator Rochas Okorocha.

    “Governor Ihedioha has set up more than 14 committees and panels since he became governor and each of the committees or panels has one or two specific assignments to carry out and all against the APC government, which Senator Okorocha had led. For instance, the Prof. Jude Njoku’s education committee took no other action than to take over the PPP-oriented Eastern Palm University and also scrapped the six new Universities, four new Polytechnics and three new Colleges of Education built by Okorocha”.

    Okorocha added: “The panel on infrastructure made no other recommendation than to give the governor the licence to demolish some of the prime projects of the former governor like the flyovers, tunnels and waterfalls.”