Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha has said his election rescued the state and its people from oppression.
Okorocha spoke at the Freedom Square in Owerri, during the Freedom Day celebration, at the weekend. He maintained that his election was a turning point in the political history of the state, saying he shunned godfathers to defeat an incumbent governor.
He said: “Before I was elected governor, Imo State was under spiritual and financial bondage. The state was dedicated to, and ruled by deities, and the people were in captivity, but my victory rescued the state and her people from all forms of oppression.
“I never benefitted from the politics of godfatherism. When I ran in 2011, I was literally rejected in the political equation. No single politician of note stood with me; this was perhaps the only election in the history of Nigeria that was won through the support of the ordinary people, and not by the support of political elites, security agencies and money bags.
“My victory came from God and the people, and that is why I have been saddled with the responsibility of ensuring that I fulfill that which I promised my God – to make life better for the ordinary man and release them from captivity.
“Today, I remain grateful to all Imolites, especially those seen as the nobodies, because they are the reason I became the governor. I promise that I will continue to do all within my powers to make Imo State great, and lift it higher as a sign of appreciation for the support I have received from the masses. I remain eternally grateful to the people.
“I try to use this Freedom Square to dramatise what I saw in Imo when I came in. The statue demonstrates a man who has endured untold hardship, ignorance, lack, systematic poverty, living in a society that is morally bankrupt; that was the situation when I came. People were about to give up on politicians and leadership because of the sufferings and deceits, but a hand of help came; this is what we are celebrating today as rescue mission.”
Tag: Imo
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Okorocha: my election freed Imo
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Okorocha: my election freed Imo
Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha has said his election rescued the state and its people from oppression.
Okorocha spoke at the Freedom Square in Owerri, during the Freedom Day celebration, at the weekend. He maintained that his election was a turning point in the political history of the state, saying he defied the rejection of godfathers to defeat an incumbent governor.
He said: “Before I was elected governor, Imo State was under spiritual and financial bondage. The state was dedicated to, and ruled by deities, and the people were in captivity, but my victory rescued the state and her people from all forms of oppression.
“I never benefitted from the politics of godfatherism. When I ran in 2011, I was literally rejected in the political equation. No single politician of note stood with me; this was perhaps the only election in the history of Nigeria that was won through the support of the ordinary people, and not by the support of political elites, security agencies and money bags.
“My victory came from God and the people, and that is why I have been saddled with the responsibility of ensuring that I fulfill that which I promised my God – to make life better for the ordinary man and release them from captivity.
“Today, I remain grateful to all Imolites, especially those seen as the nobodies, because they are the reason I became the governor. I promise that I will continue to do all within my powers to make Imo State great, and lift it higher as a sign of appreciation for the support I have received from the masses. I remain eternally grateful to the people.
“I try to use this Freedom Square to dramatise what I saw in Imo when I came in. The statue demonstrates a man who has endured untold hardship, ignorance, lack, systematic poverty, living in a society that is morally bankrupt; that was the situation when I came. People were about to give up on politicians and leadership because of the sufferings and deceits, but a hand of help came; this is what we are celebrating today as rescue mission.”
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A memorable gift in Imo
Workers’ Day is largely boring. It is an annual ritual of marches, rallies and speeches, and then workers return to their beats to bemoan their fate afresh. In Imo State, this year’s edition was a break from the norm. There was something to cheer about. The state governor Rochas Okorocha lifted a six-year embargo on promotion in the state.
The workers, who defied the heavy downpour to attend the ceremony at the Heroes Square, broke into wild jubilation on hearing the announcement. Majority of them were overdue for promotion but were restricted by the embargo that was placed on promotion since 2011.
Okorocha who lauded the mutual relationship between the leadership of workers’ union and his administration, described the gesture as an appreciation of the contribution of the workers and a way of stimulating the state workforce.
Speaking to the ecstatic crowd, Governor Okorocha assured that his administration will lift the ban on promotion as soon as the sanitisation exercise going on in the system was completed, adding that the government would like to know the status of those to benefit from the promotion exercise. He urged the workers to always show appreciation for what his administration has done for them since 2011 when he came on board.
He reminded the workers that they are the greatest beneficiaries of the free education programme in the state because there is no more pressure on them or on their salaries for the payment of school fees of their children and wards especially when the free education policy is from primary to tertiary institutions.
He also told the workers that he was the first to pay them N20,000 minimum wage against the approved N18,000 minimum wage and also paid them wardrobe allowance, which has seen them today appearing in a special dress code, and is also building ICT centres at the state secretariat and local government headquarters to enable them become computer literate.
The governor informed the workers that the government has concluded arrangement to recruit more than 3000 fresh graduates who are Computer literate into the Civil Service to make the System vibrant, adding that more than ninety percent of the workers are not Computer literate.
He assured that he would continue to dialogue with the leaders of the Labour Union in the State to ensure that the harmonious relationship his government enjoys with workers continues, adding that he would remain committed to the welfare of the workers in the State.
Meanwhile the Deputy Governor of the State, Eze Madumere in his felicitation message, hailed the workers for their commitment and resilience towards tackling the daunting challenges facing the country.
Madumere emphasized the importance of the roles of the workers in nation building, describing them as the real heroes.
He particularly commended Imo Workers for their cooperation and strategic partnership with the present rescue Mission Government led by Owelle Rochas Okorocha to building an Imo of State of collective dream.
The Deputy Governor commended the leadership of Labour for their understanding and for embracing best practices while negotiating for welfare of its members by putting the survival of the State and the country first. He also commended the State Governor over “his untiring effort to ensure that issues concerning the welfare of the workers are always on the priority list and his readiness to always listen to their heat beats whenever they come knocking.
He reminded the workers of importance of making the best out of the present Back to Farm Policy of the Government, which he said will not only “launch them into financial stability but will make them great contributors in the effort to re-launch Nigeria to its supposed position in the comity of nations.”
In his speech at the event, the state chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Comrade Austin Chilakpa, commended the governor for lifting the embargo, stating that it will reawaken the spirit of hard work, which he noted can only be guaranteed through a vibrant reward system.
He called for 100 per cent review of the agreement the Labour leaders had with the state government some time ago over the payment of salaries, stating that the Labour leaders would continue to demand that, until it is done.” -
Ohanaeze applauds FG on agric initiatives
The President of Ohaneze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo, has applauded the agricultural initiatives of the Federal Government saying they are yielding positive results in Igbo speaking states.
Ohanaeze Ndigbo is the apex socio-cultural organisation of Igbo speaking states in Nigeria.
Addressing newsmen in Enugu on Wednesday, Nwodo contended that with the implementation of the initiatives, the federal government had taken the best move to take the people out of recession.
He said that the various agricultural schemes embarked by the government through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) were a huge success.
The Ohanaeze chieftain said that the CBN governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele, should be commended for the intervention of the apex bank in various empowerment programmes aimed at stimulating the economy.
Nwodo said: “we want to use this opportunity to salute the governor of the Central Bank.
“This gentleman has had one of the most difficult challenges that have faced any governor of the CBN.
“What he has done lately in terms of fighting the value of the naira is most commendable.
“His programmes at assisting agriculture have impacted positively on the sector.
“It is working in Imo, Ebonyi, Abia, Anambra and it is beginning to work in Enugu state and we are immensely grateful to him.
“We encourage him to continue to work in this way to ensure that the ordinary people in Nigeria can bounce back as this recession continues to recede in its calamitously effect on our standard of living.”
Nwodo said that the achievements of the government in the petroleum sector should not be overlooked as the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) had been reinvigorated.
He said that the achievements recorded in the NNPC during the tenure of Dr Ibe Kachikwu as Minister of State for Petroleum and Managing Director were outstanding.
“Since the NNPC was incorporated, no minister or managing director has ever put the corporation on public portal.
“But by the click of the mouse, when our son was there, you could tell how much came into NNPC every day and how much was spent.
“For the first time, petroleum subsidy was removed without the economy collapsing,” he said.
The Ohaneze president appealed to the Federal Government to intervene and rehabilitate the Enugu/Port Harcourt expressway which he described as “death trap.’’
“While we commend the minister of Power, Works and Housing for the work that has started on the Enugu/Onitsha road, we want to draw his attention to the road between Enugu and Port Harcourt.
“The road is a death trap. It is tortuous and God knows how long it will take to rehabilitate the road especially with all the stops by security men,” he said.
Nwodo expressed concern that the entire South-East seemed to be under security siege by officers of the armed forces, who he alleged, extort money openly from innocent citizens and road users.
He said that complaints by the organisation against the brazen impunity of the security agencies on the roads across the zone had remained unattended to.
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Imo community where pregnant girls are BANISHED for life
Maidens must walk to the market with bare breasts for initiation into womanhood
Young female indigenes protest practice, say it’s initiation into marine kingdo
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Osu (caste system) is an ancient Igbo traditional practice that is well known within and outside the country but often condemned because of its perceived infringement on the fundamental rights of the affected people. But not many people are aware of Ikwe-ezi, a traditional festival in Mgbidi area of Imo State, which requires young girls to maintain a high level of morality before they perform the rites which are compulsory for every female indigene of the area. From the stone-age when the practice began till date, hordes of young girls who failed to keep to the rules of the tradition were said to have been publicly humiliated and banished from the community. INNOCENT DURU reports.
THIS, obviously, is a season of celebration and anxiety for many families in Mgbidi, the headquarters of Oru Local Government Area, Imo State. It is a joyous moment for the entire community because it is the period when the people celebrate the Ikwe-ezi, a ceremony that is akin to what is commonly known as rite of passage. It is a huge celebration that draws indigenes of the community in other parts of the country and beyond home to take part, just the way many Igbo people travel home during the Yuletide season.
The Ikwe-ezi is, however, a period of anxiety for many families whose daughters are ripe for the ceremony, because they have seen and heard of how many families in the land have had their daughters publicly embarrassed and even banished from the community for not being faithful to the rules of the tradition. The Nation gathered that the thought of the grave consequence sends shivers down the spines of parents whose daughters are old enough to take part in the ceremony.
The Principal Palace Secretary to the traditional ruler, Chief Festus Orji Achonu, who spoke with our correspondent, said: “When a girl has attained maturity but has not performed the rites, her parents must guard her jealously to prevent her from becoming pregnant. If she becomes pregnant before performing the rites, she will be banished from Mgbidi and certain cleansing rites will be done for the family she comes from. The banished girl will never step into the community again. If for any reason she enters the community, the male children in the family will have to perform some cleansing rites in order not to attract the wrath of the gods of the land.”
Some other respondents said the girl in question risks being lynched if she steps into the community after she has been banished.
“When a girl has been banished from the community, on no account must she return. She can pass through the land in a vehicle, but she must not step on the soil. If she attempts it, she will be lynched and the family will pay dearly for it,“ a respondent said.
Giving background information about the ceremony, Chief Achonu said: “Ikwe-ezi is a unique culture in Mgbidi which has not been affected by civilisation or Christianity. A young girl must have reached maturity age to qualify for participation. If you have not reached the age, you are not qualified to do it. It is a sort of check and balance on our young girls. It begins from January and ends in June annually.
“The practice started from time immemorial with the daughter of a peasant. She was so beautiful that people became jealous of her. She eventually became pregnant, making the elders to gather and declare the development as a taboo. They consequently said she should be banished from the town. The helpless, poor father cried and swore that nothing would ever put an end to the practice in the land. That is why nothing has been able to stop this since then.
“Every girl that performs the tradition will go to a river we call Nmiri nwata oma (water of a beautiful child) with a small yam that is thrown inside the shrine of the goddess of the river called Obana. That is the tradition we got from our forefathers. When she does this, it means she has done the Ikwe-ezi ceremony, and that signifies that she is now pure.
“Every girl going through the rites makes use of large quantities of coconut and fish which she distributes to the guests that come to celebrate with her. There are two nights that they will come and perform the ceremony. The first is done on the Orie market day called Ikpoba ali udu ego. The second ceremony is done on Eke market day and it is called ibu oyo. On these two days, a coconut and a fish is given by the celebrant to as many people as come to congratulate her. In appreciation, you can give her money.
“The Ikwe-ezi ceremony starts after a ceremony we call Chioha here in Mgbidi. Every parent whose daughter is ready will fire two gunshots on Eke day to inform the entire community that their child is ready for the ceremony. On the second day, which is Orie, they will perform the ikpoba ali udu ego. They will come to congratulate the family and take part in the ceremony.
“There would be traditional folk music for the celebrant to dance to on these two days. On those days, the celebrant gets a lot of gifts. The ceremony lasts for two weeks during which she will not do anything. For a period of time, the celebrant will be in a hut grinding local chalk that she would rub on her body. During this period, they would be cooking delicious meals for her to eat.
“On the final day, she would go to Eke Mgbidi Market to do izu ahia ezi, tying only wrapper and leaving their breasts open to go to the market. They will go round the market and people will see her that she did it without any blemish. If she is pregnant before entering the fat room, on the day she goes to the market with her breasts open, some old women will notice it and drive her out of the market. She would then be banished from the community.”
Concerned parents
The fear of falling victim of the unpleasant picture painted by Chief Achonu and other respondents was apparent when our correspondent visited the community. A mother, who gave her name simply as Elizabeth, said she had been seriously troubled since last year when her daughter started seeing her menstrual period. She said she had to keep a close watch on her to prevent her from getting into sexual relationships that could lead to pregnancy.
Elizabeth said: “I have never kept a close watch on my daughter the way I have been doing since she started seeing her menstrual cycle late last year. I developed goose pimples the very day she told me that she had seen her period. Frightened, I exclaimed, ‘isi gini’ (what did you just say)? Have you been seeing any man?
“Confused, she said, ‘Mummy, what do you mean? I see men everywhere.’
“Mba (no)! I mean has any man ever touched you?
“She looked more confused and said yes. Many males touch me now.
“At that point, I said you seem not to understand. Has any man made love to you before?
“She looked astounded as I bombarded her with unusual questions that thoroughly embarrassed the young girl.
“I have never stopped asking the same question every day, no matter how embarrassed she feels. I will not rest until she has performed the ceremony and come out clean. The devil is always bringing temptations to the girls when they are approaching the time, just to humiliate them and their families. I pray that, that will never be my portion. During our time, there was no need for such because you could be naked and no man would touch you. But now, a baby that wears diaper is not spared by sexual perverts.”
If Elizabeth was worried because of her only girl, Ada has more reasons to be worried as a good number of her children are females.
She said: “I constantly suffer serious headache policing my daughters so that they don’t have anything to do with men, especially before they perform the ceremony. As a parent, I cherish and preach morality to my children. But the Ikwe-ezi ceremony requires one to be more than just a morality preacher.
“I follow my daughters, especially the matured ones, bumper to bumper, because any slight mistake may lead to a lifetime regret. If I see any male around them, you will see me barking like a mad dog. If they go to school and have not returned at the time they are supposed to, my heart will be up.
“At times, I kneel to beg my daughters to keep themselves pure. I would take time to narrate the consequence of not doing so and ask them if they would want to be banished to an unknown place where they would not see me again. It is tasking, especially for mothers, because if anything goes wrong, it is the women that would be at the receiving end.”
Equally worried is Nneamaka, who is greatly haunted by stories of girls that have been banished. The fair-complexioned woman said apart from hearing that people were banished, she had seen it happen. The experience, according to her, reverberates in her memory, especially now that one of her daughters is getting ready to perform the rite.
She said: “I enjoyed the ceremony before now and had no reason to be scared because I hadn’t any child old enough to take part in it. I am feeling the heat now that my child is ready for it. I am tensed up because I don’t want any unpalatable story. It could be entertaining to watch another woman’s child banished, but one would never pray to be a victim.
“I know of a woman whose child was banished, and I can tell you that her life has never been the same since then. I don’t want to experience that, and that is why I would not sleep or slumber until my daughter has scaled the hurdle.
“The shame and stigmatisation that come with one’s daughter being banished is too much. When a girl goes to the market half naked, some old women will conduct a check on her to see if she has violated the rules. If she has, they will make her sit down and paint her with charcoal. After that, she will be banished. As they are sending her out of the town, some people will be flogging her, others will be spitting on her, while some others will use brooms to sweep her feet away as she leaves. Immediately they drive her out, you will see men from other communities coming to take her as a wife without paying any bride price to the family.
“There are so many of them in places like Izombe, Otulu and and neighbouring communities. When a young girl is taken away like that, anything can happen to her. She can be maltreated, used for rituals or any other terrible thing. I will not live for another 24 hours if such fate befalls my daughter. That is why I am doing everything possible to monitor them.”
Young girls kick
Some young girls who spoke with our correspondent expressed reservations with the practice, which they said is a subtle way of initiating them into occultism.
One of them, who identified herself simply as Amarachi, said: “I have not done it because it is against my religious belief. I don’t need to do the ceremony to live a chaste life. What is my connection with the lady from which the problem began and why would I have to go to the river to dip my leg into the water and also drop yam and fowl in the shrine? It is nothing but an initiation and I will never take part in it.”
For Onyinye, the practice has outlived its usefulness. She said: “Of what relevance is the ceremony in the modern time? I wonder why our people are holding on to the practice when many other communities have long jettisoned such primitive practices.
“Some of my friends and I have vowed that we would not take part in it. There are some men of God that are also kicking against it. They have been organising prayers for young girls like us to break the curses and other evils attached to performing or not performing the ceremony. We say no to barbaric traditional practices that humiliate the female folk. All you have are cultural practices about females. Why are there none for males?”
Different strokes for different folks
It was, however, a different story with some people who had undergone the rite. Some of them said they actually relished the occasion and wish they could do it all over.
Franca Ekwueme, who was filled with joy when our correspondent asked her about the practice, said: “This is a big festival here in Mgbidi. It is done in the Christmas period. I did mine and I was very happy about it. I feel like doing it again because it is a thing of pride.
“It is always fun because many people will come and celebrate with you. When you are in the hut grinding the local chalk that you rub on your body, your skin will be glowing and you will come out looking robust. If you do it without any blemish, your parents are proud of you for not bringing them shame.
“If you don’t perform the ceremony, nobody will marry you because you will be seen as a cursed person. Many people have been banished for not keeping to the rules of the rites.
“When going to the river, you will go with a yam and a fowl. When you get to the river, you will put your toes in the river. There are some changes that will happen to the river if you are not pure. After dipping your toes in the river, you will take the fowl and fling it across your neck three times and throw the yam at a designated place.”
Franca also shared the shocking fate that befell a girl who performed the rites while she was pregnant. She said: “There are grave consequences for those that succeed in doing it while they are pregnant. I know of somebody who succeeded in doing it while she was pregnant. But when she later got married, the husband developed mental challenges. She later remarried and stayed for a very long time before she got pregnant again.
“When it was time for her to give birth, it was a bunch of hair attachment that came out of her instead of a baby. She died and later on, the husband died too.
“It is better for one to keep herself pure and honourably observe the rites instead of trying to be smart and ending up in shame and lifetime regrets. The tradition is not treated with levity by our people. Even if you are resident in other states or outside the country, when the time comes, you must come and do it. Once the time to do it is announced, you will see many parents rushing back home with their qualified daughters from different parts of the country and beyond to observe the rites. Once a girl is banished, she would not be allowed to come back to the community again.”
Another lover of the practice, Ngozi Emmanuel, says she wants her children to observe it without leaving out any aspect.
She said: “I did full Ikwe-ezi and I will gladly want my children to do same. I enjoyed it so much because it was one moment in my life that people celebrated with me. There was no reason for me to be shy for leaving my breasts open. It was a thing of pride to show that you are pure and that your breasts are standing firmly.
“When you are walking from your house to the market, your breasts will be bouncing in confirmation of your purity. I wish I could do it all over again. The distance you will trek could be far or short. It all depends on the distance from your house to the market. It is always fun.”
Ngozi noted that there had always been attempts by Christians to put an end to the practice but the efforts always failed.
“There was a time a Catholic priest tried to abolish it, but before you know it, many people started dying or having mental challenges. It later became a legal issue because the custodians of the tradition didn’t want it abolished. The priest eventually left the community,” she recalled.
For the men, a piece of entertainment
It is, however, not only the females that enjoy the ceremony. Chats with some males showed that it serves as a piece of entertainment for them too.
One of the men who gave his name as Uzoma said: “We eagerly look forward to the ceremony. It entertains us very well as it gives you the opportunity of seeing maidens in their natural state. Apart from that, it gives us the opportunity of eating free coconut and fish provided by the celebrants. We don’t joke with the ceremony here. There was a pastor that vowed that he would not do it for his children. But the mother who knows the implication secretly did it for them.”
Enumerating the benefits of the ceremony to the community, Chief Achonu said the elders had modified the ceremony to some extent.
According to him: “The benefit is that it is a sort of checks and balances for our young girls. Anyone that has not performed it must be very careful to avoid the grave consequences. Nobody will like herself or her family members to be sent out of the community. That is why they need to be very careful so that such a nasty story does not come up. Many people have been banished.
“The modification we have done is that they don’t go to the market anymore leaving their breasts open. Some people don’t even go to the market again. The ceremony can even be performed now by proxy, especially for those who are abroad, as long as the person is pure.
“Those who fail the test are forever banished and will never step into the community again. If for any reason she enters the community, the male members of the family will be affected. They will have to perform the cleansing again to be free from attracting the wrath of the gods of the land.”
His assertion was, however, denied by some of the community members who claimed that some groups still go to the market with their breasts totally open.
“It is not true that no one goes half naked to the market anymore. Some groups, especially those who are devotees of the water goddess, still do it. There was a family that did that recently and we all saw it,” a community member said.
Knocks for practice
The practice, like the Osu (caste system), has also attracted severe condemnation from religious leaders and gender activists. In a chat with our correspondent, the General Overseer of Living Souls Pentecostal Ministry, in Mgbidi, Bishop Paul Chukwu, said he does not support the Ikwe -ezi ceremony because “it causes the girls to be messed up.”
The cleric, who did not hide his disdain for the practice, said: “They are always asked to go to the river to place their legs there and perform some rituals. They will strip themselves naked along the road and do all sorts of things in the public glare. After the whole exercise, the young girls would be told to go and have the freedom to fornicate. It is hard to bring the indigenes of this place into Pentecostal churches.
“I have been speaking to the custodians of the tradition on the need to abolish it, but they are tightly holding on to it. At times, when you mention it to them, they will be harassing you. When you dare say anything that is against the practice, they will tell you it is a no-go area.”
He dismissed the claims that the ceremony attracts a lot of benefits to the community, saying: “Forget their argument that the practice is aimed at making the girls to keep their virginity. We are here seeing everything that is happening. All the people that have gone through the ritual that I know of become promiscuous after doing it. Look around and you will see that this particular city is filled with touts and prostitutes even in residential buildings.
“The name of the community is one of its undoing. Mgbidi means barrier, and everywhere you go and say that you are from Mgbidi, the next thing people will do is to scream. I have seen many girls that were banished because they became pregnant before going through the ritual. It is an abomination for anybody to banish fellow human beings. Did God ask us to kill or destroy another person? There are many things that I have seen here that are reprehensible.”
On her part, the Executive Director of Project Alert, a non-governmental organisation based in Lagos, Dr Josephine Effah Chukwuma, said: “It is a discriminatory practice and very much out of line with the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. It is discriminatory because they do not banish the boys/men who impregnate them. Did the young girls get pregnant on their own? Why do we keep holding on to cultural practices that are harmful and discriminatory to women and girls?
In her remark, the Executive Director, Centre for Children’s Health Education, Orientation and Protection (CEE-HOPE), Betty Abah, said: “My view of it is that this is a cultural thing and cultures, traditions and norms should have a place in our society. That is what gives colour, candour and character to a society or a micro-society in this instance. We can’t throw the baby away with the bath water.
“I suspect that this is a sort of rite of passage or coming of age ceremony, which applies in many indigenous societies with the various rites and ceremonies. What we should examine is the crude aspect of it so as to do away with it. And typically, as I can glean from this, the odds are against the womenfolk. First, does she really have to go half-naked in this age? To prove what point exactly?
“Again, very importantly, what are the methods of ascertaining whether she is pregnant or not? Are those methods medically ethical or healthy? Are they done by a medical professional or a crude method that may pose the risk of infection or contamination all in the name of sustaining a tradition?
“Ultimately, I would like to ask the elders, the custodians of this age-long tradition a quiet question: why should the girl be the only one to be banished? Does it no longer take two to tangle or did she somehow impregnate herself? What happens to her partner in crime? Leave him to continue impregnating more girls and then getting those girls banished?
“While I do not condone extra-marital sex, I believe it will be great if both are punished. It can only be fair that way. Generally, I think the practice should be scrutinised and ‘polished’ in light of modern realities.”
Taking a legal look at the practice, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chief Ladi Williams, said the idea of banishing defaulters is out of place.
He said: “Freedom of movement in any part of the country is a constitutional right which cannot be abrogated. The community has no right to do that. Any customary law that says that they have such powers to the extent that it is consistent with the constitution is null and void. If a customary court supports that, then it is nonsense.
“The affected persons should proceed to the magistrate court. Such case can even go on up to the Supreme Court. The banished persons can sue for enforcement of human rights and also claim damages for preventing them from going to her primary place of abode.”
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‘Let’s return to Imo rice farms’
Did you know that Imo State was once known for rice production, churning out over 10,000 tonnes a year? When the Nigerian economy thrived on agriculture, the state was one of the major contributors to the national GDP, ranking among the highest producers of rice.
In Okigwe zone were majority of the rice farms were located, over 10000 tonnes of rice was produced annually. The economy of the rural communities was buoyant and the youths were gainfully engaged. The state was then exporting rice to other parts of the Southeast and the rest of the country.
This prompted the World Bank in conjunction with the Federal Government in 1977 to cite the multi-billion naira irrigation project in Egweleze Umukara in Ihitte Uboma Council Area to aid commercial rice farming in the state.
The project with an expansive rice farm measuring 66 hectares and 6,500 meters wide dam was constructed by Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) and managed by the state Agricultural Development Programme (ADP), which engaged a workforce of over 5000.
Apart from the rice farm and irrigation project, the state government and other private investors consequently built rice milling factories across the district as part of the value chain.
The economy of the state, especially the immediate communities was buoyant. The enterprise created wealth and employment. That was then when agriculture was the mainstay of the nation’s economy.
An irrigation expert and field engineer in the defunct rice farm, Mr. Keke Ikechukwu, described it as a food basket of the state, which he said provided the food security for the state. But shortly after Nigeria jettisoned agriculture for oil, this critical investment was abandoned and soon died out altogether. The once important dam has turned to a major threat to the agrarian communities after the water broke the barrier and flooded not only what used to be a flourishing rice farm but other surrounding farmlands.
Today all the farm equipment, as well as administrative and other office buildings, are dilapidated. The connecting farm roads have all been washed away and overgrown by forest.
This is the sorry state of the World Bank Rice project that was once a major employer of labour in the state. Most painful is the fact that neither the World Bank with a controlling share of 60% and the state government has taken any step to salvage the situation.
For more than 20 years it laid comatose, while the weary staff dispersed after appealing to successive governments to revive the farm without success.
Fortunately, the abandoned project has gotten the attention of the Senator representing Okigwe Senatorial zone, Senator Benjamin Uwajumogu, who has begun an agricultural revolution to revive dead and dying agribusinesses in the zone as part of his constituency projects.
The Senator during a fact finding tour of the project, lamented that such huge project with the potential of creating wealth for the entire nation was abandoned to decay.
The Senator, who blamed government’s indifference to agriculture for the collapse of the project and other similar agro-allied companies across the country, said that the rice farm has the capacity to meet Nigeria’s annual rice demand, which he put at 6.5 million tons a year.
He said, “At a time when countries like Thailand, which is among the world’s highest exporters of rice, were setting committees to control rice production, Nigeria under Muhammadu Buhari’s regime set up a Committee headed by Umaru Dikko to supervise rice importation instead. This is how we got to where we are today”.
Speaking further, he said, “Today Nigeria consumes 6.5 million tonnes of rice annually, while the production rate is at 1.5 million ton annually leaving behind a huge deficit. But if projects like this are up and running, it will help to return Nigeria back to the map of global rice producers”.
The Senator, who was conducted round the abandoned rice farm by the former field Engineer, explained that, “with the global economic situation, agriculture is the way to go. Today the Federal Government spends huge sums of money to finance agricultural ventures in the North but if a quarter of that sum is spent in the Southeast, we will soon be exporting food to the North”.
He stressed further that, “we are going to attract private investors to partner in this project because as you can see, it will take about N1 billion to get this project back to track. We need the support of the Federal Government and the Ministry of Agriculture to revive this all important venture.
“In this part of the country, we have arable land that has not been cultivated all we need is for the government to provide equipment. For instance we have only three dams in the Southeast. But I am using this opportunity to show that we can surpass even the North in agriculture. Today, Anambra and Ebonyi states have quadrupled its rice production and we hope to even beat that record in Imo.
“I am appealing to the FG to see the need to help these communities to realize their agricultural potentials. We have fertile lands, all we need is to open up these lands and provide palliatives and other incentives for the people to return fully to agriculture. We must feed ourselves and our nation”.
Some of the villagers who expressed fear over the rising threat by the dam appealed to the government to quickly repair it to avert impending disaster.
“If the irrigation project is revived, apart from working in the company, we will also go back to rice production fully and we can cultivate all year round,” they said.
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Succour for seniors in Imo
Their strength has failed, and their friends have kept their distance, leaving them lonely, sickly and abandoned. That is the gloomy world of the elderly in Imo State, as in other places.
But help has come through a Non-Governmental Organisation, the Sanab Development Foundation.
This foundation undertakes the feeding, medical and social upkeep of elders. According to the founder, Mrs Anaba Sarah Nwanjuobi, the idea is to show the senior citizens care and love and minimise their sufferings.
She hinted that what majority of them require is just companionship, adding that loneliness accompanied by a deep sense of rejection often weighs down the aged ones.
Speaking during one of the foundation’s outreach programmes, where hundreds of elderly men and women were given medications, food items, clothing, as well as cash, Anaba, said that, “I have a passion to help the elderly. The initiative started 30 years ago and since then we have been supporting indigent senior citizens who do not have people to care for them”.
Speaking further, she said, “Part of the services we render to them apart from financial support include going to clean up their homes and cook for them. That is when we found out that a little show of kindness can go a long way to keep the aged ones happy and healthy.
“In Abia State where I come from, the foundation provided home for over 75 elderly men and women and equally attends to their needs which also include healthcare services”.
The retired civil servant, said that she was driven into the unusual passion for the aged by the love she has for her aged parents, “when I think of my parents and how they glow in the love of their children, I cannot but also think about the fate of those aged ones that are not so fortunate. So that made me want to be the child of every childless and helpless old person”.
She added further that, “I am also motivated especially to do what we are doing in Imo State by what the wife of the governor, Nneoma Rochas Okorocha is doing for the indigent widows in that state. When I remember that she has built over 200 houses for the helpless people I feel challenged and spurred to do more”.
Anaba also informed that, “we will be distributing food to the aged people in the three senatorial zones of the state, we have just done that of Owerri and it was successful, we are going to move into the other two zones the moment we get a date with the Ministry of Health and Women Development, which has shown interest in what we are doing. We also have the hope of taking the service to other parts of the country”.
She however revealed that, “our major challenge for now is limited fund because all our activities are solely funded by me and as a retiree my source of income is limited. So we are hoping to collaborate with individuals, corporate organizations and philanthropic organizations that share similar passion”.
Obiano’s Wife Visits Communities with Free Delivery Kits to Pregnant Women
From- Nwanosike Onu, Awka
The Wife of Anambra State Governor, Chief (Mrs.)ý Ebelechukwu Obiano, has continued her tour of communities in the state with free delivery kits for pregnant women.
The Mama kit packs and pampers, had created excitement amongst the pregnant women in the State who turn-up at the centres in various communities.
The packs were handed out to 10 expectant mothers at Ezinifite, Nnewi South Local Government Area, one of the five communities she visited.
Other communities where the kits were distributed to pregnant women same day included, Ebenator, Ukpor, Osumenyi, and Akwaihedi.
Speaking while handing out the kits to the lucky expectant mothers, Mrs. Obiano stated that no woman should be exposed ýto unsafe delivery due to lack of basic sterilized equipment in the rural communities.
According to her, “My NGO, Caring Family Enhancement Initiative (CAFE) decided to use the opportunity of this tour to reach out to pregnant women to ensure that they observe necessary antenatal visits and have the Mama kits ready and handy on their Expected Delivery Date”
“We are grateful to our donors GEANCO Foundation, a US based organization which made it possible for us to get this modern kit to assist us in promoting safe delivery as a means of reducing high maternal mortality rate in our state and country”
She told the women that her husband, Governor Willie Obiano treats the welfare of women as priority and does not want to hear that any woman could not deliver safely in any part of the state.
“I am supporting the effort of our governor in promoting the health and safe delivery of pregnant mothers by giving them these delivery kits and each pack contains all the tools for safe delivery.
“I want you to keep the kit inside your packed bag unopened to avoid contamination until it is handed over to the Nurse whenever you enter labour.”
One of the lucky expectant mothers at Ezinifite, Mrs. Chizoba Obiakor thanked the wife of the governor for the gift and for giving women in Anambra a sense of belonging in many positive ways.
Each Mama Kit pack contains sterile scalpel, OB pad, pair of non- latex gloves and 4×4’’ gauze, Sterile Bulb Syringe, Sterile Umbilical Clamps, Plastic Underpad, Receiving Blanket, Non-Woven Towels, BZK Towelette, Plastic Placenta Bag, Plastic Apron, Twist Ties, Trash Bag, and Apgar Scoring Chart.
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Imo industrial park to gulp $2bn – Okorocha
Gov. Rochas Okorocha of Imo on Monday said that the construction of Imo Industrial Park located at Asa community in Ohaji/Egbema Area of the state would cost N 2 billion dollars.
Okorocha, who made the disclosure when he visited the state council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Owerri, said the park would stimulate economic activities in Imo, when fully developed.
“The Imo Industrial Park, which will include a gas plant at Asa in Ohaji, is the brain child of my government.
“It will be constructed under public/private partnership agreement and a foreign firm will fund the project with over $2 billion.
“Though the project may not be completed before 2019, but my appeal is that whosoever that will succeed me should support the project and see to its completion because the project will stimulate economic activities in Imo,” he said.
The governor, who listed various developmental projects he embarked on since assumption of office, said that his vision was to turn the state to one of the best for business in the world.
“When I assumed office as governor in 2011, most governors who visited Owerri usually did not like to pass a night in Owerri because the hospitality industry and the environment was still not up to acceptable international standard.
“Today, we receive hundreds of letters from groups requesting government’s approval for them to hold their programmes in Owerri,” he said.
According to him, the state can now boost of a lot of world class hospitality firms.
“Government is planning to organise three months training for the hospitality workers on ways to enhance their service delivery,” the governor stated.
On agricultural programme, Okorocha said that mega farms would be established in each of the 27 local government areas, while each commissioner, schools, churches, and professional bodies would be encouraged to set up farms.
He also said he would expand the executive council members to enable him realise the concluding programmes and projects already listed by his administration.
He said that after the urban renewal projects, from September 2017, he would commence the construction of 540km of rural roads spread across the 27 local government areas of the state.
Okorocha appealed to illustrious sons and daughters of Imo to invest at home, saying, “bringing your investments home is a better way to develop Imo and address the problem of unemployment and insecurity”.
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We don’t have leadership crisis -APGA
The All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) has condemned the attempts by people it called detractors to create leadership crisis in the party when there was none.
The party’s National Publicity Secretary, Chief Ifeatu Obi-Okoye, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Awka that there was no crisis in the party.
Obi-Okoye, who reacted to the report of purported delegates meeting of the party in Owerri, Imo, said it was untrue.
He said APGA got a hint that some expelled members of the party wanted to meet with a former Imo gubernatorial candidate of the party, Chief Martin Agbaso, but were stopped following a security report.
“There is a report making the rounds that some people purporting to be members of APGA met in Owerri to woo a former member of APGA to be their leader; this is not true.
“We got wind of the meeting about two weeks ago and after reporting to the Directorate of State Security (DSS), they invited Agbaso who disowned them.
“Agbaso told the DSS he did not have knowledge of their meeting and as such, said the meeting did not hold,’’ Obi-Okoye told NAN.
“We condemn this move to create problem for our party which is the most peaceful, united, coherent and stable political party at the moment under the leadership of Dr Victor Oye.
“For the purpose of emphasis, Chief Martin Agbaso is a PDP member because there is no record available from the national down to the ward levels that he has returned to APGA.’’
Obi-Okoye warned those causing confusion in the party to desist as APGA would use every legal means to stop them from issuing reports that were misleading.
Reacting, Agbaso told NAN that there had been overtures on him from several quarters to work for APGA again.
The former candidate of APGA in Imo said that he represented the dejected, the disenfranchised, the marginalised which the party stood for and could not have abandoned the party.
He confirmed that he joined the PDP at a time because of the prevailing circumstances then but did not leave APGA.
Agbaso said that he had not told anybody that he was accepting to serve the party in any capacity but would make a public statement soon.
“The truth is that people felt bad when I left APGA to join PDP and told them that I did not leave in anger but something came up at that time and I wanted to win for APGA.
“I represent those who are concerned about disenfranchised people, who do not have access to good life, educated unemployed youths and unempowered women and people who yearn for good governance and that is what APGA is all about.
“If you a member of APGA today, you are APGA for life until all those issues APGA stands for are addressed.
“There has been consistent call from all strata of APGA and across the country on me to come and work for the party and I told them I will participate in the activities at the appropriate time.
“I have not told anybody that I am accepting any responsibility but I will respond to all that in a public statement, I have always said that I will do so at the appropriate time,’’ he said.
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Customs seizes N178m medicament, N250m contraband in Imo
The Federal Operations Unit (FOU) in Zone C of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has intercepted consignments of medicament including the banned Tramadol, with a duty paid value (DPV) of N178,209,310.
Other unregistered drugs were also impounded.
Contraband impounded across the zone in March included foreign rice, used shoes, machine spare parts with a DPV of N112,617,700.
The Customs Area Controller in charge of FOU in Zone C (Owerri), Comptroller Mohammed Garba, displayed the consignments during a media briefing.
He said the unit recovered N48,742,845, being the underpayments within the time under review.
Garba said NCS remained resolute in protecting the wellbeing of Nigeria through its statutory duties.
The Customs chief said the unit made 17 seizures comprising various contraband with DPV of N112,617,700 in March.
He said the unit, during its anti-smuggling operations in March, also intercepted and detained a huge consignment of medicament estimated at N178,209,310 in duty paid value.
This brought the duty paid value for seizures and goods in its custody in March to N250,951,010.
Giving a further breakdown, the Comptroller said the unit recorded 2,455 bags of rice with DPV of N77,558,800; 1,266 foot wear with DPV of N6,076,800; 307 used tyres with DPV of N3,789,600; 100 bags of used shoes with DPV of N8,100,000; 40 bales of used clothing with DPV of N5,280,000 and three vehicles with DPV of N4,050,000.
On the medicament intercepted in the Agbor axis of the zone, Garba said they included 268 cartons of Tramadol, 202 cartons of Pullegra, 36 cartons of Reall Octra and 928 packets of Tramadol.
The Customs chief said a sample of the various medicament had been sent to the National Agency for Foods and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) for tests and verification while the consignment was being detained for further investigations.
He said: “The nefarious activities of smugglers endanger the health and safety of Nigerians, affect the economy and even pose a threat to national security.”