Tag: Imperial

  • Anambra’s imperial majesty?

    The mood at the arena was simply eclectic. Only a sea of heads was discernible, as humans milled around. They came in their numbers, like all such politically conceived gatherings are, consisting of all sorts: party men and women, youths with no clearly defined allegiance, traditional rulers and their spouses, presidents-general of various communities, civil servants directed to report for ‘duty’ at the venue, in spite of the day being a nationally recognized public holiday, and perhaps much more important, a hired crowd of countryside folks, for whom the availability of free ride, and a stipend of N3,000 was an almost irresistible bargain at these austere times.

    The venue was the Alex Ekwueme Square, more renowned for its deplorable conditions, which sharply contrasts with the iconic image of the man whose name it bears.

    It was Monday, October 2, and the governor of Anambra State, His Excellency, Willie Obiano, had chosen that date to flag-off his quest to rule the state for another term of four years.

    Amid the clanging of cymbals, frenzied drumming and general merriment, ndi Anambra everywhere and other persons who were watching the spectacle on live television broadcast waited with anxiety to listen to the governor reel out not just his scorecards, but also promises of what ‘democracy dividends’ would accrue should providence be gracious enough to gift him another tenure.

    Around high noon, the moment came. And to herald his appearance on the podium (as has become customary), Obiano’s Special Assistant, SA on Flute, a craggy middle-aged fellow from his native Aguleri community went to work. From across the mountain of loudspeakers strategically placed around the arena, the shrill echoes of the flutist waltzed forth, extolling the one who had transmuted from *Akpokuedike* Aguleri to *Akpokuedike* Global, conqueror of the Anambra political firmament.

    Just as the spirits hearken to the summons of the *surugede* dance, Governor Obiano sprang to his feet, took a few giddy steps, swirled around like an infernal being, before staggering forward like an Abriba war general, leaving the audience pondering if he was merely reacting to the flutist’s call, or some other stimuli.

    Finally, he came face to face with a horde of microphones which he had to speak to. The words rang out in staccato:  “The chairman of the campaign organization, Her Excellency, the Governor of Anambra State, my wife…”

    Pronto, a cold chill descended upon the hitherto boisterous crowd. Did their governor just cede his executive office to his wife, or could it have been an inadvertent slip? Some more implacable citizens in the crowd rationalized that should the reference to his wife be a mistake, they were certain, however, that naming her chairman of the campaign organization wasn’t. Rather, it seemed like a devious move to downscale the importance of former national chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Chief Victor Umeh, who the governor had earlier named the Director General of the 87-member campaign committee on August 3.

    Yet, while Governor Obiano’s adulation of his wife as “the Executive Governor of Anambra State” might seem preposterous to other Nigerians, ndi Anambra and close watchers of affairs in the state are not in doubt that the governor truly wields and shares power with his spouse.

    At many state functions, including the one in review, the state’s deputy governor, the affable Dr. Nkem Okeke, is often not allowed to speak, while Mrs Obiano shares the limelight with her husband.

    Indeed, besides maintaining an office complex from which she operates, right inside Government House, Mrs Ebelechukwu Veronica Obiano can, to all intents and purposes be said to be the de facto governor of the state, leaving her husband with a de jure status.

    For one, she is known to have a convoy which trumps that of the deputy governor; routinely flies on chattered aircraft to her many trips to Abuja, the nation’s capital and other cities, and generally lives off the state, in the costliest and choicest hotels within and outside the country.

    For those who worry over the funding for her ostentatious tastes, they may have to make do with the allegation by a member of the Anambra State House of Assembly, Hon. Onyebuchi Offor, that Governor Obiano pockets a princely sum of N1.45 billion monthly as security vote. Till date, there has been no official reaction disproving the charge.

    But were the Anambra First Family’s ‘sin’ centred around only finances, not many ndi Anambra would have seriously minded. Rather, it is Madam Excellency’s obtrusive conduct that reeks and irks ndi Anambra who pride themselves as “the Light of the Nation.”

    As a matter of fact, in her October 2 speech, instead of focusing on serious matters of state, Mrs Obiano elected to dwell on banalities.  Added to her intemperate disposition, which has seen her publicly slap drivers and aides, many fear that Her Excellency’s acerbic tongue might in the long run do her husband in, much in the same way as former First Lady, Patience Jonathan’s cantankerous electioneering drove a wedge between her husband and several of his erstwhile admirers.

    Consider this. On April 10, Mrs Obiano had visited Ukpor community, home town of the Speaker of the state’s legislature, and engaged in a shouting match with some indigenes.

    Trouble was said to have started after Mrs Obiano claimed that the administration built the Nkwo Oha market in the community – a lie which an APGA chieftain who hails from Ukpor openly repudiated.

    Despite adorning an APGA uniform, Chief Osigwe Aghochukwu had shouted, “Madam, it is a lie”.

    Shocked by the seeming impudence, Mrs Obiano allegedly walked up to Aghochukwu and dared him to repeat his assertion, and he promptly did by insisting, “I said it is a lie”.

    Casting executive decorum aside, the governor’s wife upbraided the man, calling him “a devil in APGA uniform”.

    For a woman who largely turned out in long ankara gowns, with a Catholic scapular always around her neck back in 2013 during the campaign that brought her husband into office, Osodieme Obiano appears to have turned full cycle: from the meek Sister Ebele next door, to Anambra’s Imperial Majesty, before whom all else, including her husband, the governor must kowtow.

     

    • Hon. Ogene, was deputy chairman, Media and Public Affairs, in the House of Representatives, Abuja.
  • Developer to build IPP at Imperial ‘smart city’

    Developer to build IPP at Imperial ‘smart city’

    Electricity supply has continued to be a major concern in the country. Even in highbrow estates, stable electricity can only be guaranteed by the use of generators, a system that is not in sync with the current drive for clean energy usage.

    Lagos state’s new status of a megacity has thrown up the challenge of ensuring a clean and safe environment at all times, especially with the looming effect of climate change. This is why developers are now building into their housing projects, alternatives that will ensure that environmental pollution are drastically reduced, especially in the area of energy usage.

    This thinking and the future demands on the environment are the reasons a real estate developer and promoter of International Imperial Business City (IIBC), ChannelDrill Resources Limited, has concluded plans to include in its development of the first smart city in Africa, an independent power plant (IPP) to ensure that its smart city project, set for commencement next week, does not only enjoy stable power supply, but uses clean energy supply. The IIBC is a planned smart city located on a 200-hectare expanse land in Ikate  Kingdom, which is to be attained by dredging the Lagos Lagoon.

    In an exclusive chat with The Nation, ChannelDrill Managing Director, Mr. Olufemi Akioye, explained that the plans for the IPP in the smart city is to ensure that the city is intended to be self- sustained. Besides, the use of IPP within the city will ensure that there is no need for the use of generator by its residents, leading to clean energy.

    He also explained that the waste treatment plant to be built on the Island will be producing methane that will be used for production of more electricity or cooking gas. “Electricity will be available on 24/7 basis; cooking gas will also be piped into each building, thereby eliminating the usage of gas cylinders in the city,” Akioye explained.

    Shedding light on the power project within the development, Akioye explained that due to power supply intermittency, the developers have assumed that Lagos does not have capacity to uptake the new demand levels of the island. Therefore, a new intake substation on the Island would be supplied directly from an existing substation on the mainland via a subsea cable.

    Also, this, he further explained, will act as a secondary supply to the city and could potentially be used to export the surplus generated to the existing Lagos distribution network.

    Akioye said exhaust gasses from the generators used in the IPP will be treated by a dedicated gas cleaning plant to ensure that fumes released into the atmosphere complies  with international standards; secondary power will be generated by alternative sources such as waste to power plants, while liquefied natural gas (LNG) will be supplied to the city via barges. “Fuel will be pumped into bulk fuel storage bays via pipelines from the coast. Bulk storage feeds into a treatment plant before entering generator supply streams,” he explained.

    Akioye said the infrasture consultants to the project, Mott MacDonald Limited, London, United Kingdom, are also banking on past project experience on past Master Plans that were executed in climatic conditions similar to those of Lagos to estimate power density figures. He said this will be calculated for each load zone based on land allocation.

    “We are aware that air-conditioning is a large element within power demand in a highbrow area like the IIBC, so preliminary load estimate per plot is 100MVA,” he said.

  • Imperial governor

    Imperial governor

    •Governor Aliyu’s treatment of his estranged deputy negates law and decency

    Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu of Niger State has shown scant regard for the rule of law in his disagreement with his deputy, Ahmed Musa Ibeto. The quarrel between the two arose from the deputy governor’s decampment from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC). Ever since that action, Governor Aliyu has incrementally abused his powers, to maltreat his deputy. The latest is the cynical relocation of the deputy’s office to a public residential area, about 1,500 metres away from the government house premises; an action, he should rescind, immediately.

    While a deputy governor should not decamp from the party on which he is elected with the governor, as it is incongruous to the spirit of the executive office, such occurrence is not enough reason for Governor Aliyu to ridicule the deputy governor’s office, which is a creation of the constitution. In pursuit of vendetta, Governor Aliyu has flagrantly abused the constitution, and is making a mockery of his own office, being a creation of law. First, the governor barred the deputy governor from the state executive council meeting, against the provisions of section 193(2) of the 1999 constitution. Again, the governor illegally handed over the reins of the state to the Speaker, State House of Assembly, instead of the deputy, when he travelled, in disregard of section 190 of the constitution.

    So, while the deputy governor may be accused of moral indiscretion in dumping the governor with whom he ran for office, the governor on his part is riding roughshod over the fundamental law of the country, the constitution from where his powers derive legitimacy. Because his earlier unconstitutional acts were ignored by the deputy, the governor has now gone ahead to forcibly eject the deputy from his office, using cleaners and policemen. In justifying the official misconduct, the governor’s chief press secretary, Israel Ebije, was reported to have said, “As you know, renovation work on the protocol department has just been completed and it is the turn of the building of the deputy governor’s office”.

    In case the governor has forgotten, the Supreme Court had held as unconstitutional similar infractions of the law by a chief executive, in pursuit of an estranged deputy, in the case between Alhaji Atiku Abubakar versus Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. As in that instance, political disagreements between the executive official and his deputy, however serious, should never be enough to bring the provisions of the constitution to disrepute. We agree that ideally, the governor and the deputy governor should operate on the same political platform, but when political differences have occurred, the issues should be sorted out within the provisions of the law.

    In the present instance, a 20-hour notice to relocate, handed over to the deputy governor on the orders of the governor, clearly does not fall within the express and clear intents of the 1999 constitution. To save our democracy from such abuse, as championed by Governor Aliyu, we urge all lovers of democracy to deprecate his actions; more so as the alleged spiteful actions of the governor during the PDP primaries, gave rise to the current crises. We recall that the governor was accused of imposing candidates during the party primaries, particularly the gubernatorial candidate of the party. May we remind Governor Aliyu that he is the chief ambassador of democracy in Niger State, and it will be unfortunate if he allows his animosity against his deputy, to turn him into a champion of undemocratic actions in the state. His actions sadly remind us of the military era, when one person sees himself as the alpha and omega, wielding executive, legislative and judicial powers altogether.

  • Okrika and its Imperial Majesty

    Okrika, the headquarters of Okrika Local Government Area of Rivers State is the hometown of the wife of President Goodluck Jonathan, Dame Patience, and the ex-leader of the Niger Delta Vigilance Movement, “General” Ateke Tom.

    Prior to the October 26, 2007 inauguration of Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi as the governor of the state, Okrika was a hotbed of militancy and a no-go area.

    The youthful ex-Speaker of the Rivers House of Assembly (Amaechi), shortly after his inauguration as governor, declared that his administration would have nothing to do with militants and he declared total war on them.

    Ateke’s “highly-fortified” camp in Okrika was invaded by security operatives, with the then dreaded abode destroyed and the warlords scampering to safety, in the face of superior firepower and more sophisticated equipment/weapons.

    The late President Umaru Yar’Adua, in 2009, gave amnesty to the repentant Niger Delta militants, which complemented the efforts of the Amaechi’s administration.

    Okrika is back in the news. And for the wrong reason.

    On January 11, the All Progressives Congress (APC) secretariat in Okrika was bombed. Then on January 22, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate Nyesom Wike campaigned at the playground of the National School, Okrika. It was attended by Dame Jonathan and transmitted live on the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA).

    Ateke, at Wike’s rally in Okrika, boasted that the ancient town belongs to the PDP and that APC’s campaign would never be allowed in Okrika.

    The 44-year-old Rivers governorship candidate of the APC, members of his Greater Together Campaign Organisation and his supporters were billed to campaign at the playground of the same National School in Okrika from 10 a.m. on January 24, but the place was bombed.  while some of them were injured and their valuable property lost to the bombing, burning, shooting and attacks with machetes and other dangerous weapons from 3:45 a.m.

    The Okrika rally was later suspended by Peterside and members of his team, in order not to expose the APC’s members to danger, but indicated that they would never be cowed or intimidated.

    It is believed that the directive not to allow APC’s rallies to hold in Okrika and in Ogu, the headquarters of neighbouring Ogu-Bolo LGA (of the same Okrika-Ijaw stock) was given by Dame Jonathan, for the whole world not to confirm that Peterside  has supporters in her hometown.

    Ogu is the hometown of the self-acclaimed Speaker of the Rivers House of Assembly, Evans Bipi, a former aide to the wife of President Jonathan, and the representative of the Rivers East Senatorial District, George Thompson Sekibo.

    Peterside’s Okrika rally was rescheduled for February 12, but the Chairman of the Greater Together Campaign Organisation in Okrika LGA, Tamuno Williams, a lawyer and ex-Chairman of the council, at a news conference in Port Harcourt on February 11, expressed shock on the refusal of the Rivers police, led by Dan Bature, to provide security for the campaign.

    Williams said: “The wife of the President, Mrs. Jonathan, decreed that the APC  must not  be  allowed  to  hold  its  rallies  in  the two Okrika  speaking  LGAs of Okrika and Ogu/Bolo. Despite several entreaties to Her Majestic Excellency (Dame Jonathan) to allow the APC hold mere campaign rallies, she insisted that the rallies must not hold on ‘her turf.’ To further guarantee that her orders were not to be thwarted, Mrs. Jonathan arrived Port Harcourt on February 11, with plans to visit Okrika on February 12.”

    The Okrika rally was again suspended. The Rivers Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Muhammad Kidaya Ahmad (DSP), however, stated that at no time did the command tell anybody that it would not guarantee security of a rally anywhere in the state, claiming that the Rivers police command, along with other security agencies, was assessing situations in Okrika, with a view of reassuring the APC’s members of the required adequate security.

    President Goodluck Jonathan and the security agencies should take urgent steps to put an end to the escalating violence in Rivers and allow peaceful APC’s rallies in Okrika and Ogu/Bolo LGAs.

     

  • Imperial College alumni honour Adadevoh, Diamond Bank MD

    The Imperial College Alumni in Nigeria is celebrating three of her members for making their alma mater proud. They are: the late Dr Stella Adadevoh of the First Consultant Hospital, Lagos; Mr. Uzoma Dozie and Mr George Osahon.

    The group honoured Dozie for his appointment as the Group Managing Director of Diamond Bank Plc last month, and Osahon for his appointment as the Director of the Department of Petroleum Resources in June, while remembering Dr Adadevoh for helping to stop the spread of the Ebola Virus Disease in Nigeria. She died in August after treating Patrick Sawyer, the Liberian-American who brought the EVD to Nigeria.

    Dozie bagged a Master in Business Administration from the college in 1998. Before his appointment, he had over 18 year experience in the banking industry. A statement by the association’s President, Olugbenga Adelana, said Dozie had ‘been the chief driver of Diamond Bank’s award-winning retail banking franchise and technology-based innovative banking solutions; quietly building on the Diamond Bank Integrated Banking Solutions pioneered by his father and founder of the bank.”

    “The alumni association is, indeed, happy to associate with Mr. Dozie in his strides towards making his ‘Diamond heritage’ last forever,”Adelana added.

    Similarly, Osahon, who was formerly President of Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE), is a 1981 Masters graduate of Petroleum Geology.

    “Osahon’s appointment follows after many such petroleum sector achievements that Imperial College graduates in Nigeria have attained over years. However, Osahon’s contribution to local content development in the Oil and Gas sector as the first Group General Manager of NNPC’s Local Content Department gives us joy as fellow graduates of his alma-mater,” the statement added.

    Adadevoh was a I993 graduate of the Colleges Hammersmith Hospital Medical School. Adelana described her as the heroine of Ebola war in Nigeria.

    “When the Ebola scare broke out in Nigeria, Dr. Stella’s show of compassion and humanity towards a sick foreigner in her care marked her out as a modern day Florence Nightingale. Even though Dr. Stella is no longer with us, memories of her selfless service to humanity will forever linger in our memories. We are most happy to associate with this Heroine of the”Ebola war” in Nigeria,” he said.

    Imperial College Alumni Association of Nigeria is a fellowship of graduates of Imperial College in Nigeria dedicated to promoting the ideals of the college and members feats home and abroad.

    Adelana said: “This is to encourage up and coming graduates of the college to take pride in contributing their knowledge, exposure and experience to the development and prosperity of our dear nation Nigeria.”

     

  • Imperial Sullivan Chime

    Imperial Sullivan Chime

    ‘The only conduct that merits the drastic remedy of impeachment is that which subverts our system of government or renders the president/governors unfit or unable to govern’ – Charles Ruff

    The kernel of this discourse is informed by Governor Sullivan Chime’s acceptance of responsibility for the ongoing malicious attempt to laughably impeach Sunday Onyebuchi, his deputy for keeping poultry in government house among other puerile allegations. Hear his imperial majesty Chime: ‘I gave him the option to resign. It has actually come to a point where we need to know who actually is the boss because we can no longer work together. Let the House of Assembly do their job and see if, indeed, he is fit to remain as Deputy Governor.’

    No right-thinking man will say that a governor should keep an errant deputy in office. The political marriage between the governor and his vice is not one of equals but at the same time, it is not one of master-servant relationship. If for instance, someone is deemed fit enough to deputise for a governor, courtesies and protocol demand that such a person should be treated with decency by the state because doing anything inimical against the holder of such exalted office is tantamount to denigrating that office which in this column’s view amounts to wilful subversion of the system.

    Charles Frederick Carson Ruff (1939 – 2000), a prominent American lawyer and 27th White House Counsel, who defended President Bill Clinton during his impeachment trial in 1999 over the Lewinsky scandal and Paula Jones case, presents a template for determining the suitability of a man to retain his office under a democratic setting when he said: ‘Impeachment is not a remedy for private wrongs; it’s a method of removing someone whose continued presence in office would cause grave danger to the state.’ Could Enugu State deputy governor’s retention of his seat be deemed to be inimical to the development of the state? Could the personal interest of a governor be rightly deemed to be the over all interest of the state?

    Edmund Burke had this to say on the high pedestal of impeachment when he described it as the ‘tribunal’ by which ‘statesmen/office holders are tried not upon the niceties of a narrow jurisprudence but upon the enlarged and solid principles of morality.’ Again, can the gale of impeachments across the country satisfy this yardstick? This is a poser for all politicians masquerading as democrats in the country today.

    Curiously, the Enugu State House of Assembly found the deputy governor guilty of infracting its February 12, 2013 resolution decided upon at its plenary prohibiting the maintenance and operation of commercial livestock and poultry farms within residential neighbourhoods in Enugu metropolis in promotion of public health standards. The deputy governor is said to be keeping commercial poultry/livestock within his official residential quarters despite alleged lawful directives issued to him by the governor. Put succinctly, the deputy governor is accused by the House to have “between February 2013 and February 2014, wrongfully deployed the resources of his office and exercised the powers thereof to resist and ridicule the implementation of a public health policy of the government of Enugu State by maintenance and operation of commercial livestock and poultry farms within residential neighbourhoods.”

    Chime’s deputy was also accused of refusing to represent his boss at the flag-off of the construction of the second Niger Bridge in Onitsha by President Goodluck Jonathan on March 11, and at the South-East Governors Forum held in Enugu on Sunday, July 8. However, the deputy governor was widely reported to have been present at the 2nd Niger Bridge event purportedly sitting next to Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

    The ridiculous aspect of this impeachment move is that in January, it was widely reported in the media that state government forcefully evacuated the so-called deputy governor’s 3,000 birds. Yet, the governor has not effectively cleared the air over accusations that he is also guilty of same offence since he still allegedly keeps big farms in the same Enugu State Government House. More damning is the fact that this impeachment is simply because the Onyebuchi reportedly declared intention to run for the Enugu East Senatorial seat reserved by Chime for one of his close aides.

    In sane climes, impeachment is deployed with tact and the consideration of what is of significant essence to the polity. Impeachment and removal of governors have happened occasionally throughout the history of the United States, usually for genuine not concocted corruption charges and abuse of office. Only two U.S. Presidents have been impeached by the House of Representatives. Both were acquitted at the trials held by the Senate: Andrew Johnson in 1868 (trial) and Bill Clinton in 1998/1999 (trial). The House Judiciary Committee voted on Articles of Impeachment for President Richard Nixon in 1974, but he resigned before the full House of Representatives could vote on any articles. Since the entire House did not vote, Nixon was never impeached.

    In the view of this column, impeachable conduct must be rescued from the ambivalent Nigerian constitutional provision that is currently promoting executive rascality and diminishing legislative integrity at the same time. In an orderly and well organised society, impeachment should proceed from misconduct of public men through abuse or violation of some public trust, and they must relate mainly to injuries done immediately to the society itself. What immediate injury has keeping poultry done to the Enugu State people?

    There are so many Chimes in Government Houses across the federation who treat their deputies as waste bins where any rubbish can be dumped. They should be reminded that nothing lasts forever. Afterall, President Jonathan’s former boss, Umaru Yar’Ádua never contemplated that he could succeed him the way and time it happened. That is life  even though it is doubtful that Jonathan himself has learnt any lesson the way he is going after governors that are not supporting his 2015 re-election bid by instigating legislators against them.

    His imperial majesty Chime must watch his back for there is something called the law of Karma. It is inescapable. His predecessor, Chimaroke Nnamani, fought his godfather and benefactor, Jim Nwobodo. Chime has repaid Nnamani with an overdose of tyranny and treachery. He should not think that he has immunity against being paid back in his own coin. If he likes, let him pick his own biological son as successor. The same applies to serving governors that are behaving as if they are the first and last thing to happen to their states.

    The perilous thing about the on-going impeachment, whether in Enugu or Nassarawa, is that it is unduly punishing the man and also denigrating the office he holds. The governor, with the support of a weakling and highly compromised legislature, is committing despotic transgression with impunity through the mis-use of vast powers and perquisites of office at his beck and call. Chime, like others in his shoes in other states, are setting the dangerous precedent of corruption and abuse of power. Unfortunately for the country, those who should be impeached are the ones behind others’ impeachment within the nation’s political system generally. This ugly trend portends danger for the sustenance of democracy.