Tag: Kinsmen

  • Elechi Amadi: Widows,  kinsmen eulogise literary icon

    Elechi Amadi: Widows, kinsmen eulogise literary icon

    The late Captain Elechi Amadi was born in 1934. He died on June 29, 2016 at the age of 82. His one week funeral, which gathers momentum today and tomorrow, began on Monday. Many activities have lined up to mark his exit. PRECIOUS DIKEWOHA, who visited the family of the literary icon reports   

    The burial rites of renowned author, Captain Elechi Amadi have begun in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital. As an Ikwerre-born traditionalist, his exit is to be marked with several activities. Such activities include the launch of his biography entitled Kedara on November 29.

    When our correspondent visited the late Amadi’s residence at Mgbodo,  Aluu Community in Ikwerre Local Government Area of Rivers State, members of the community were in high spirits to receive dignitaries from all walks of life who will come to pay their last respects to the Aluu chief. Many youths of the community were at the compound working to keep the environment clean.

    The deplorable road linking Aluu community with the late Amadi’s house has been fixed and the family house has also been renovated by the state government.

    His palace where his body will lie in state today and tomorrow has also been renovated. His old pictures are still hanging on the wall of the palace when our correspondent visited the family.

    One of such pictures is a group photograph showing Nigerian soldiers in 1964; with Brig. Ademulegun, Maj. Gen. Welby–Everard, Lt.-Col. Yakubu Gowon and others. Another picture on the wall is the group photograph with Rotimi Amaechi, the former Governor of Rivers State, Mr. Tele Ikuru and Dr. Alex Ekwueme.

    There is also a photograph of his late father with other Aluu chiefs exchanging pleasantries with the first Military Governor of Rivers State, Commander Alfred Dapapreye Diete-Spiff (rtd). There are also other memorable photographs on the wall of the palace.

    Speaking on her closeness and the last encounter with the late Amadi, the third wife, Dr. Priye Elechi-Amadi whom many described as the late traditionalist’s handbag, said the literary icon actually told her goodbye but it was very difficult for her to accept his goodnight wave.

    Dr. Elechi-Amadi said she knew that he was going to die but she didn’t know it was going to be soon because there were serious health challenges which he survived in the past.

    “In 2009, he was very ill. We had to fly him to the United Kingdom.  I am a member of Eckankar. I told God that one thing I want from Him was to go back with my husband to Nigeria. He went into the theater three times.  That was why when he fell ill this time; I thought it was not as serious as the previous one. If he had survived that one, this one was no case. I know that his soul lives on, the signs were there that he was going to die but I found it difficult to accept the reality.”

    On the day her husband died, she said it took her two weeks to realise that he was gone. “I wasn’t conscious of myself  two weeks after, because it was a big shock to me. I didn’t lose a husband; I lost a friend and a lover. His death created a big vacuum in my life. He was a very patient man and good listener.

    “Actually, I was privileged to be with him in his private moment. He really opened up to me. You know he loves poetry. While he was ill, there was a reading programme organised by Total Plc. Then I said to him, but for this sickness, you would have gone for this event and he said, “No, you can go for both of us. Please, go and represent me.’ The next morning he was the one that reminded me to go for the event. I went there and gave a speech on his behalf and came back and met him in the hospital.  I think that was a goodbye. He was a true artist to the end.”

    Continuing, Priye, who is a lecturer at the Ignatius Ajuru University of Education (IAUE), Rivers State, said: “He was honest and romantic; he wooed me for about two years. Our relationship started in a very critical note. We worked together on a book, that book entitled Kedara has been published; that was what brought us together.

    “But there was no thought of marriage at all at the initial time. Because of our interactions, we discovered that we were soulmates and intellectually compatible. I think it is natural that we ended up together as husband and wife. We stayed together for 26 years as husband and wife and 30 years together as friends. The best thing I will do for him is to preserve his literary legacy. As a matter of fact, I collaborated on his biography work before he passed on.

    “It was launched on Tuesday, November 29, this year. The biography centred on his personality, lifestyle, work and others. What informed my marriage to him was that he was genuinely lovely, sincere  and kind-hearted. I had two children with my late husband.”

    The second wife of the late writer, Mrs. Rose Elechi-Amadi, who responded in Ikwerre dialect, said her late husband was a good father to their children.

    She said one thing she would miss was his caring attitude.

    “He was one of those men in Ikwerre that know how to marry wife. I’m going to miss his caring attitude. All of us are going to miss him and I have been praying that God should grant him eternal rest.”

    The first wife, Mrs. Dorothy Elechi-Amadi would died last year, but one of her daughters, Pastor Karen Elechi-Amadi said her father was a member of  Ikwerre Language Committee where he assisted the group to translate the new and old testaments into Ikwerre language.

    “Of course, he is part of the Ikwerre Language Committee where he assisted to translate the Bible into Ikwerre language. They have already translated the New Testament; they are still proofreading the Old Testament. He had a dual personality; while he had his eyes on tradition, he also did things that were positive in the eyes of God.”

    “We loved him and respected him; wherever he went, he ensured there was peace and harmony. His area of specialisation was Mathematics and Physics but later he started writing and today he turned out well as a literary giant before he passed on.

    “He taught me how to read even books that were beyond my age. Not just me alone, the rest of my siblings, bringing us very close to books had actually helped us.  He told us that reading is power.”

    We will miss him.”

    Some of his kinsmen said their late brother’s beliefs, lifestyles and his contributions to community development made him a legend, adding that the late Amadi  immortalised himself before he died.

    The younger brother to the late litrary icon, Elder Valentine Amadi said his brother had made a good impression on earth that would last forever, stressing that he was not sick or weak until the day he died.

    He said those were the qualities of an upright man in Ikwerre ethnic nationality. He called on the people to live a life worthy of emulation; since man does not know the day he would die.

    “You can see the atmosphere, the great man in the community is gone. All we are doing now is to  celebrate his achievements and what he believed in. He was a great man, he trained me and seven others. He ensured that we were enlightened and now he is gone.

    “He was a free man. Despite the insecurity in the community, he was not afraid to move around. He was a community man because he participated fully in the community development. He interacted with both old and young. One thing about him is that he preferred living here than outside the community,” he said.

    A resident of Aluu community, Mr. Chris Oji, said the late Amadi, through his literary works, had immortalised himself.

    Oji said:  ”The burial ceremony of Elechi Amadi is not a platform for people to cry. We are celebrating his greatness. We can sympathise with members of the family on the death of a great man who had left this sinful world and to also inform them that we are glad to join in celebrating the literary icon.

    “When you mention the Mandela of our area, then you are talking of the late Elechi Amadi. He had done everything he needed to do.  He had made a lot of progress and trained a lot of people.”

     

     

  • Monarch, kinsmen praying for Olabimtan’s release

    Monarch, kinsmen praying for Olabimtan’s release

    •Abductors reduce ransom to N5m

    The monarch of Supare-Akoko, Oba Kasali Omosogbon, has declared three days fasting and prayers for the release of the kidnapped former Ondo State House of Assembly Speaker Victor Olabimtan.

    Omosogbon called on security agents to intensify efforts to secure his release.

    The monarch called on all Christians and Muslims in the town to converge on his palace for the special prayer, saying before the end of the sessions, Olabimtan would be released by his abductors.

    Women marched on the town, urging the abductors to release the former Speaker without delay.

    They said as mothers they are not comfortable with the kidnap, describing Olabimtan as humble and peace-loving.

    Sources said the kidnappers have reduced the ransom to N5million from the original N20million.

    The Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State, Isaac Kekemeke, has urged residents to shun hasty conclusion on the abduction.

    Besides, he advised them not to attach any political motive to the development.

    The former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) said the kidnappers are enemies of the state and should be reprimanded.

    The APC chairman advised the people to remain calm and allow security agencies do their jobs.

    He said: “We need to work hand in hand with the government and law enforcement agencies to ensure that Olabimtan is returned to his family. We believe very soon he’ll be freed.

  • Kinsmen back minister

    Kinsmen of the Minister of State for Education, Prof. Anthony Anwukah, in Egbuoma community in Oguta Local Government Area of Imo State have urged him to display the high moral values for which the community is known in the discharge of his duty.

    In a communiqué issued by the Egbuoma Stakeholders’ Forum and jointly signed by the Chairman, Sir Simon Muomah, Secretary, Nkeonye Okeke and the Publicity Secretary, Comrade Uche Chukwudi respectively, the community assured that the minister is one of the thorough bred politicians from the state who will fit in properly in President Muhammadu Buhari’s change agenda.

    According to the communiqué, the community has suffered indescribable marginalisation in the past, despite being an oil-producing community and as a result will give all necessary support and prayers for the minister to succeed as a mark of appreciation to President Buhari and Governor Rochas Okorocha for nominating one of their sons as a minister.

    The communiqué stressed further: “In line with the norms and values of our community, we will continue to support our son as he assumes duty as the Minister of State for Education and we also thank President Buhari and Governor Okorocha for remembering our community.

    “We are not in doubt that Anwuka will deliver on his mandate. We are assuring Mr President that his entire community is behind him and that his antecedents conform strongly to the change agenda.

    “We are equally seizing this opportunity to appeal to President Buhari through the minister to address some of the challenges confronting the zone, which include lack of basic infrastructure, environmental degradation and unemployment, among others.”

     

  • AUDU in the eyes of his kinsmen

    AUDU in the eyes of his kinsmen

    ‘We’ve lost a breadwinner’

    The sudden death of Prince Abubakar Audu, the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate in last Saturday’s Kogi State governorship election, has left behind a lot of grief, particularly for the people of his ancestral homeland, of Ogbonicha in Ofu Local Government Area. JAMES AZANIA reports

    To the people of Ogbonicha in Ofu Local Government Area of Kogi State, the death of Prince Abubakar Audu is a blow too much to bear. Coming barely a day after the Returning Officer for the state governorship election, Prof. Emmanuel Kucha, had proclaimed his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) winner in 16 out of the 21 local government areas, in last Saturday’s election, his demise was a shock of unimaginable proportion, not just for people of Ogbonicha, but to his thousands of supporters and admirers, several of who wished for his resurrection on the day of his burial.

    Unarguably the most visible politician beginning from the creation of Kogi State in 1991, Audu commanded a near cult following among his people, not merely because of his stupendous wealth, but their conviction in his total commitment to their cause. Audu used his position anywhere he was to impact on his people, and this they knew. When he was out of town, his palatial residence in Ogbonicha never required security guards, because the whole community guarded it.

    Anywhere Audu went in his community, it was usually shouts of adoja (one that guides his people), followed by their chorus ede. You could see it in his eyes that he loved his people and his people loved him.

    That Prince Abubakar Audu, aged 68, became the first elected governor of Kogi State in 1992 on the platform of the defunct National Republican Convention (NRC) after a banking career spanning over two decades. Before the creation of Kogi, Audu served as commissioner under Jonah Jang, before Kogi was carved out of old Benue State, is well known to the public, but not many know of how his people literally begged him to be governor, based on the developments he attracted to his area while he was in Jang’s cabinet.

    In 1991, Gabriel Adukwu, the NRC chairman in the old Benue and C. O Cornelius, from Kabba, both signified interest in becoming governor of the newly created Kogi State, but then, Audu was approached by some eminent persons who felt he had what it took to pilot the affairs of the new state to contest as governor, which he was to later accede to, but while Adukwu accepted to withdraw from the race, Cornelius refused to step down and went into the race for the NRC ticket with Audu. He was worsted, polling only one vote at the primary.

    The Social Democratic Party (SPD) in the state, on the other hand, was in crisis and unable to pick a candidate. Audu has since then, and until his death, remained the de factor political numero uno in Kogi. Alhaji Abdulkadir Audu, an octogenarian and the eldest of the over 60 children born by the late Audu Oyidi, the patriarch of the Audu family, gives an insight why the younger Audu was so much loved by his people.

    He said that his brother, long before he became commissioner in Benue, was always looking for ways to impact positively on his people. According to him, the late Audu built three houses at different times in Ejule, about 10 kilometres to his country home, Ogbonicha. He then built the fourth one in Ogbonicha, just to be closer to his people. He also established a mega (NNPC) petrol station just across his row of houses in Ejule, the proceeds of which were dedicated to the welfare of the extended Audu family.

    Among the deeds that endeared him to his people included his influencing the construction of the Otukpa-Ejule road while he was commissioner in old Benue State. Other roads constructed by him were

    the Lokoja-Ajaokuta, Anyingba-Ogbalito and the Anyingba-Abejukolo roads. He ensured the constant maintenance of the Idah-Ofu federal highway, because it directly connects the people of his area and to

    enhance economic activities in the area.

    According to Abdulkadir, his brother and former governor was a man of resolve whose word was his bond. His words: “Prince Abubakar was my brother. He was born in my presence. What he said he would do, that was what he would do. But whatever he said he would not do, he would not do. His first job was at the bank, after which he joined politics. He became Commissioner for Finance under Jonah Jang when he was military governor in Benue. From there, he did this road (Otukpa-Ejule). When they created Kogi State, people asked who would be governor in Kogi? Then they said let them look for the man who did the road from Otukpa and Ejule.

    He was in Lagos then; he was the executive director, Federal Savings International Bank (FSB) then. He was invited two weeks to the primary of NRC; he accepted to join. But he won the ticket and went ahead to win the election.”

    The Attah Igala and President, Kogi State Council of Traditional Rulers, His Royal Majesty, Idakwo Michael, Ameh Oboni II, said of him: “Prince Abubakar Audu lived a successful life and impacted positively on all those people he crossed their path”.

    The Orego Attah Igalaland and paramount ruler of Ogbonicha, Alhaji Tijani Audu, said the late politician, who was an only son from his mother, was a dogged fighter. He described the late Audu as fearless and as a man of destiny who single-handedly lifted Ogbonicha from obscurity and to international prominence.

    He said: “He fought for his people. The people he fought for, it is left for them to fight on. From the prophecies we learnt, even if he won, he would not stay long. When I told him, he said, ‘don’t mind them’. He said even if they would kill him he would fight for his people. He was not a troublesome person while growing up when we were in elementary school at Etteh. He was always a peace maker. But since he has fought for his people, it is left for them to fight on”. Hajia Hadiza said the whole people of Ogbonicha have lost a “bread winner and emancipator” with the death of Audu, adding that his shoes were too “too big to fit into another man’s legs”.

    She continued: “What can you say of this man? This was somebody that raised the whole Ogbonicha; he raised the whole of us. He made us proud. He brought roads, schools, hospital, wealth. Everything good, he brought here. Nobody can do what he had done and he was never tired. You cannot cry to him and come back not smiling. Audu is gone!Our Audu is gone!”.

    One of the late politicians’ nine children (eight males, one female), Aliyu, said their father placed much premium on education and that he was a very nice man whose death was too sudden.

    “I was very close to my father. He was a very nice man; a man of his words and very close to his people. He pushed us all to work very hard to succeed on our own merit. His death was a sudden surprise, very very. If you will permit me, I think he was still young, he was 68. I never expected him to die. I was expecting him to be there on the day of my son’s wedding and be there to see his grand children”, said Aliyu.

    On the legacy left behind by their father, he said: “The most enduring legacy he has left behind is education, not only for me, but for all of us. I believe that that is what has brought me to where I am now. He is an advocate for education. Not only for me, but he has touched the life of the average Kogi man through education”.

  • Dickson’s kinsmen endorse Sylva 

    Dickson’s kinsmen endorse Sylva 

    •‘Good friend better than bad brother’

    Kinsmen of Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson, yesterday vowed to support the aspiration of the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Chief Timipre Sylva, in the December 5 governorship election.

    The kinsmen from Sagbama, Dickson’s local government area, said they found in Sylva, a good friend but a bad brother in Dickson.

    The governor, they said, abandoned them and failed to site developmental projects in their communities for over three years.

    The kinsmen from Toruebeni community and other wards in Sagbama said they would gladly vote for the APC and Sylva ahead of Dickson, who they accused of insensitivity and woeful performance.

    They were particularly angry that Dickson refused to rehabilitate a school he attended in Toruebeni and failed to complete a road leading to the community, which Sylva almost finished before he was booted out of office.

    They spoke when Sylva led a team of APC leaders to Toruebeni community to identify with them on their yearly festival entitled, Ebenimo-oge.

    In the entourage of the former governor were the Director-General of the Sylva/Igiri Campaign Organisation (SICO) and Minister of State for Agriculture, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri and former acting Governor of the state, Chief Nestor Binabo.

    The APC candidate received a royal blessing by the traditional ruler of the community, His Royal Highness, S.T.A. Binagha, who tied a white wrapper round Sylva’s waist and gave him a lantern signifying light.

    Binagha who described himself as an apostle, said Sylva would emerge victorious like previous candidates who stood for elections in the past after receiving his blessings.

    Sylva described the community as great and ancient vowing to develop the area if given the mandate.

    He expressed dismay that the people could not drive into their community because the road and a bridge he almost completed were abandoned by the current administration.

    He said: “l am readier than ever before to govern and develop you. When l wanted to come, l thought we would drive down but we used boats. The bridge and the road were started by Alamieyeseigha.

    “I took it up and it was remaining only two pillars to complete the bridge. I concluded arrangement to pay N2bn to the contractor to finish everything. But l was removed.

    “Your son is in government. If he really loves you, why can’t he do it? When you vote us in within one year, you will drive to this community.”

    Lokpobiri said there was hunger in the state and wondered what the governor had done with funds.

    He said it would be disastrous for the people to stay in hunger for another four years, adding that APC is the only solution out of poverty.

    Describing Sylva as a lover of the people, the minister said Sylva’s government would partner with the federal government to develop rural areas in the state.

     

  • Jonathan’s kinsmen protest plot to relocate project

    •Youths threaten war

    Youths and kinsmen of former President Goodluck Jonathan in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State yesterday protested an alleged plot by the Nigeria Content Management Development Board (NCMDB) to relocate a project in one of their communities.

    NCMDB was said to have acquired land at Emeyal community during the administration of Jonathan to establish an  Oil and Gas Park.

    But following the exit of the President, some “forces” were said to have mounted pressure on the content board to move the project to another local government area.

    Sources said some people working for the state government   were making moves to take the project  to Toru-Orua, Governor Seriake Dickson’s community in Sagbama Local Government Area; others said the governmrnt had nothing to do with the moves.

    Investigation showed that the move to relocate the project unsettled Ogbia; various youth groups have been threatening a showdown.

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Ogbia clans, Niger Delta Youth Movement (NDYM), the Ogbia Brotherhood and Emeyal Youth Group have held a series of meetings on the matter.

    They were said to have written a protest letter to the Executive Secretary of the agency’s board, warning against any plot to divert the project.

    The letter was signed by IYC Chairman for Ogbia clans, Osaanya B. Osaanya; President, Ogbia Brotherhood Youth Council (OBYC), Daziba Apiri; Secretary-General, NDYM, Isaac Amakuro; President, Emeyal Youth Group (EYG), Victor Otobo and the National Union of Ogbia Students (NUOS).

    In the letter, the stakeholders expressed appreciation about the decision of the agency’s board to locate the oil and gas park in Ogbia, the local government area where oil was first struck in commercial quantity in Nigeria.

    They expressed concerns over speculations that the board was under pressure to move the project to another local government area.

    They said: “Ogbia youths want to inform the board that the project is welcome in Ogbia and advise the board to remain resolute to the Act that established it and keep politics out of its operations.

    “Ogbia youths will resist any attempt from any quarters, no matter how highly placed the individual may be, to remove the oil gas park out of Ogbia because the project stands to develop Ogbia and its environs.

    “It is an established fact that the board has acquired a portion of land in Emeyal community in Ogbia and pray for the board to continue the project in Ogbia.”

  • Kinsmen celebrate Kingsley Kuku

    Kinsmen celebrate Kingsley Kuku

    The crème de la crème of high society will have another reason to converge this Sunday. This time, the meeting point will be Arogbo, Ondo State, where the kinsmen of the immediate past special adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan on Niger Delta Affairs, Hon. Kingsley Kuku, are set to honour him tomorrow.

    Having contributed immensely to the development of his community and Ondo State at large, Kuku’s kinsmen deem it necessary to celebrate him for.

    There will be a special thanksgiving in the morning, followed by a reception.

    Kuku is reputed as one who does not believe in half measures. Hence the reception promises to be a grand affair. Those who matter in high society are already gearing up for the occasion.

  • Okonjo-Iweala’s Ogwashi-Uku kinsmen bemoan lack of water, power

    Okonjo-Iweala’s Ogwashi-Uku kinsmen bemoan lack of water, power

    Despite over a century of unbroken existence as provincial headquarter, Ogwashi-Uku, headquarter of Aniocha South Local Government Area, has little to show for its status.

    Ogwashi-Uku, the birthplace of Minister for Finance Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has grappled with total darkness and a lack of potable water for its inhabitants in the last seven years.

    When the Federal Government in 2003 commenced work on a dam, Ogwashi-Uku residents heaved a sigh of relief, but that hope has since been dashed following the abandonment of the dam10 years after construction started.

    As if to add insult to injury, the Ubu River – the only source of water to residents – has  become polluted due to the activities of the contractors at the dam, raising fears of an imminent epidemic.

    The Ubu River, which traverses many communities, used to be a fast-flowing river, but has become stagnant and polluted. The river at a point on the Asaba-Ughelli is threatening to wash off the road under construction due to the build-up of water up-stream.

    The Iyase of Ogwashi-Uku, Dr Collins Afunwa, who spoke to Niger Delta Report in Ogwashi-Uku, urged the Federal Government to complete the dam to forestall an impending health calamity.

    He confirmed that the only water source in the community has become polluted owing to the construction work at the dam site. He lamented the non-completion of the Ogwashi-Uku Dam  after over a decade after.

    He said the abandoned water dam is negatively affecting the wellbeing of residents, adding that residents are forced to buy water from commercial water vendors at exorbitant costs.

    He blamed the pollution of the Ubu River on the blockade of the river channel to the copper dams used to restrict the flow of water during construction work at the dam, which has been left unopened.

    Of the four copper dam constructed down-stream, only one is evacuating water- a situation that may be responsible the restricted flow and attendant water build-up  up-steam.

    Aside the non-completion of the dam, our findings revealed that another major factor militating against the completion is the uncompleted power substation attached to the dam.

    Dr Afunwa expressed doubt over the completion of the project, adding the current state of the dam has made it impossible for the people of the community to have access to the Ubu stream.

    He predicted that the Ogwashi-Uku people would endure more hardship during the dry season owing to the uncompleted dam.

    On efforts the community is making to ensure that work resumes, Afunwa appealed to Dr Okonjo-Iweala to help fast track the completion of the dam, as the community has exhausted all means available to get work to resume on the dam site.

    His words: ‘We understood that the Minister for Finance, who hails from this town, is handling the dam project. So, we have no committee in place that is liaising with government on the dam. We are hoping that the Minister for Finance will use this opportunity to show she hails from this town. I believe strongly that that project has been abandoned.”

    A resident, Alphonsus Onianwa, said without potable water supply, he has had to build a concrete pond to store water purchased from commercial water dealer at great cost.

    His words: “We have continued to suffer as we have suffered since the past seven years. Many residents fetch water from the streams around while the rich buy water from tankers who get water from boreholes.

    “It is cheaper to buy from commercial water tankers who fetch from the polluted Ubu River as it sells for N5000, while commercial tankers who fetch from borehole sell theirs for N7500.For an average family, this  stock of water will last only two weeks and as a civil servant you will agree with me that this is expensive.”

    Afunwa wondered why the privatisation efforts of the Federal Government have failed to yield the expected dividend for which it was handed to private investors.

    He said: “It is indeed sad that despite the purported privatisation of the PHCN things have not changed Besides one is compelled to wonder why the investors of the electricity company are not in a hurry to put things in order so that they can start making profits from their investments.  One would have expected they will be in a hurry to do the needful so that they can start making profits, but that is not the case. The whole thing looks suspicious.”

    Continuing: “We have done everything humanely possible to ensure that we have electricity in the last seven years and nothing is happening about light. For more than seven years we have never had light and it has been like that and nobody is thinking about getting us light. As far as light is concerned Ogwashi-Uku is not sure of getting light in the next two years, unless government comes to our aid.”

     

  • Peterside’s kinsmen: Rivers not for only Ikwerre

    Peterside’s kinsmen: Rivers not for only Ikwerre

    •Toby, others urged support for APC candidate

    The kinsmen of the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Adol Peterside, under the aegis of Opobo/Nkoro Patriots, have urged Rivers people to massively vote for the 44-year-old member of the House of Representatives.

    The Opobo/Nkoro patriots said Rivers State is not only for Ikwerre people.

    Opobo/Nkoro patriots spoke in Port Harcourt yesterday through Prof. Dagogo Fubara, Alabo Biakpo Jack Tolofi, Dr. Silas Okansu and a former Rivers Deputy Governor, Sir Gabriel Toby.

    The Opobo/Nkoro patriots said: “We thank Eze Ekpeye Logbo, chief and the entire Ekpeye people (of Rivers State) for their support. The Abua, Eleme, Engenni, the Ogba, Etche and Omuma people (all of Rivers State), we thank you. The market women, men, the non-indigenes and indeed, all people of goodwill have, in various ways, accepted the candidacy of Dr. Peterside. We say thank you and may God bless and prosper all those who have stood and defended the cause of justice, fairness, and equity, that, this time a round, the riverine section of the state be given the opportunity to produce a governor.

    “This is an opportunity of a lifetime, which all true sons and daughters of Opobo and Nkoro Kingdoms (in coastal Opobo/Nkoro LGA of Rivers State) cherish. We therefore call on all Rivers people and those resident in Rivers State to come out en masse on February 28, 2015, to vote Dr. Dakuku Adol Pererside, the APC’s standard bearer, as governor of Rivers State.

    “It remains for us to place on record our deep appreciation to Governor Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, for his courage and outstanding sense of justice. It was he (Amaechi) who said from the outset that he would not support any other Ikwerre person to succeed him, because Rivers State is not only for the Ikwerre. Governor Amaechi went ahead to urge his party to nominate a riverine candidate to be governor. By this singular act, our dear governor has shown that indeed every Rivers man and woman can aspire for any office in the country. He has renewed the faith of every child in the strength of our rainbow coloured state and reassured us that no community will be left behind, in our march to building the Rivers State of our dreams.

    “We are also mindful to note that it is only the APC, as a party, that accepted the plea of various Ijaw groups, including that of our leader, Chief Edwin Clark, who joined the Ijaw chiefs and elders, in urging all political parties to nominate a riverine person to bear their flags in Rivers State.

    “We therefore call on all registered voters in Rivers State to ensure that we all come out and vote and protect our votes. Remember, your votes count. So, let us all come and elect Dr. Dakuku Adol Peterside, the APC’s standard bearer as our governor during the governorship election, scheduled to hold on February 28, 2015.”

  • Yuguda celebrates Sallah with kinsmen

    Yuguda celebrates Sallah with kinsmen

    Bauchi State Governor Isa Yuguda celebrated Eid-el-Kabir with his kinsmen in Yuguda for the first time decades after his parents left the quiet farming community.

    The village is 25 minutes drive from Bauchi, the state capital, and four minutes drive from Tudun-Gambo Junction, off the Yankari Games Reserve road in Alkaleri Local Government Area.

    It is located on a flat fertile farming land good for rearing domestic animals and producing cereals. The village has a population of about 2,000, including petty traders.

    Besides a newly built Cottage Hospital, with state-of-the-art medical facilities and a Doctors’ Quarters, which has not been inaugurated, Yuguda has a primary school and a few hand-pump boreholes.

    The governor, dressed in white babariga, was accompanied to the village by his immediate family, some security operatives and drivers.

    He gave “Sallah kolanut” to his guests, among who were nomadic Fulani, who were seeing him for the first time.

    Addressing his kinsmen in fluent Fufulde (Fulani language), Yuguda, who has barely seven months to complete his eight-year tenure, said his administration was committed to developing rural areas and giving every resident a sense of belonging.

    He said: “If rural areas develop, the economic potential of rural people will be greatly enhanced. Urban migration will be minimal and life expectancy of the people will increase.”

    The governor promised to link Yuguda to Juwara, Kundak, Bununu and Bauchi by road, adding: “The remaining part of my tenure will be used to empower the people and provide social facilities for you as part of your social rights, for it is your right to enjoy the dividends of democracy, having voted for people of your choice. My administration will do its best to make life better for you, so that you too will feel the positive impact of democracy.”

    Yuguda urged them to remain peace loving and accommodate visitors.

    Two rams were slaughtered after the Raka’at prayers, led by the village’s Chief Imam, Mallam Ahmadu Shehu.

    Shehu urged the people to be tolerant, forgiving, prayerful and show love to one another.

    Yuguda inspected the Cottage Hospital and treated the villagers to a sumptuous meal.

    The Village Head, Mallam Hamza Musa, thanked the governor for celebrating with them, saying: “We will tell the story to even our unborn children.”

    Musa said Yuguda’s actions showed that he was humble.