Tag: OGBIA

  • Kinsmen to Jonathan, others: intervene in Ogbia crisis

    Kinsmen to Jonathan, others: intervene in Ogbia crisis

    Stakeholders from Ogbia Local Government of Bayelsa State have called on prominent indigenes, including former President Goodluck Jonathan, to intervene in the leadership crisis rocking Ogbia Brotherhood.

    Ex-President Jonathan is one of the prominent indigenes of Ogbia Council.

    The umbrella body of Ogbia sons and daughters has been thrown into crisis, with series of failed settlement moves.

    The litigants have approached the court in suit No. OHC/13/2023 to sack the interim executive and give order for the appointment of substantive executives for the group.

    The case came up yesterday at the Ogbia High Court sitting in Yenagoa, with Felide Zimughan Esq. appearing for the claimants and Earnest Omilole Esq. appearing for the defendants.

    The presiding judge of Ogbia High Court, Justice S. W. Amaduobogha, however, adjourned the matter till March 28.

    Traditional rulers, chiefs, women and youths, who were at the court, called on contending factions in the crisis to withdraw the case and settle out of court for a substantive leadership of the Ogbia Brotherhood.

    A revered compound chief at Otuabagi community, Chief Joseph Joshua, stressed the need for the constitution of a substantive executive for the umbrella body of Ogbia people.

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    He said based on the constitution of Ogbia Brotherhood, the current caretaker leadership is illegal, having stayed in office since 2019.

    Joshua expressed worry that the matter even got to the court, calling on Jonathan and other well-meaning indigenes to intervene.

     to ameliorate the lingering crisis.

    The community leader, who said the crisis was an issue that could have been resolved, urged parties to put the interest of the body ahead of other personal considerations.

    Joshua hoped that eventually, the matter would be settled in the interest of Ogbia people.

    A prominent indigene, Dr. Dorcas Agboge, expressed frustration about the ongoing court case, saying it was a matter that should be resolved among Ogbia people.

    She said Ogbia Brotherhood should be used to foster the interest of Ogbia people and not those of a few persons, adding that all hands must be on deck to ensure peaceful resolution of the issue.

  • Card reader fails to authenticate Dickson, others

    Card readers on Saturday malfunctioned in most polling units in Bayelsa State and forced voters to resort in manual authentication of their fingerprints.

    At the polling units where Governor Seriake Dickson and his Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Daniel Iworiso-Markson voted in Sagabama and Ogbia Local Government Area, the card readers failed to authenticate their fingerprints.

    They were asked by the electoral officers to undertake manual authentication, which involved identifying their names in the voters’ register and thumb printing on them before casting their votes.

    It was observed that most people that voted in Ward 11, Unit 1 in Opume, Ogbia Local Government Area where Iworiso-Markson cast his ballot at about 9:30am, experienced the same problem.

    At Unit 12, Ward 11 in Opume, card readers refused to work as at 10:30am as the electoral officers said voting could not take place in the unit.

    They however said they were waiting for new card readers to enable voters in the unit cast their ballot.

    But there was massive turnout of voters in most polling units in Ogbia, Yenagoa and Kolokuma-Opokuma local government areas as people waited patiently to cast their votes.

    Speaking after voting in his polling unit, Iworiso-Markson said the exercise in his area was very peaceful and commended the turnout of voters.

    “It is orderly and the voters are conducting themselves very well. There is still an issue with the card reader because it was unable to authenticate my fingerprints. That is the general complain that I noticed here.

    “If there is anything at all that INEC should address speedily, it is the fact that the card readers can’t authenticate fingerprints of the voters. I had to resort to manual authentication,” he said.

    He complained bitterly about violence in Basambiri in Nembe and some parts of Ekeremor, which he said started at the eve of the election.

    Also a founding member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Prince Preye Aganaba, commended the exercise in his hometown in Odi, Kolokuma-Opokuma.

    “People have been able to exercise their franchise. But in one or two places in Odi, we have card reader problems. But they resorted to manual authentication,” he said.

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    Aganaba, however, said there were skirmishes in Ward 5, Olubiri, saying a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) fomented trouble in the area.

    He, however, said security agencies rose to the occasion and arrested the chieftain adding that some thugs tried to disrupt the elections in Sampo.

    He expressed optimism that Buhari would win the election nationally but said he would get improved votes in Bayelsa.

    “Buhari will do a lot better than he did last time and for me that is a win. I am hoping that this time around the president will give appointments to active party members to enable us influence the grassroots”, he said.

    Also speaking, a two-time member of the House of Representatives, Warman Ogoriba, said election went well in Odi, Ward 1, unit 8.

    “There was no incidence of violence and everybody conducted themselves peacefully.

    “The card readers worked well though slow. I got reports in some units that the card readers were not working but they later started working,” he said.

    But scores of indigenes of Opu Nembe and Oluasiri in Nembe Local Government Area besieged the office of the Indepedent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to protest the hijack of materials meant for their areas.

    The protesters blamed some leaders of the APC and demanded the release of the electoral materials belonging to seven wards of Bassambiri and Oluasiri.

    The insisted that the electoral materials for Nembe Constituency 2 and 3 comprising Opunembe and Oluasiri were hijacked and taken to a hotel in Bassambiri to perpetrate electoral fraud.

    The Nembe Local Government Chairman, Mr. Sunny Erewari, said in a statement on that thugs led by APC leaders hijacked the materials and deprived the people their right to vote.

    He said that some security agencies colluded with APC thugs to chase away all PDP members from Bassambiri.

    He said that the women were protesting because they could not vote in spite of the fact that they all had their permanent voters cards.

    There were reports of shooting in Agbere community in Sagabama as suspected political thugs invaded the area and made away with ballot boxes for the 10 units.

  • Corps member who drowned in Bayelsa

    Johnson Uduebor, a youth Corps member, drowned in Bayelsa on September 8. Here is the true story of how the Edo State-born star was dimmed, reports MIKE ODIEGWU

    Johnson Uduebor woke up as fit as a fiddle on September 8. The young man, who hailed from Edo State, was full of life. For him, that day in the Ologoghe community, Ogbia, Bayelsa State, where he served his fatherland as a member of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), was bright and held many promises.

    A hard-working Uduebor, whose Place of Primary Assignment (PPA) was the Ologoghe Community Secondary School, had a dream. He dreamt of taking advantage of the school holiday to secure his future. He wanted to key into the agricultural revolution by cultivating cassava. His ultimate aim was to keep himself busy after passing out in December instead of parading the streets in search of scarce jobs.

    The Batch B Stream 2 Corps member’s main objective was to produce cassava flour popularly known as garri because of its scarcity and high demand in Bayelsa. But all his dreams, aspirations and efforts were swallowed by Bayelsa waters.

    Uduebor never knew the danger lurking around. Already, he purchased a parcel of land alongside his colleague and lodge mate, Jethro Ololade, for cultivation. On the fateful day, the duo set out to clear the land and get it ready for cultivation. They went to the site without their life jackets.

    In fact, there was no need for the jackets since the farmland could be accessed by land. As they trekked, they spoke about the farmland; how fertile it was and the kind of yields they expected from it.  It was a smooth journey. They got the work done without bruises, though they were exhausted.

    At the end, Uduebor and his friend decided to trek back to their lodge. But the Edo man never saw his lodge again. He was buried underneath the water.

    Ololade, who survived drowning, but yet to recover from the shock, narrated how they ended up having a boat accident. He said around their lodge, they saw one of their students, a 15-year-old boy, paddling a rickety canoe. The boy, whose name was not given, was just learning how to paddle a canoe.

    “We were almost at our lodge because it was a walkable distance when we saw the boy. There was no need for us to board the boat because we would get home without using the water. But on sighting our student, Uduebor beckoned on him.

    “When the boy came with his canoe, we exchanged pleasantries with him and Uduebor suggested that we join him in the boat to cross over to the other side since the distance was not much,” he said.

    Ololade said he tried to discourage him from boarding the canoe. He said the paddler even told them that he was an amateur, who was just learning how to survive the Ijaw way. He confirmed that the boy also said the boat was too small and too fragile for three persons.

    But the Corps members decided to board for the sake of having the feeling of sailing on water.

    “We just wanted to experience being on water for the first time. That’s why Uduebor suggested it and I agreed,”he said.

    The canoe boy struggled with his emergency passengers across the water. He was almost at the shores, when the tide rose with speed and overturned the canoe. Ololade was able to jump with all his energy to the shores and held tenaciously to a stump of a tree. The canoe boy did the same. Both of them were rescued by an elderly woman.

    However, Uduebor was nowhere to be found. He fell into the water that was filled with hyacinths. The community was thrown into confusion when news filtered in that a Corps member was missing along the Ogbia waterways. Some community folks dived into the spot to save him but could not find him.

    Ololade said: “I was able to struggle and hold onto the stump of a tree and was rescued by an old woman. The boy paddling the canoe almost got drowned but was rescued by the old woman too. Johnson was nowhere to be found. He was searched for thoroughly but the search yielded no fruit.”

    Indeed, the community of Corps members were in disarray when Ololade returned to the lodge without his friend. The leadership of the NYSC in the state immediately started making frantic efforts to locate the missing corps member.

    On September 11, the state coordinator, NYSC, Mrs. Loto Bolade, who could not control her tears, led a delegation to the distressed area in the company of the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Youth Matters, Appah Kelvin, the NYSC Public Relations Officer, Mathew Ngobua and other senior officials of the scheme.

    As the search for Uduebor continued, Mrs. Bolade and her entourage boarded a boat and went round the riverine communities in Ogbia, assembled Corps members posted in the areas and warned them against traveling by water no matter the distance without their life jackets. She reminded them of the orientations they received in the camp on how to use life jackets that were given to them. She prayed for them.

    Mrs. Bolade was still hopeful that Uduebor would be found alive. She concluded that perhaps the young man, who was loved in the community because of his humility, intelligence and hard-work, had been rescued in any neighbouring community, but was unconscious to identify himself.

    The state government was involved. The government set up a committee led by the former Secretary to the State Government, Chief Serena Dokubo-Spiff with a mandate to comb all the nooks and crannies of the creeks to find the missing Corps member.

    On September 12, the committee, including Mrs. Bolade, visited the missing corps member’s community and met with the principal of his school. The principal, who lamented the development, said he was not aware that the corps members purchased land for farming.

    He said he had given all of them serving in the community a parcel of land for cultivation. He added that if he had known that Uduebor wanted a personal farmland, he would have provided a parcel for him free of charge.

    The principal also said the Corps members had no need for cultivation of land since they were to pass out in December. But Ololade explained to the committee that they embarked on the project to keep them busy after passing out because of the high level of unemployment in the country. He said they had planned to come back, harvest the cassava and process it into flour for sale.

    Days turned to a week, but Uduebor was nowhere in sight. Funds were provided and more divers and search parties were employed to locate Uduebor. Divers spread their tentacles and explored the waters of Ogbia, Nembe and Brass. Mrs. Bolade was not herself. Everyday she would go to the community and come back to Yenagoa with sorrow.

    Eventually, some experienced divers went back to the spot of the incident and found the remains of Uduebor on September 17. After nine days underneath the water, Uduebor was found clutching heaps of water hyacinth. The body was conveyed to the morgue of the Federal  Medical Centre (FMC) Yenagoa.

    It was a period of mourning for all the Corps members and officials of NYSC. Mrs. Bolade cried like a baby. She refused to be consoled. In fact, people thought she was the biological mother of the deceased.

    On Tuesday, the remains of Uduebor, who died serving his fatherland were released to his family and evacuated to Edo State for burial. For his parents, it was an incalculable and irreparable loss; an investment gone down the drains.

    It was one death too many. They lamented that the death of Uduebor was avoidable. One of the Corps members, who identified himself as Daniel, said he would never go close to water again without his life jacket.

    Also, Destiny, another Corps member, described Uduebor as a cool-headed man. He wondered why he boarded a boat without his life jacket.

    “Despite all the warnings, it is sad that just a few minutes of joy could land Uduebor in the grave,”he said.

     

     

  • RIFAN urges Bayelsa youths to embrace agric, shun crime

    The Bayelsa chapter of Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN) has urged youths in the state to shun crime and embrace agriculture so as to boost the economy.

    Mr Ezekiel Ogbianko, state RIFAN Chairman, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yenagoa on Tuesday that crimes like stealing, pipeline vandalism and kidnapping were destructive and harmful to any growing economy.

    He described farming as the oldest and the most lucrative business that was not perishable, urging the youth to go into it.

    “We cannot fold our hands and be begging the government for jobs that are not forthcoming; there is more money in agriculture than the oil and gas.

    “RIFAN in Bayelsa is ready to partner with individuals or groups that would want to venture into rice farming.

    “We will continue to do what we can do to ensure that there is enough food for the common man in the society.

    “We have commenced clearing of lands for the new rice planting season and many farmlands have been acquired, cutting across the eight local government areas of Bayelsa.

    “The state’s topography is not a hindrance to rice cultivation because what we are into is pure mechanised farming; therefore, the challenges of terrain can be surmounted,” he said.

    NAN reports that Bayelsa has a riverine and estuarine setting, as a larger percentage of the state comprises settlements which can only be accessed via water transportation.

    Out of the eight local government areas of the state, only Yenagoa, Ogbia, Sagbama and Kolokumo/Opokuma local government areas can be accessed by road.

  • PDP’s BoT meeting in Bayelsa sparks row

    PDP’s BoT meeting in Bayelsa sparks row

    It was meant to bring peace. But a meeting by the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)  in Bayelsa State to reconcile feuding groups ahead of the December 5 governorship election has provoked more controversies.

    The Acting Chairman of the party’s BoT, Dr. Haliru Mohammed, it was gathered, presided over the parley which was convened on Sunday at the courtyard of the former President Goodluck Jonathan in Otuoke, Ogbia Local Government Area.

    It was gathered that the meeting was at the behest of Jonathan, who was said to be making efforts to halt the exodus of his party men to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    A core decision taken at the gathering, it was learnt, was the lifting of the suspension and expulsion of party leaders by the State Working Committee (SWC).

    The SWC, in a move supported by the Governor Seriake Dickson, expelled for anti-party activities during the last general elections.

    They were sanctioned a few months after the state chairman of the party was suspended for allegedly diverting N40million campaign funds donated by the former Minister of Petroleum, Mrs. Diezani Allison-Madueke – an allegation he denied.

    But the move backfired and led to a prolonged crisis that saw some disgruntled people pitching their tent with the APC.

    The Saturday meeting, which started at 11am, however, ended with anti-Dickson forces claiming that the governor and the chairman of the state Reconciliation Committee were barred from the gathering.

    One of the anti-Dickson party members said the meeting, insisted that Dickson and Alameiyesiegha should not be part of it.

    The source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The two were asked to leave and were accompanied out of the venue by Haliru before the meeting commenced. They accused Alamieseigha of taking sides and insisted that he should not be party of the gathering.

    But a loyalist of the governor who spoke in confidence said nobody was walked out of the meeting.

    He said: “This is part of a campaign of calumny against Dickson. I was present at the meeting and nobody was walked out. It is senseless to say that a sitting governor who also initiated the reconciliation and a former governor who is the chairman of the reconciliation committee were barred from attending a meeting. It is unbelievable. Nothing of such happened”.

    Also, the Secretary of the state Reconciliation Committee, Chief Thompson Okorotie, said there was no time the governor or any member of the party was walked out of the meeting.

    He said the Haliru-led committee met with groups separately as part of diplomacy in resolving the crisis.

    “Dickson had an engagement to inaugurate the Nembe City stadium. So after concluding his meeting with the committee, he was allowed to go for his engagement with his entourage. We also followed him to Nembe.

    “Alamieyeseigha followed us to Nembe. Even the former President left shortly because the committee wanted to be left alone with the people they invited to meet. So, it is not true that he was walked out of the meeting,” he said.

    Also, the state Secertary of PDP, Mr.  Godspower Keku, said the meeting ended peacefully, with a call on feuding members and stakeholders to close ranks, ahead of the forthcoming governorship poll.

    He said the meeting resolved to rescind the suspension and expulsion of some members, who had despite the internal squabbles, remained in the PDP, unlike those, who defected to the opposition.

    He said the decision was taken in the best interest of the party, especially with a crucial election around the corner.

    According to him, the decision was taken on Dickson’s request.

     He, however, pointed out that, the lifting of the suspensions was still subject to the ratification of the state’s working committee, which is expected to deliberate on it soon.

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  • In Ogbia, one good term deserves another

    One good turn, they say, deserves another. But for the representatives of the 18 communities that make up the Ogbia Constituency ll in Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, one good term deserves another.

    Men and women, young and old from the constituncy trooped to Yenagoa, the state capital on Tuesday. They found their ways to the capital city through different means of transportation. Persons living in the rural communities came on chartered buses while those living in Yenagoa and close to the venue of the event walked some distance.

    In their best traditional attires they came. Their physiognomical countenances radiated with joy as they exchanged pleasantries. Youths, elders, women groups and traditional rulers of about 18 communities that make up the constituency were present. To them, Chief Obedient Emoto has served them well in the Bayelsa State House of Assembly and he deserves a second term.

    To reinforce their decision, the elated constituents rolled out their drums and danced to their ancestral rhythm. Niger Delta Report was told that the event was put together by the lovers of the lawmaker to passionately appeal to him to return to the hallowed chamber in 2015. Emoto who was described by various people as a grassroot politician was in attendance with his beautiful wife.

    So, he listened to speeches from the Obhan Anyama Council of Community Development Committee (OACDC), Pro-Jonathan Vanguard (PJV), Ogbia Gradutae Forum (OGF), Ogbia Constituency ll Advancement Forum (OCAF) and Obanema’s representative.

    Their solidarity speeches were laced with commendations and appreciation of Emoto’s personality and performance. Some described him as a selfless and honest lawmaker; others referred to him as a man of outstanding integrity; still others said the lawmaker who hails from Ologi community in Ogbia, has outstanding leadership qualities.

    The hall, however, erupted with intermittent applauses when a community leader, Mr. Majesty Inegbagha, seized the floor for over an hour to enumerate the achievements of Emoto in less than three years in office.

    He highlighted the importance of legislation and said: “The office of the state House of Assembly cannot be occupied by riff-raff, nonentities, criminals, impostors and ego-centric persons whose motives of entering politics are borne out of selfish desire to amass wealth at the detriment of the people.

    “Days have gone when people use guns, thugs and all forms of criminal tendencies to hijack the mandate of the people so as to under-develop them. Today, people have realised that politics is meant for persons who place public interest above their personal gains.

    “The people of Ogbia Constituency ll have woken from their slumber and have resolved to sustain the mandate of their elected leaders who have shown exemplary and unparalleled leadership qualities for the overall interest of all devoid of sentiment, discrimination and domestic tendencies.

    “The people have concluded that legislators like Chief Obedient Emoto who attach importance to public interest above his personal gains are very rare in the contemporary Nigerian politics. He observes the moral laws of politics which is based on honesty, goodness, righteousness and consideration for others”.

    He recalled that immediately he was sworn-in in June 2011, Emoto began to present the basic problems of his constituency to the state and the federal government for attention. He wrote letters and memos to the various ministries, agencies and parastatal.

    Some of the needs and problems he was said to have identified were dilapidated school buildings in the area, electrification and wiring of communities, provision of potable water, shore protection of Anyama, Ayakoro, Ologi and Otuegwe and sand filling of Otuedu community waterfront, provision of landing jetties, construction of road to link Ogbia Constituency ll to the state capital and construction of befitting general hospital in the constituency.

    Through Emoto’s efforts, Inegbagha said the government has given attention to some of the myriads of problems in the constituency. According to him, the inputs of the lawmaker were visible in the 45 bills so far passed into law by the assembly.

    “Indisputably, he is one of the most regular and punctual lawmaker in the state House of Assembly”, he said.

    He added that Emoto’s constituency projects were adjudged by the Directorate of Project Monitoring and Evaluation the best in the state. “The lawmaker has completed the boarding school constituency project at the Government Secondary School, Anyama, the constituency electrification project at Ologi, headmaster’s quarters at Otuedu while many primary school projects are ongoing”, he said.

    He noted that the lawmaker has been at the vanguard of paying school and WAEC fees of students from the constituency adding that his medical, infrastructural and social programmes were unbeatable.

    After thoroughly assessing the performances of the legislator. The constituents moved a motion to adopt him as their preferred choice for 2015. In unison, they gave him a clean bill of health.

    In his acceptance, Emoto promised more effective representation vowing to attract more development to the area.