Tag: Okorocha

  • ‘Okorocha saved Ndigbo  from meaningless opposition’

    ‘Okorocha saved Ndigbo from meaningless opposition’

    National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) John Odigie-Oyegun, Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai, and his Bauchi State counterpart, Mohammed Abubakar, have described the Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, as a visionary politician who saved Ndigbo from “meaningless” opposition.

    The trio who were in Owerri, the Imo State capital, to witness a public presentation on Okorocha’s scorecard in five years.

    They noted that Okorocha took an uncommon and unusual decision when he joined the APC at a time Igbos were supporting the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Lauding Okorocha’s achievements, El Rufai said: “I respect Governor Okorocha because he is one of the few politicians who saw tomorrow. The entire Southeast should commend him because if not for him they would have been condemned to meaningless opposition.

    “Imo is already great; as a first time governor, I am happy to associate with experienced governors like Okorocha to get free training, I commend Okorocha for his views, achievements and above all, for his ‘Nigerianess’ because he has proved that Nigeria is truly one.”

    Abubakar described Okorocha as one of the most performing APC governors. “I am yet to see such achievements or performance put together by any governor in Nigeria. I must congratulate the Okorocha and his team for the great achievements despite the paucity of funds.”

    Odigie-Oyegun noted that Okorocha has made the party proud by surpassing his campaign promises. “I want to say that Imo State today is better and has been rescued, and as the National Chairman of the APC, I am happy with the level of achievements recorded by the Rescue Mission Administration.”

    Okorocha said his administration was able to achieve all it did because it adopted an unusual approach that undermined bureaucratic bottlenecks that has hitherto marred government business.

    According to him, “when we came in we adopted what we called four-year rolling plan signed by the House of Assembly, which is like a four year budget and allows you know what you are going to do for the next four years and this removed all the bureaucratic bottlenecks which is the greatest enemy of government business. For the five years I have been in power, I have not been in my office for more than 15 times because many Governors spend a great deal of time talking about Due Process, which I call Due Process of corruption, so we have removed Due Process in government business in Imo State and that is why we have achieved so much with very little capital”.

  • APC is building new  Nigeria, says Okorocha

    APC is building new Nigeria, says Okorocha

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha yesterday said the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) administration at the Federal level is demolishing what he called the old and shaky structures the country stood on and rebuilding it for a new nation that all Nigerians will be proud to have.

    The governor spoke at a special church service marking Sunday’s Democracy Day celebration at the Victory Chapel at the Government House in Owerri, the state capital.

    He said: “What is happening now in the country is a total reconstruction of Nigeria and laying of a strong foundation that will metamorphose into a new Nigeria we shall all be proud of.

    “The restructuring requires patience and perseverance on the part of all. The APC government, led by President Muhammadu Buhari, will put Nigeria back on its strong foot. The APC government will not use the downturn in the economy as an excuse but will bring water out of stone to put the nation right.”

    He added: “What we are passing through now as a nation is a road other great nations, such as the United States of America (U.S.A) and Britain, passed through before they got to where they are today. If Nigeria fails from now henceforth, then the APC will be held responsible. But this government must be given time to clear the rot of yesteryears.”

    On his achievements in Imo State, Okorocha said: “The joy of a father is to see the collection of successful sons he has set the state on the right path of greatness with his Rescue Mission team. I love Imo State.

    “I am doing my best to live a legacy and mark that the generation yet unborn will be proud of.”

    Also, Deputy Governor Eze Madumere said: “Five years down the line, we can look back and thank God for all we have done to uplift the infrastructural situation of the state and raise the living condition of Imo people.

    “I work for the glory of the job and not for its gains. My struggle is to see that my name and story appear favourably and boldly when the history of the state will be written.”

     

  • Okorocha: Uncommon methods, uncommon results

    It must be noted upfront that one had been one of the harshest critics of the man in Douglas House, Owerri, Imo State, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, especially in its early days. Now five years in the saddle, running out his second term in office, truth must be told that as far as governance and accomplishments go in today’s epoch, Okorocha will stand out among the high achievers in Nigeria.

    But because he has adopted a peculiar style all of his own but which rubs off badly on many people, he has not been quite popular among the critical elite and intelligentsia.

    But being a participant observer in the four years preceding his emergence, one is in a pole position to make informed judgment on what has transpired in this last five years.

    First let us consider some elements of the governor’s uncommon methods which his critics often latch upon to pummel him. Most notable is that Governor Okorocha seems to have adopted a no-method approach to governance. He seems to have obvious disdain for bureaucracy, red-tapeism and paperwork.

    Explaining this approach, he seems to believe that going by the level of development of the country today, only a “task force” system would engender rapid infrastructure development. He is convinced that there is need to deliberately whittle down the ‘debilitating’ influences of such groups as the bumbling bureaucrats, the grasping elite and the carpet-bagging political class so that resources could be harnessed for rapid development of the state. He thinks these centrifugal forces suck in much of the resources of a state leaving little for public works.

    This has been both his guiding principle and driving force. He works on the go, he said, and sometimes for many weeks, he does not see the four walls of his office. It is easier to see me at my project sites than in the Government House, he noted recently to a group of visiting senior journalists.

    Thus, while you are bound to quarrel with his methods which pay no heed to structured tendering and procurement processes which are the hallmarks of public administration, he has achieved immense results far more than his immediate predecessors. Again, people say the quality to his projects are below par but there are projects, huge, huge projects across the state only reminiscent of the Sam Mbakwe glorious era.

    One of the greatest things going for him is that he is a big man with big, big ideas seemingly swimming about in his head. He thinks big; indeed, adventurously big. Is it not said that it is better to aim for the sky so that should you fail, you would at least crash on an iroko tree. This seems to be Governor Okorocha’s abiding work ethic.

    No matter how much you may dislike a guy, you cannot discount self-evident facts that present in form of huge projects across the state. A few examples will suffice here. There was only one major road linking new Owerri to the chaotic old part of town. Today, over four virgin roads including three bridges across Nworie River have been accomplished in just four years. This feat could not be achieved in 12 years preceding his time.

    Owerri, Imo’s capital city is indeed a huge beneficiary of Okorocha’s infrastructure revolution. There are so many construction works going on in Owerri that the question would be, where does he get the funds to accomplish all these. Here is a checklist of some landmark edifices: an underground tunnel crossing the Owerri-Port-Harcourt Expressway by the Concorde gate; a set of six 21-story highrise buildings in new owerri; the outer ring road started by the Ikedi Ohakim administration with two flyovers and the Chukwuma Nwoha dual carriage stretch; the Relief market extension; Concorde Hotel makeover; Ochiedike Specialist Hospital to mention only a few projects.

    Another landmark feat is the dualisation of the nearly 100- kilometre Owerri-Orlu road which has a major bridge. One doubts if any other state governor in Nigeria has done this stretch of road which ordinarily is something in the realm of the federal government. In Ogboko, Ideato, Orlu zone, a massive tertiary institution – the Eastern Palm University, will resume academic session in October this year.

    Though it is a public-private project according to the governor, it is a showpiece citadel. Nothing like it has been accomplished by any state governor in the entire South-east in the last 30 years. Even the old Imo State University does not come anywhere close to it. It is indeed a most ambitious project which will make any Imolite proud upon completion.

    Though Okigwe has not fared as well as Orlu and Owerri zones, but at that, it can be said that Okigwe never had it so good since its inception. Roads are being dualised in Amaraku, Anara and Okigwe. An imposing Princess Hotel is rising in Okigwe and so is the Okigwe Township stadium among other urban improvement projects.

    Twenty seven modern general hospitals have been built in each of the local government areas of the state, a feat unprecedented in any single tenure. While some may worry about the state of old hospitals these new ones are vast upgrades which have taken health infrastructure in Imo State a notch up. What we have in these new structures is a template for a total revamp of Imo health sector.

    There is an on-going drive to plant at least one agro-based industry in each local government council of the state. This initiative would drive the government’s economic diversification programme. Some of the numerous abandoned factories across the state are already being brought back to life.

    It is impossible and even improper to seek to capture the achievements of Governor Okorocha in one short article, but suffice to say that as far as state governance go in Nigeria today, he stands out as a governor who has left a shinning legacy already. Yet he still has three years to go.

    There may well be something enduring about Okorocha’s uncommon approach to governance for if he continues at this current pace he is bound to surpass the legacies of Dee Mbakwe in the pantheons of Imo leadership.

  • Buhari’s one year in office a huge success, says Okorocha

    Buhari’s one year in office a huge success, says Okorocha

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha at the weekend said President Muhammadu Buhari’s first one year has scored huge successes in all sectors of the economy.

    The governor said within a year, the President had laid a solid foundation for a new Nigeria, adding that whoever succeeds him would not grapple with the type of rot he inherited.

    Okorocha addressed reporters in Owerri, the state capital, marking the first year of his second tenure in office.

    The governor said it would take a man with President Buhari’s strength of character, integrity and global acceptability to rescue the nation from the current socio-economic challenges.

    Okorocha, who had announced his formal withdrawal from the 2019 presidential race to support the President for a second tenure, said the President had justified the confidence Nigerians reposed in him by implementing sound economic policies to revamp the economy and restore investors’ confidence.

    He said: “Presently, it is only President Buhari who can fix Nigeria. His global acceptability has restored Nigeria’s respect because a nation is rated by the character of its leader. Today, Nigeria is respected globally and foreign investors are now willing to do business in Nigeria. It can only take a Buhari to fight corruption the way he is doing. You can also agree with me that the war against Boko Haram and other insurgents has been largely successful.

    “President Buhari may not have built any infrastructure in the first one year but he is laying a strong foundation upon which a better Nigeria will be built.

    “Mind you, his first budget has just been passed. After the implementation, Nigerians will appreciate what President Buhari has done. This is so because in the past, no administration achieved over 10 per cent budget implementation. But under Buhari, the budget will record better implementation.”

    On his own scorecard, Okorocha said his Rescue Mission administration surpassed previous administrations in providing infrastructure, security and socio-economic development.

    The governor noted that in the last five years in the saddle in Imo State, he initiated and completed over 1,000 verifiable projects across the state.

    Among them, he said, are over 600 kilometres of rural roads, 27 new general hospitals in each of the 27 local government areas, free education, among other projects.

    Okorocha, who pledged to sustain the free education programme, despite the current economic challenges, said the programme had reduced the level of poverty from 57 per cent in 2011 to 19 per cent in 2016.

    He said: “We have justifiably utilised the resources of the state in the last five years. We have also prudently managed the local government funds to develop the state.

    “We are building the first-ever flyover in the state and, by the time the 27 general hospitals become fully operational, the state will be the next destination for health tourism. I have also completed all the projects abandoned in the state the military era till date.”

  • Okorocha to NYSC members: don’t reject postings

    Okorocha to NYSC members: don’t reject postings

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha has urged National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members to see their postings to various parts of Nigeria as a call to nation-building.

    The governor advised them to stop rejecting their postings for fear of death or molestation.

    Okorocha spoke yesterday in Owerri, the state capital, when he hosted the Director-General of NYSC, Brig.-Gen. Suleman Kazaure.

    The governor noted that NYSC members should also regard their postings to various parts of the country as a test of patriotism.

    According to him, “patriotism is not only in the fear of the law but equally in the love of one’s country”.

    Okorocha said: “Even the greatest love a man can show his nation is that he dies to save it. We must, therefore, never for reasons of terrorism or cult activities, refuse to fight this battle of indivisibility of the nation. We must remain united. The essence of NYSC is nation integration. Our country is going through a very difficult moment and harassment by men of underworld who have organised themselves to humiliate, kill and maim people.

    “NYSC members should be bold to stand up and serve their fatherland without fear of terrorism. The time has also come for the NYSC members to begin to receive some forms of military training for reasons of self-defence. The most humiliating case is to see a man with gun, who ordinarily cannot beat you face-to-face and because of the piece of metal he has, he treats you like a piece of dirt. That is the most painful.”

    The governor described Kazaure as a vibrant soldier with integrity, adding that Nigeria had been in dire need of men and women of integrity who could contribute to the development of the nation.

    Kazaure said he was touring Imo State to get acquainted with the situation in NYSC’s camp.

    He hailed Okorocha for what he called a befitting camp he was building for the NYSC.

  • I’ll not run for President in 2019, says Okorocha

    I’ll not run for President in 2019, says Okorocha

    •Governor backs Buhari for second term

    Imo State Governor and the Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Governors’ Forum, Rochas Okorocha, yesterday said he has jettisoned his 2019 presidential ambition to support President Muhammadu Buhari for a second term.

    The governor addressed media executives, who were on tour of projects across the state.

    He noted that President Buhari had shown good leadership virtues and should be encouraged.

    Okorocha said his long-time desire to be the President of the country was to provide good leadership, adding that since President Buhari had shown that kind of courageous, visionary and people-oriented leadership, his best bet was to support him to continue beyond 2019.

    He said: “Yes, I have been running for the presidency of this great nation until God said I should settle for the Imo governorship. That passion to become the President of the country is not just borne out of the thirst for the position but arose out of the eagerness to offer the nation and its people a strong leadership. The essence would be to build a nation of our collective dreams and aspirations.

    “President Buhari came in almost one year now and within the one year, Nigeria has once again got the doors of the rest of the world opened for her. He has shown courage, confidence, maturity and strong leadership. There are now high feelings of leadership in the country.

    “What the President, therefore, needs in the circumstance is to be supported and encouraged to continue the good work, even after 2019. For that reason, I have decided to keep my presidential ambition aside. It is also believed that others with such ambition would also want President Buhari to be given the required support to continue the good job, to a very large extent.”

    Okorocha urged the media executives to also support President Buhari’s policies and programmes in the interest of the nation.

    The governor noted that the President had shown quality leadership.

    He added: “God loves this country and has also shown such love by making it possible for Buhari to emerge the President. This is because if the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had been allowed to continue in power beyond 2015, the nation and its people would have been in for it by now.”

    The governor urged Nigerians to continue to pray for the President.

  • Okorocha: PDP’s zoning of VP  to Southeast mocks Ndigbo

    Okorocha: PDP’s zoning of VP to Southeast mocks Ndigbo

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha has said the alleged plan by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to zone the vice-presidency to the Southeast in 2019 is a mere mockery of Ndigbo.

    In a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr Sam Onwuemeodo, the governor said it was laughable that the PDP suddenly realised that the Southeast could get the position of the Vice-President one year after it lost power.

    The statement said: “For 16 years, the PDP was in power. The party never had any reason to remember that the Southeast, as a major bloc in the country, could occupy the Vice-President position or could hold any of the sensitive positions in the country. They are just waking up from their slumber after being out of power.

    “The PDP never allowed the Southeast to have the President, the Vice-President, the Senate President, the Speaker of House of Representatives and so on. The Southeast totally lost out in the PDP government.

    It added: “Even in terms of projects, the Southeast had a very rough experience in the PDP government. All the federal roads in the zone were death traps until the party was voted out of power. The second Niger Bridge became endless pit for the PDP. Some oil locations belonging to some states in the zone were taken away and given to other states outside the zone. It was a hopeless situation for the zone under the PDP.

    “Now, they have begun to dangle or brandish the VP position before the zone because they desperately want power again. They also know that what the zone could not get from the PDP government, they could now get from the Muhammadu Buhari-led All Progressives Congress (APC) government.

    “The fact is that the Southeast would get its due from the APC administration because the party believes in fair play, justice and equity. The PDP toyed with the fate of the Southeast, which the APC cannot do. The good signs are everywhere. The Southeast will be better under the APC government.

    “Our interest is to develop the Southeast, and the APC administration will do that for the zone. Anything due for the zone will be given to it because the level of greed in the PDP cannot be found in APC. The APC won’t wait until it is out of power before remembering the Southeast or any other zone. That cannot be our portion.

    “We are going to play visionary and group politics, which the PDP never allowed the Southeast to play. A few individuals used the zone to load their political buses. We are going to play collective politics in lieu of divisive politics.

    “It is only important that the Southeast would be strong in APC and give President Buhari all the needed support and solidarity. So, the Southeast should see the PDP’s VP as a Greek gift.”

     

  • Ikpeazu, Okorocha and DSS

    When the Department of Security Services DSS recently announced its investigations claiming that members affiliated with Indigenous Peoples of Biafra IPOB, abducted, murdered and buried five Fulani men in a shallow grave in Abia State, many discerning Nigerians must for good reasons, have been frightened. The shock is not only borne out of the dastardly nature of the alleged criminality but the frightening prospects of the incident ruffling the fragile peace that currently pervades the nation’s landscape.

    DSS spokesman, Tony Opuiyo, said the five men who resided in the Isuikwuato LGA of Abia State were discovered in the Umuanyi forest where they were suspected to have been killed and buried, amidst 50 other shallow graves of unidentified persons. He further alleged that the IPOB was gradually showing its real colours.

    But the IPOB vehemently denied the allegation by the DSS describing it as “fabricated lies”. The group said it was unfortunate to link a non-violent body with the alleged abduction murder and burying of five Fulani men. IPOB further alleged that the accusation was meant to instigate northerners whom they do not have any problem with against them so that there will be reprisal killing of their people in the north for no justifiable reason.

    Since then, the matter has remained at the realm of claims and counter claims as no further evidence has been adduced by the DSS to show how it arrived at the conclusion that IPOB was responsible for that murderous act.

    But a new dimension came into the controversy last week when the governors of Abia and Imo states- Okezie Ikpeazu and Rochas Okorocha addressed the press. In that media briefing after a joint security council meeting of the two states, the governors while condemning the killing of the five Fulani men in a border forest of the two states, said it was an act of kidnapping by criminals which has been rife in the states.

    More specifically, Okorocha said the killing was an act of kidnapping and had nothing to do with ethnicity. The governor said “information reaching us reveal that it is not just five Fulani men as there were two corpses believed to be Igbo from the area, so it is not just a direct attack on any ethnic group”. The governors also disclosed the arrest of the culprits who have been giving useful information with a promise that they will be made to face the full weight of the law.

    With the intervention of the two governors, it is now obvious who between the DSS and the IPOB, is telling the truth in respect of the motive behind the killing of the Fulani men. It would also seem that speculations on who is responsible for the killings have been laid to rest especially given the arrest of the suspected masterminds of the devious act.

    The intervention of the two governors, as commendable and timely as it was, has brought to the fore the conduct of the DSS in the matter. Here is a responsible security organ of the government that went to town to announce that members affiliated with IPOB abducted , murdered and buried five Fulani men in a shallow grave. And given the high regard the public has for that security arm of the government, many must have believed that the DSS must have had their facts right since they claimed the disclosure was a product of their investigations.

    But we have now been made to know after a joint security council meeting of the two states that the five men as reprehensible as their killings were, fell victim to the rampant kidnapping in the two states. What is more, two other bodies believed to be Igbo from the area were among the victims of the murderous activities of the kidnappers.

    How the DSS came to the conclusion that the five Fulani men were killed by the IPOB remains largely curious. Why it also chose to ignore the fact that there were two other bodies suspected to be Igbo victims of the murder at that site littered with 50 other shallow graves puts serious doubt on the purpose the information dished out by DSS was meant to serve.

    And given the sensitivity of such information and its frightening prospects to further compound the fragile security situation in the country, it remains a puzzle why the DSS rushed to town with information now faulted by the joint security council meeting of the two states. It is noteworthy that such joint meetings have among others in attendance, the state directors of the DSS.

    My reading of this development is that having participated in the joint security council meeting of the two states where it was agreed that the five Fulani men were victims of kidnapping, the DSS apparently admitted that the information it fed its national headquarters on who killed the Fulani men was incorrect. That was why the two governors had to announce to the public that the killings had nothing to do with ethnicity, which link the IPOB angle inevitably conveyed.

    By that also, the governors have diffused the tension and prospects of reprisal killings that may have followed that disclosure. It is nothing new that reprisal killings have before now been rampant from the part of the country where the five men come from. In the past, we have seen how even a cartoon that appeared outside this country resulted in reprisal killings in north from people who considered that cartoon offensive to their religion.

    Why the DSS could not factor such incendiary prospects while taking a decision to go public with an allegation that has now been proven wrong is a sad commentary on the proficiency and competence of those who handled that piece of information. Even at that, if the DSS had in verity stumbled at information linking the IPOB with that killing, what ought to have been its appropriate response to it? To go public with it or spread its dragnet to apprehend the culprits and make them face the full weight of the law?

    For this writer, the rational option for that security agency would have been to liaise with other security organs of the government to apprehend the masterminds of that devious act. Since it was able to finger the body allegedly connected with the incident, we presume the agency had a fair idea of those who took part in the killing. The right approach would have been to arrest and prosecute them rather than going public with unconfirmed information that could further create serious security challenges.

    We have now been told by the governors that the masterminds have been arrested and are giving useful information to the security agencies. That is the right path the DSS should have taken rather than dishing out tendentious information that would later be faulted.

    As much as one resists the lure of imputing motives into that hasty announcement by the DSS, it is utterly disappointing that that agency could not anticipate the mortal harm the development is to the lives of those on whose behalf the IPOB claims to be crusading.  Even if that piece of information was to be correct, the public had no need for it because it could result in reprisals killings. When that happens, would that agency not have failed in its statutory duties?

    We demand a thorough investigation into the circumstances leading to the filing of aspects of that report that has now turned out false. Those found culpable for acts of omission of commission should be punished. That is the right way to correct the festering impression by the IPOB that linking it to the killings was primed to precipitate reprisal killings of their people in the north.

    Above all, Ikpeazu and Okorocha deserve commendation for their bold and timely intervention that has saved the nation another cycle of violence arising from the poor handling of the matter by the DSS.

  • VP, Ambode, Okorocha, proffer solution to Nigeria’s economic woes

    VP, Ambode, Okorocha, proffer solution to Nigeria’s economic woes

    Vice President Yemi Osibanjo, Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, his Imo State counterpart, Rochas Okorocha and other dignitaries have identified measures to solve the economic challenges in the country.

    They spoke Thursday at the maiden edition of  National Forum on Economy organised by Vintage Press Limited, publishers of The Nation Newspapers, held at Lagos Airport Hotel.
    Osibanjo in his keynote address blamed the nation’s economic challenges on oil dependence and corruption saying that the time has come for the country to look beyond oil and celebrate integrity over corruption.
    According to him, “It is pathetic that a nation with over 170 million people benchmarked its budget on the price of oil. We must look beyond oil because it disturbs us from looking to other sector. In order to move the country forward, we must reduce the FG and state dependence on sharing revenue made from oil sales.”
    He said government is fully aware of the overwhelming challenges confronting Nigerians, assuring that ongoing reforms at various sector is a pointer to the fact that the situation will soon be a thing of the past.
    “The foundation for a strong economy demands that we have appropriate fiscal policies that will help the country that is arising from a very low rate of VAT and a low taxpayer’s base. We are focusing on increasing the country’s taxpayers base. We are committed to expanding the tax net.
    “At the federal level, the implementation of the country’s 2016 budget will stimulate the economy rather than impose undue austerity on the citizens. For instance, 30 percent of the country’s budget has been earmarked for capital expenditure.
    “Non-oil sources comprising company income tax, VAT and others are expected to contribute N1.5 trillion which is more than the estimated revenue from oil. This is unprecedented in the history of the country.”
    Vice President said there is urgent need for the country to take full advantage of the oil sector, adding that rather than extract and exporting, the country must take full advantage of the oil sector and entire value chain.
    He explained that government would soon commence work on the Lagos-Kano and Lagos-Calabar rail routes, as well as 31 major road projects across the country, just as he stressed the commitment of the current administration to give a quantum leap to infrastructural development.

    He said the governments this year will focus on key areas such as oil and gas Agriculture, social investment among others to tackle the situation.
    Governor Ambode in his remark said the nation’s economy was at a critical threshold and thus, will require its leaders to think outside the box and come up with creative innovations that will trigger economic growth nationwide.
    He lamented the fact that previous governments at the federal level failed to take advantage of the oil boom to grow other sectors of the economy, saying that the fall in price in the international oil market coupled with many years of corruption has made the economy vulnerable.
    “It is very unfortunate that we wasted the golden opportunity to deploy the trillions of dollars earned from our oil exports to develop the critical sectors of the economy including power, agriculture, industries, solid minerals, transportation infrastructure among others.  No doubt, if we had done the right thing as some other oil producing countries did, keeping in mind that crude oil is a finite resource, we would not be experiencing the devastating effect of oil price crash on the scale we are experiencing it now.

    “We are now being forced to do, with pains, what we should have done with ease years ago. The task of charting a new direction for the economy is not going to be a tea party. Various policy options must be identified and assessed on the basis of our current situation and needs.  Moving our economy forward requires thinking outside the box and doing things differently. We need creativity, innovation and the courage to take difficult and tough decisions.

    “The leadership of the country at national and state levels must have the courage to take tough decisions and make sacrifices in the near term which will, in the long run, make our economy stronger and sustainable and, consequently result in prosperity across all regions of Nigeria,” he said.

    Recommending strategies to improve the economy, Governor Ambode said that the nation must begin to explore and expand the opportunities that abound in inter-State relations and strengthen regional competitiveness by maximizing economies of scale, regional optimization of assets and endowments and mitigation of afflictions and natural disasters.

    He listed other viable areas for inter-State collaboration to include transport infrastructure to facilitate market linkages, education, market development, human capacity building, security and intelligence sharing, saying that it was high time to move away from an oil driven economy.

    “Prior to the oil boom era, Agriculture was the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy and contributed about 65 per cent to the country’s GDP and represented close to 70 per cent of total exports. Through farming, Nigeria was able to feed its population while major cash crops were exported to earn foreign exchange.

    “From the cocoa and rubber plantations in the West, the groundnut pyramids and cotton in the north, to palm oil in the east; each region was identified by its economic areas of comparative advantage which were collectively harnessed towards ensuring food security and inclusive growth across the country.

    “Given our current economic challenge, I believe it is time we take a cue from our old ‘playbook’ for a viable ‘game plan’ to revive our national economy. States and regions must once again begin to leverage on their respective areas of comparative advantage by establishing partnerships towards establishing inter-State or inter-regional commodity value chain. We must re-start inter-state/regional cooperation,” he said.

    Governor Ambode said that Lagos has already taken the bull by the horn with its recent partnership with Kebbi State aimed at developing a commodity value chain that will see the local production of 70 per cent of Nigeria’s rice needs with a multiplier effect that will ensure job creation, the development of ancillary industries as well as strengthen the Naira.

    The Governor however added that for regional integration to thrive a functional modern rail and water transportation system must be in place, noting that movement of goods, materials and people by road was not only inefficient but fraught with risks, safety hazards and detrimental to the roads.

    Earlier in his opening remarks, Chairman of Vintage Press Limited, publishers of The Nation Newspaper, Wale Edun said the forum was put together not just to lament the challenges facing the country but for government and members of the critical sectors of the economy to dialogues and chart a way out.

  • Okorocha to Ohakim: you’re Imo’s worst governor

    Okorocha to Ohakim: you’re Imo’s worst governor

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha yesterday took a swipe at his predecessor, Ikedi Ohakim, for being what he called the worst governor the state ever had since its creation.

    The governor, who was reacting to a statement credited to Ohakim that he (Okorocha) had destroyed the state, insisted that the only legacy Ohakim left after his four-year term was gala night and expensive parties that drained the state’s resources.

    Ohakim, according to the statement, accused Okorocha of planning to install a successor from his Orlu zone, adding that he left something in the Government House, which he would return to collect.

    But a statement by Okorocha’s Chief Press Secretary, Sam Onwuemeodo, said: “Without mincing words, if there had been one man who paid the state and its people in counterfeit, that man is Chief Ikedi Ohakim, when he was the governor from 2007 to 2011. “If he had done well as governor, Imo people would have given him the mandate for a second term.”

    The statement added: “Ohakim was also very careful in his claims. He carefully avoided accusing Governor Okorocha of non-performance because that would have made us to challenge him to tell Nigerians only one thing he achieved as governor in four years, while we tell Nigerians 1,000 things Governor Okorocha has achieved, which are verifiable.

    “On what he left behind in the Government House for which he wants to come back in 2019, he said he left Owerri master plan and other master plans. In other words, for four years, what he achieved were only master plans that were never worked on. But to us – and to most Imo people – what the former governor left behind were gala night and sharing resources of the state to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) big men. And it was unfortunate.

    “We had taken time also to go through the whole story to see whether the former governor had told his audience how Governor Okorocha destroyed Imo State, but we didn’t find any claim or allusion close to that. He only talked about the governor planning to install another Orlu man as governor in 2019 and the governor sacking the Secretary to the Government of Imo State (SSG); that’s all he claimed he left behind in the Government House Owerri.

    “Let us, on the face value and for the sake of this rebuttal, agree that the governor would like an Orlu zone man to succeed him in 2019. Then, the follow-up question would be: how could that be interpreted to mean destroying the state? And how would the governor dropping the SSG also mean the destruction of the state?

    “In the case of Governor Okorocha, the style is that once the master plan is done, work begins immediately and is also done. We won’t keep master plans waiting till we leave and come back. Our projects are everywhere to be seen. That was why the former governor could not accuse the governor of non-performance.

    “The government, which Governor Okorocha heads, does not take delight in insulting or attacking leaders in the state. We respect them and treat them as such. But the more we try to avoid clashing with them, the more men like the former governor scratch the governor and the government.

    “By 2019, political parties will field their governorship candidates and it is left for Imo people to make their choice not minding which zone the person comes from. “