Tag: Port Harcourt

  • Rivers Collapsed Building: Site engineer, Architect, others to be prosecuted

    Indications emerged weekend that victims of the collapsed 7-storey building in Port Harcourt, the Rivers state will soon get justice.

    It was gathered that the state governor, Nyesome Wike has given a directive to the state Attorney General to put in place a process to arrest and prosecute the owner of the building, Sir Francis Allagoa, apparently for the failure to comply with the building approval he got in 2014.

    Recall that a 7-storey building (with an underground layer) under construction in the Woji road axis of the Government Reserved Area (GRA), of Port Harcourt, collapsed shortly after casting of the sixth floor in November 2018, thereby killing many and injuring others.

    The governor had set up a commission of inquiry led by a state High court Judge to investigate the incident.

    The committee, it was gathered, sat between December 23, 2018 and January 7, 2019.

    Reports of the committee indicted Alagoa, the site engineer and the Architect of the building.

    Read Also: ‘Good times ahead in Rivers’

    Also found wanting in the incident are some principal staff of the state ministry, including Dr. Reason Onya, who voluntarily stepped aside from his position to allow for smooth and uncompromised investigation into the immediate and remote cause of the callapse.

    The  government after the  state Executive meeting presided over by Wike on Friday, directed the State Attorney General, Zacchus Adango  to prosecute Alagoa and any other person whose actions constituted criminality as established by the Judicial Commission of Inquiry that investigated the collapsed 7 Storey building.

    Rivers state Commissioner of Information and Communications,  Emma Okah,  said: “The Rivers State Government accepts that the owner of the building,  Sir Francis J. Allagoa should bear all liability regarding compensation to families of the deceased persons and individual expenses of those injured.”

    He said: “Allagoa is also to bear the cost and make good the damage done to the adjoining property owned by Mrs Edna Ezekiel Hart.”

    The state government also declared  that in line with the recommendations of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry it will comprehensively reform the procedures and processes relating to building approvals and actual construction of buildings to eliminate failure of buildings in the future.

    The government added that the collapsed 7-Storey building was not covered by any approval and that the one obtained in July 2014 was for a four-five floor building.

    The Rivers State Government directed the State Civil Service Commission to take disciplinary action against Town Planner Edmund Obinna, Director of Buildings and Plan Approvals because his actions fell short of expectations.

    The Council also directed the State Civil Service Commission to take disciplinary action against Rev Dr. Mina Aprioku,  Director of Development Control for professional deficiency.

    The Attorney General of the State was directed to prosecute Engr Adeniyi Ibiyeye and Architect Timiebi Reuben for professional misconduct.

    The Council resolved to report Engr Ibiyeye to the Nigerian Society of Engineers and the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria for necessary disciplinary action.

  • Court remands two suspects for alleged kidnap, robbery

    A senior magistrates court in Port Harcourt, Rivers State has ordered the remand in prison custody of two persons for alleged Kidnap and armed robbery.

    The suspects are David Anele ’27’ and Onyemauche Nwankwo ’38’.

    The duo allegedly robbedone Martha Don-Mark of her valuables valued at N500,000 while armed with guns and other dangerous weapons.

    They also allegedly kidnapped their victim and released her on December 20,  2018 after the family had paid N350,000 ransom.

    The suspects are alleged to have committed the offence on December 14, same year at Igbo-Etche, Etche local government area at about 2am in the morning.

    Read Also: Court remands herdsman for allegedly killing farmer

    The three-count charge of conspiracy, armed robbery and kidnap preferred against them were not read out to them;   the court lacks jurisdiction to hear the matter hence, they did not take any plea.

    They were represented by a lawyer who applied for their bail.

    The court presided over by Magistrate Gomba Osaro denied them bail but advised the counsel to seek their bail at the high court.

    Osaro ordered that the suspects be remanded in prison custody while their case file be duplicated and sent to the office of Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) for legal advice.

    She adjourned the case till April 30, for DPP’s advice.

     

  • Wike, Awara clash at stakeholders’ meeting in Port Harcourt

    The Governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike and the state’s governorship candidate of African Action Congress (AAC), Biokpomabo Awara  Saturday clashed at the commission’s stakeholders’ meeting in Port Harcourt.

    Awara, an indigene of Kula-Kalabari in Akuku-Toru Local Government Area of Rivers, accused Wike and INEC of doctoring results of the ‘bloody’ governorship and House of Assembly elections of March 9 in the state.

    Wike, however, accused Awara, other members of AAC and their backers in the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) of promoting violence and scaring investors from Rivers.

    The Chairman of INEC, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, who was represented by the National Commissioner of the commission in charge of Rivers, Bayelsa and Edo States, Barr. May Agbamuche-Mbu, a lawyer, who also chaired the stakeholders’ meeting, urged Rivers residents to allow peace to reign in the state before, during and after the activities outlined for the conclusion of the controversial elections.

    Also in attendance at Saturday’s meeting, which took place at Omni Event Centre, Eastern By-pass, Ogbunabali, Port Harcourt, ahead of April 2 resumption of collation of results of March 9 governorship and House of Assembly elections, was the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 6 Division, Nigerian Army, Port Harcourt, Maj.-Gen. Jamil Sarham, who was represented by the Garrison Commander of 6 Division Garrison, Brig.-Gen. Adeola Kalejaiye.

    Others included Rivers Commissioner of Police, Usman Belel, who is also the Chairman of the Interagency Consultative Committee on Election Security, ICCES, (in Rivers state); and INEC’s Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), in Rivers, Mr. Obo Effanga, who was represented by the Administrative Secretary in the state, Elder Etim Umoh.

    Rivers Chairman of the PDP, Chief Felix Obuah; Ledum Mitee of Initiative for Credible Elections (ICE), who is a former President of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP); representatives of the Navy, Air Force, Department of State Services (DSS), Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), Customs, Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), as well as top politicians and other eminent personalities were also in attendance.

    Awara said: “Surprised that the leaders of political parties involved in the elections were not asked questions by members of INEC’s five-man fact-finding committee. I doubt the reliability of the doctored result sheets and other electoral materials with INEC in the last three weeks. We have record of some of the results being mutilated, particularly that of Akuku-Toru LGA.

    “REC of INEC in Rivers State has refused to give reasons for charging the four compromised electoral officers of the commission, who lack integrity for being card-carrying members of PDP.

    “If the violence made the March 9 elections not to be credible, according to INEC, where did the commission get results for the seventeen LGAs, of Rivers 23 LGAs in the INEC’s possession? At what point did the elections become violence-free, for the commission to now have results for 17 LGAs? Why has INEC refused to release the results of the 17 LGAs it claimed to have and the remaining six LGAs it wants to do supplementary election?”

    Rivers governor, however, accused the AAC’s governorship candidate, members of his party and his backers in APC of being economical with the truth.

    Wike said: “I do not agree that Rivers is a violent state. Rivers State has never and it will not be a violent State.  Why are they raising too much alarm? What causes violence? Why is there violence each time there is election? The only way to have peaceful elections is when the security agencies refuse to interfere or manipulate any process.

    “How did people die? When INEC would go and collate results and people would resist and when people resist, they will shoot them. Rivers is not a violent state. It is most unfortunate that people would leave their state, come to another state, instead of them to make sure what obtains in their state obtains here, they do not want it, they want to cause problems for us.

    “With all due respect, the Garrison Commander (Brig.-Gen. Adeola Kalejaiye) is here. Throughout my political career, of not less than thirty years, I have never experienced the type of roles the army played. We must tell people the simply truth.

    “INEC set up a committee in 2016, during and after the reruns, where it was stated in your report that certain police officer manhandled your electoral official. He even went as far as naming the police officer. What has happened, as INEC? You could have said you did not want that kind of officer again. The same officer was also implicated in your report in these elections. Who are the people causing the violence?

    “Rivers State in not violent when they are drilling crude oil. Why must the violence be during the period of elections? Who are those responsible, in order to tell them? INEC can insist on not requiring the services of the violent security personnel; that is the only way we can have peaceful, free and fair elections in Rivers State. Let the army personnel remove their hands from elections. It is unfortunate that we had some people demonstrating and thanking the Nigerian Army for a job well done. That is Nigeria for us.

    “Who are the security personnel that will be in charge of the collation (between April 2 and 5)? Let us avoid sermon. You do not preach to me what you will not practise. The onus is on the security agencies to help INEC to do the right things, in order to achieve the results the commission wants to achieve. Rivers State is a peaceful state. Nobody should be driving away investors from us. Let personnel of Nigerian Army remove their hands from electoral process.”

    INEC chairman, at the “most-important stakeholders’ meeting,” stated that the elections were suspended on March 10, due to the high-level of violence that occurred during the March 9, 2019 polls in Rivers.

    Yakubu said: “I want to use this opportunity to appeal to the good people of Rivers State, our traditional rulers, market women, youths, leaders and members of political parties in the state, including the candidates in the elections and all other stakeholders to allow peace to reign in the state before, during and after the activities outlined for the conclusion of the elections by the commission.

    “We do not have any other state, apart from Rivers State, to call our own. Let us join hands together to make Rivers State even greater. On the part of the commission, I wish to assure you of our commitment to free, fair and credible elections. We intend to keep these promises. May God, in His kindness, grant Rivers State perpetual peace.

    Read also: Tonye Cole, Accord Party assembly candidates call for fresh election in Rivers

    “The results of the March 9 elections in Rivers State are with us (INEC) in our strong room and they have not been tampered with.

    “A five-man fact-finding committee was therefore set up to ascertain the nature and verify the report of obstructive and lawless activities that generally attended the elections at the state collation centre, other collation centres and polling areas, occasioning the suspension. I was a member of the fact-finding committee. So, I know what I am talking about.

    “The main objective of this meeting is to brief you on the schedule of activities and timeline, set by the commission for the conclusion of the governorship and state House of Assembly elections, and to solicit for your maximum cooperation towards the success of this exercise. It is also to generate discussions among the stakeholders, with a view to achieving transparent, peaceful and violence-free conclusion of the elections, within the timeline set by the commission.”

    Rivers police commissioner also stated that the past few weeks in Rivers state, before, during and after the general elections had been very difficult and trying moment for everyone, stressing that all stakeholders had maintained decorum, outstanding maturity and dedication to peaceful resolution of conflicts in Rivers.

    Belel said: “As it is usual in every contest, winners and losers must emerge, but the maturity with which the contest’s results is accepted, determines how peaceful the society can be. I wish to appeal to all stakeholders to give peace a chance (in Rivers State) and be magnanimous, either in victory or in defeat, as there will still be Rivers State beyond these elections.

    “It is my humble appeal that contestants and parties’ faithful should prevail on their supporters to do away with thuggery and violence. The Rivers State Police Command is determined to provide security for all residents and stakeholders in Rivers State for them to exercise their fundamental rights.

    “As the lead agency and the  Chairman of the Interagency Consultative Committee on Election Security, ICCES, (in Rivers State), I want to use this opportunity to thank all stakeholders for the synergy and oneness of purpose that has kept this state together this long. I hereby encourage all of you to do the needful, in furtherance of our interagency cooperation.”

    Rivers REC of INEC, in his welcome remarks, reiterated that On March 9, the governorship and House of Assembly elections were held in Rivers, but due to unexpected developments, especially security, the collation could not be concluded, maintaining that till now, INEC did not know the winners of the elections.

    Effanga said: “In order to ensure credible process, INEC has sent seasoned electoral officers, led by the National Commissioner in charge of Rivers, Bayelsa and Edo States, Barr. May Agbamuche-Mbu, who is the chairman of this occasion. Political parties that participated in the March 9 elections should submit the names of their agent. We are not conducting fresh elections. The status quo as at March 9 remains.

    “We have the results for these seventeen LGAs: Ahoada East, Akuku-Toru, Andoni, Bonny, Eleme, Emohua, Etche, Ikwerre, Obio/Akpor, Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni, Ogu/Bolo, Okrika, Omuma, Opobo/Nkoro, Oyigbo, Port Harcourt and Tai. Their (17 LGAs) collation was at the local government level. Collation was not completed in the remaining six LGAs: Abua/Odual, Ahoada West, Asari-Toru, Degema, Gokana and Khana.

    “In Abua/Odual LGA, the materials and men did not even go out to the field. They were frustrated from going out and elections did not take place there. In Gokana LGA, materials and men went out to the field, but none came back, because there was outright violence and everything was destroyed. So, we do not have any result from there. In Ahoada West LGA, out of about 100 polling units, we have results in only 24 and that is not good enough. Asari-Toru LGA was not concluded, but we have the polling units’ results available, but they were not collated. Degema LGA has 17 registration areas, which we call wards in INEC’s context, and collation took place in ten, remaining seven. The seven wards, their results are in INEC’s strong room. In Khana LGA, there was no collation at the local government level, but we have results from the polling units and the collation from some wards available.

    “INEC, in its mandate to conduct free, fair and credible elections in Rivers State, decided to come with a timetable (timeline) to let the people know how to ensure the collation and to know the winners.”

    INEC’s REC in Rivers also stated that the stakeholders’ forum was not strange, but to carry everybody along and to know what INEC was doing.

    Effanga noted that before the suspension order came from Abuja on March 10, collation had commenced, with INEC now resuming the collation.

    REC of INEC in Rivers disclosed that the collation, scheduled for between April 2 and 5, would hold at the INEC’s office on Aba Road, Port Harcourt.

  • NIGHT OF HORROR

    GEORGE Onokpoma had no inclination of the horror lurking around his neighborhood on March 20, 2019. As a dedicated member of the National Youths Service Corps (NYSC), the easygoing George, known for his honesty and uprightness, never nursed any foreboding that he could be a target of violence by the same people he came to serve after leaving his comfort zone in Port Harcourt, Rivers State. George, who hails from Delta State, never knew that those he was sacrificing his one year to improve their lives were waiting in the wings to take his life. If he had known that his dreams would be cut short in such a gruesome circumstance in Bayelsa State while serving his fatherland, he would have heeded his elder brother’s advice for redeployment. His elder brother, Honest Akpos, had wanted to seek redeployment for George but he, out of patriotism, turned down the offer, saying: “I will go wherever I am posted”.h But that decision cost him his life. The 29-year-old twin and graduate of the Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) just returned from church where he went for his evening worship. He was sitting at the balcony of his quarters in Swali area of Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, evaluating the scripts of his students when tragedy struck. The quarters, where he lived with other corps members,  belonged to Mr.

    Jerry Yeseme Moses, the owner of a private school, Victory International School, where George and his colleagues discharged their primary responsibilities as teachers. While Moses and his family occupied the first floor of the storey building, George and his colleagues, including other tenants, lived on the ground floor. But like a scene in a horror movie, the building was invaded by suspected cultists at about 10pm. Gunshots were heard by neighbours and in a twinkle of an eye, George was found  on the floor struggling for his life. One of the corps members was also seen gasping for breath in the pool of his own blood, while another victim lay helpless. Their attackers had fled the vicinity. Thirty-year-old Popoola Oluwatobi Olamide, a graduate of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) and indigene of Oyo State, died on the spot. Anthony Gbenga Dada, who hails from Kogi State, and George were rushed to the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Yenagoa. George breathed his last at the hospital, while Dada is still battling to live again. The horror Eyewitnesses narrated the terror unleashed on innocent corps members by gun-wielding cultists. The hoodlums launched their attack under the cover of the night. Moses, who is the landlord of the corps members, said he was inside the house when he heard gunshots. He said: “I am the proprietor of Victory International School, Swali, and the corps members are my employees. On that Wednesday at about 10:30, I was watching television when I heard gunshots. I didn’t know what was happening. Shortly after, the sounds stopped. I rushed out of the house and quickly went downstairs where the corps members lived. “It was then it dawned on me that the attack happened in my building. I saw corps members lying  on the floor. I don’t really know the reason why they were shot. One of them was lying dead, while the other two were still struggling for their lives. “I alerted neighbours to help me put them in the vehicle and I rushed them to the Federal Medical Centre. Unfortunately, two of them died but one was responding to treatment.” Moses said he alerted the paramount ruler of the community immediately he heard the gunshots and appealed to him to call the police. “The policemen were not there when I took them to the hospital. But when I returned, I was told the police came”, he said. Another neighbour of the corps members, Mercy Isaac, said she went upstairs to charge her phone at her landlords’ place when he heard repeated sounds. She said: “I didn’t know that the sounds I heard were gunshots. Some other persons in the landlord’s apartment and I wanted to go out, but the landlord held us and appealed to us to wait. “Few minutes later, we heard similar sounds. When the sounds ceased, we all went downstairs only to see the corps members struggling with their lives. We later heard how it all happened. Those who killed them came and saw one of the corps members at the balcony marking his students’ scripts. “They held him and led him to the door where other corps were and asked him to knock at the door. He knocked but when a voice from the room demanded to know

    who was knocking, the corps member refused to say his name. The gunmen became angry and concluded he was playing with them. They shot him twice in the head. They broke into the room and shot others”. An eyewitness, Glory John, was simply concerned about the good nature of the corps members in the neighborhood. “They don’t deserve to die”, she said. She described them as peaceful and dutiful. “They never had an issue with anybody before and anytime they were back from school, they were always indoors”, she added. Another source, who spoke in confidence, said the corps members were shot in the head. He said the attackers were obviously out to kill them. According to him, the one that died on the spot was shot twice on the head because they felt that he was joking with them. “When they gained access into the room where others were sleeping, they shot another in the head and the other in the lower abdomen. But when they wanted to go, they wanted to shoot the one that survived on the head. On pulling the trigger, they discovered that they had run out of bullets. That was why Dada survived”, he said. ‘Why did they kill my brother?’ “What did my brother do to deserve this horrible death?”, queried Akpos Honest. The slain George was Honest’ younger brother. George was special to his family

    and very close to his mother, who singlehandedly trained and sponsored all of them through school. Honest, a broadcast journalist based in Port Harcourt, narrated his ordeal. He said: “He was my younger brother, he was not a distant relative nor my cousin. He was a twin; his name was George; his twin sister’s name is Georgina. He was born in 1989 and he graduated over two years ago in Petroleum Training Institute (PTI), Warri. He waited for two years just to get his call-up letter from NYSC. “I was on duty on Thursday at about 3pm when I got a call from his twin sister that someone from NYSC called that his brother was dead. She was crying as she was talking. I had to stop all that I was doing and rushed to Bayelsa. I got to Yenagoa by 5pm and saw my brother’s corpse in the mortuary”. Honest, who wept uncontrollably, said he would explore all legal means to avenge the death of his brother. He said George would not die like his fallen and forgotten colleagues. He vowed to sue all the stakeholders responsible for the safety of his brother. He said: “This is one of those incidents that happen to serving corps members and I intend to follow this to the latter. I intend to sue the Federal Government, NYSC and the Bayelsa State Government. I am only waiting  for the autopsy to be out; I will not let it go like that because my brother was an honest

    Nigerian”. Describing his brother as a patriotic Nigerian, he said: “I told my brother that I will make arrangements for him to serve in Rivers State because I stay in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, but he refused because he did not like someone going through the back door to do something for him. “While in camp, I begged him to allow me redeploy him but he refused. He was a strong Christian. My mum called him the pastor of the house  and we were brought up by my mother alone. We are seven and Iam the eldest. “My mum called and begged him that his brother wanted to redeploy him to Rivers State but he still refused. He said he wanted to do it the way it ought to be done because he was a strong Christian and didn’t like passing through the back door. “When he was posted to his primary assignment, l wanted  George to serve in Daewoo because he studied Mechanical Engineering and graduated as one of the best students. I believed that since he insisted on serving in Bayelsa, at least Daewoo would have offered him security  and accommodation, but he still refused and told me that he would stay where  he was posted. “So, imagine what it feels like that I had every opportunity to remove my brother from Bayelsa and even to work in Daewoo but because he believed in the system, he did the right thing but paid with his life”. He said as at the time he spoke to our correspondent, the management of the NYSC had not deemed  it necessary to send a delegation to his distraught mother, adding that even the proprietor of Victory International School where George worked had not bothered to visit his grieving mother. On what he was told happened to his brother, he said: “They said a group of hoodlums went to  the compound where he stayed, took another corps member from another part of the building and asked him to knock at my brother’s door. He knocked and when he was not knocking well, they shot at him and that’s the corps member presently in FMC, Yenagoa receiving treatment. “And when they broke into my brother’s room, they took their phones. The next thing was, they shot my brother right in his stomach. I understand my brother died in the hospital at FMC, Yenagoa, while his roommate died instantly. “The government has a regulation that you must honour the youth service corps but  they don’t have a policy that protects the lives of corps members who have spent years passing through the Nigeria academic system, which is the toughest in the world”. Honest lamented that he could lose his mother because of the incident. “You don’t want to see my mum. My mum has not slept since Thursday(last week). She has been grieving and my mother is hypertensive. I am scared because I don’t want to lose my brother and my mother at  the same time”. He decried the insecurity in Niger Delta, particularly in Bayelsa. He wondered how

    the government and security agencies allowed young men to be roaming the streets with weapons. Honest narrated: “I was told two Fridays ago that three policemen were killed. I was also informed by the police that at Kaiama, they killed some of their police officers. So, if they can kill police officers, how much more ordinary civilians in the state. “I drive through the East West Road every day; you can see how volatile security is in this state. I would say no security. I slept in Bayelsa in an hotel and a friend who accompanied me wanted  to buy something  but he was told he should hurry up, because that the place was not safe. Honest described his younger brother as very exceptional. “They say a mother has a favorite among all the children but you see, George who was killed was exceptional. George went to church on that day and was marking the students’ scripts in his room when he was killed”,he said. He added: “But I need to ask why. I need to understand the reason for the killing,

    but I was only told that they are cultists and these things happen. I don’t know what they smoked but I understand my brother did not participate in the elections; so I would have said he offended someone in the course of working for INEC. But he didn’t. “So, I need to understand why. My brother  will not even insult someone he was older than; that is how humble George was. They have not seen anything. All they do is console the victims. This won’t go down like every other issue and that’s the promise except I don’t know my right. “My mother cannot spend years training George and lose him this way. George went to a private school, went to petroleum training institute; he had everything to be a better person. He spent over two years waiting for his call-up letter and you can just kill him and then you say you are sorry!” ‘He died a virgin’ Victoria  Ivwhrighe is yet to come to terms with the calamity that had befallen her. She is not believing the report that the son she loved so much and spent fortunes to train in school is no more. “They should bring back my son”, she kept shouting. Her voice was loud but sorrowfully laced with outcries. “This is a joke. George cannot die. Stop telling me that my son is dead”, she said. But from Wednesday last week, everyday that passed by brought Ivwhrighe to the reality that her son was no more. His telephone no longer rings. She could only hear his voice from the past. “I am not okay”, the melancholic woman said. She then remembered one striking feature of her son his moral rectitude. She recollected that her son was a virigin until his death. He would have no taste of a woman except in wedlock. As tears dripped down her wrinkled face, she said in pidgin English: “The last time I saw my son was December. George was a Christian. At his age, he had not known a woman yet. He said when he finished his service, he planned go to another school before settling down. “I was not privileged to go to school. So, I spent all my life working to train them in school. This thing they are telling me is making me feel pains all over my body”, she said. On how she heard of her son’s death, she explained: “I was in the market when my daughter asked me to give her my friend’s number. I felt she wanted to get something from my friend, so I sent her the number and also gave my daughter’s number to my friend. “Georgina said some NYSC officials met her and told her George sent them to her. In their presence, my daughter called his brother but the number did not go through. They said Georgina should take them to the house but she refused because she did not know them. They had to emphasize on that for some time before eventually she agreed. “When they got there, one of them went to the next compound and told my neighbour what happened. My neighbour then told Georgina. My daughter narrated the incident to my friend. When I came back, I went straight to the kitchen to prepare food to eat; as I was eating, different people were coming into my apartment. “Immediately they mentioned Geroge,  I told them I didn’t want to hear it, that I

    wanted my son. The  government was the one that posted him to Yenagoa. They should go and bring him. Since then, I have not been myself. I am hypertensive and I have been the one taking care of them. When I gave birth to the twins was when their father ran away. I struggled with them all by myself. “But now, they are announcing my son on television. I don’t understand. They should give me my son. I want government to give me my son. I need my son. My son was 29-year-old and they are twins. I went through a lot for them. I don’t know how to take this issue because my heart is heavy”. ‘My twin brother promised to come home first week of April’ Georgina, the twin sister to the deceased Georgina, could barely talk. She was drenched in grief and drowned in tears. Crying uncontrollably, she said: “I don’t know what to say. He was my twin brother. He was a friend and a father to me. He was like my better half”. Georgina said she spoke to George on January 3. She said in their discussion, George promised to visit home the first week of April. “I refuse to accept that my brother is no more and Iam patiently waiting for him to come back as he promised. “George lived a triangular life, if he was not in church, then he would be in the school where he taught  and if he was not there then he would be at home. George  was a straight forward; he always liked to have things done the right way. “At first when he knew it was Bayelsa, my elder brother asked him to redeploy but he refused and said he would go to wherever government would  send him. People who didn’tt know him called him the singing prophet because he loved to sing a lot and cannot stay without music. “If he was in his room and heard someone singing, he will rush out and make that person his friend. He would wave to people around whenever he was singing; he used to spend time with children. There is even a child that always come around and now he cannot come around again. “You can ask anybody about George, they may not know his name but if you say the one that sang and walked about, they will tell you they know him. He just loved music; he was a chorister in the church. “The truth is, I am still waiting for him. They should give me my brother. He is not dead though it is taking long but I will wait because he told me he will come first week of April. So, I will still wait; I don’t care what they are saying. “My brother cannot go just like that. He wanted to serve this country  and said there was nothing anybody would say to him to change his mind. He believed whatever happened was for a reason and would accept it like that and he said since he was posted to Bayelsa,then God wanted him there. “Let me not say much. I’m only waiting. There is still time; first week of April,he will come. I’m still waiting; there is no need for consolation because my brother is coming”, she sobbed. The outrage and worsening insecurity in Yenagoa The killing of the corps members high-lighted the worsening insecurity in Bayelsa, especially Yenagoa, the capital city. Guns are everywhere in Yenagoa and life is gradually becoming cheap in the capital city.  Armed cultists have declared war in Yenagoa, robbing, killing and maiming residents at the slightest provocation. The residents lampooned the police and security agencies for failing in their responsibility to secure lives and properties of the people. They wondered how a small town like Yenagoa with the headquarters of the 16th Brigade of the Nigerian Army, Central Naval Command of the Nigerian Navy, Mobility Command of the Airforce, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), the Joint Task Force, Operation Delta Safe (ODS), the police, the DSS and other security outfits could be overrun by cultists. Armed cultists seem to have formed a parallel government administering terror unchallenged. They even attack armed security operatives, kill them and dispossess them of their guns. Even in popular markets, like the Swali Market, cultists operate and kill people in broad daylight at will. Their activities have killed nightlife in Yenagoa. A resident, who identified himself as David, said said he could not control his tears when he saw the lifeless bodies of the corps members and wondered why the insecurity had been allowed to degenerate in the state. He said: “What is Yenagoa turning into? The level of insecurity is very alarming; imagine two youth ‘corpers’ serving in Bayelsa State  shot and killed this night at Swali community by suspected armed robbers! “When I saw the lifeless bodies of these young men at the Federal Medical Centre,Yenagoa, I was totally troubled in my spirit. What will become of their parents who have spent hard- earned resources to send them to school only to lose them while serving their fatherland, the land that doesn’t have faith in the ability of the youths”? Another resident, Fawe, lamented that Yenagoa had become notorious for unpleasant and criminal incidents and blamed political actors for the development. He said: “Those who call the shots live in well guarded environments and go about in bullet proof cars purchased with taxpayers’ money.  Yenagoa is not bigger than Ada George Road in Port Harcourt. It’s the worst thing to lose a child. Now, what will be of the parents of the deceased?” The Commissioner for Youth Development, Mr. Udengs Eradiri, and the Ijaw Youths Council (IYC), Central Zone, condemned the gruesome murder of the corps members. Eradiri and the IYC Chairman, Tare Porri, led a high-powered delegation of Governor Seriake Dickson’s aides on youths to pay a condolence visit to the state Coodinator, NYSC, Bolade Loto in Yenagoa.

    The youth commissioner said the governor was devastated by the report of the killings and mandated them to visit the IYC management in the state. Addressing Loto, he said: “As a state, we heard what happened. Our principal, the governor, was very touched and concerned about this ugly incident and we must express our condolence as a state government to the NYSC. “Young people who came to serve their nation don’t deserve to die in the process. For us, we are sorry that such will happen in our environment. It should not happen to the NYSC, not to youths who are serving their fatherland. “But the government is doing everything possible to ensure that the culprits are brought to book. It is unfortunate that the society has gone this bad. We condemn what happened and we are doing our best to engage young people. “There is no reason why a young person will take another person’s life. Youth corps members are priceless assets to every nation. Our condolences go to their families and we will work very hard to ensure it doesn’t happen again”. Porri said it was unfortunate that such dastardly acts were happening in Yenagoa despite the presence of many security outfits. He accused the security agencies of conspiracy and urged them to step up their game and guarantee security in the state. He said: “It was a terrible and shocking incident that happened to us as Ijaw people. We are not known for things like this. It is unfortunate that young people who were serving our fatherland could be killed in such manner. “But my concern is that this sincerely calls for sober reflection. We have many security outfits in the state. We have the Nigerian Army 16th Brigade of the Nigerian Army; Central Naval Command of the Nigerian Navy; Mobility Command of the Airforce; Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC); the Joint Task Force; Operation Delta Safe (ODS); the police; the DSS and other security outfits and this kind of incident is happening. “The Bayelsa State government is doing its best but these other security agen

    cies should do their best. I don’t know what is happening, whether it is conspiracy. I call on the security outfits to step up their game. It is life that we are talking about. We are worried and concerned”. Also, a former governor of the state, Chief Timipre Sylva, condemned the killing of the corps members and derided the the government for failing to secure Bayelsa. He said: “It is a very sad thing that some NYSC members were killed in their own lodge. They were not even outside. They were in their own lodge when two of them were killed. “My heart goes to the families of these corps members. They were very innocent people serving the nation but they are no more with us not because of their fault but because the government could not protect them”. Also the Sagbama branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) condemned the brutal murder. A statement by its Chairman, Dise Sheila Ogbise, said the unwarranted murder of two was the latest in a spate of incessant violence, killings and criminal activities in the state. She said: “The insecurity in Bayelsa is alarming and a concern to peace and development in the state.” Corps members’ concern over their safety In fact, corps members are worried over their safety. Barring any change in plans, the youth corps members will be on the streets to protest the death of their colleagues and constant attacks on them by hoodlums in the state. A corps member, who identified herself as Blessing, said they were no longer safe in Bayelsa. She complained that they were targets of attacks by cultists, who rob them of their smart phones and other valuables. Blessing said most of their lodges had been attacked by hoodlums and called on security agencies to provide adequate security for them. Also another corps member, Joy, described the killing of her colleagues as very unfortunate. She lamented the constant attacks on corps members’ lodges by criminals and appealed to the government and security

    agencies to stop the insecurity in Bayelsa.  “I feel very bad. I don’t know them but then, I can imagine how their families feel. We came out to do service to the nation and then they were killed. The government and security agencies are supposed to ensure our safety”, she said. The state Coordinator, NYSC, Boladei Loto,  expressed disappointment at the incessant attacks of corps members in the state, saying it had become worrisome. “These hoodlums have been attacking corps members serially. The Director-General has had cause to write to the state governor and the matter reduced. There is no day we don’t record cases of attack against corps members”, he said. Loto described the incident as very heart-breaking, pathetic and very shameful, charging the police to thoroughly investigate the killing and bring the perpetrators to justice. She said the NYSC had already contacted the families of the deceased persons, adding that Akpos Honest, the brother of one of the deceased, George Onokpoma, had been crying uncontrollably. Loto said the motive behind the killing was still unknown since the murderers left the scene of the incident without stealing any valuable. Narrating how the incident happened, she said: “When I was notified of this incident at the middle of the night on Wednesday, I immediately sent messages to the DG of NYSC, the Deputy Governor and the SSG. “They all replied me to express their shock for this dastardly act. Up till now, I am still in shock. I keep asking myself, why? What could have happened because reports have it that they took nothing from them. Since then, we have been in constant touch with the DG of NYSC and with the state government. “That very morning, I visited the surviving corps member in the hospital. I ensured the hospital quickly and promptly gave the corps member the needed attention. The two families that lost their children had been contacted. They are still in shock, wondering what their children could have done. They are still weeping”. The State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Olusholla David, visited the State Secretariat of NYSC and met with Lotto. David expressed shock over the incident and assured the NYSC of a rejigged security strategy to ensure the safety of serving corps members in the state. The police boss promised to brief Governor Seriake Dickson on the incident, adding that the perpetrators would be found and brought to justice. He said: “There is nobody that will hear the incident that will not be shocked. The corps members in the state may be scared but please assure them that there will be improved security under my watch”, he said.

     

  • Honour for ex-President Jonathan, others

    Two Ijaw groups of the Niger Delta – Ijaw Republican Assembly (IRA) and the Ijaw Media Action Initiative (IMAI) – have honoured former President Goodluck Jonathan with the title of “the Ijaw Man For all Season”.

    The event held at the weekend in Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    Governorship candidate of the Accord Dumo Lulu-Briggs was also honoured as the Ijaw Politician of the Year 2018. Forty-eight other prominent Ijaw sons and daughters also got lifetime achievement awards for their outstanding performance in their areas of endeavour. Among them were the late Major Isaac Adaka Boro, the late Senator Melford Okilo and late High Chief Olu Benson Lulu-Briggs, who received post-humous awards.

    IRA president Alatubo Charles Harry said: “This is an uncommon day in the history of the Ijaw nation. Ijaw people are uncommon people. We are not here to eulogise ourselves; we are not here to applaud our achievements, but we are here to dream and achieve that dream.

    Read also: Patience Jonathan’s $5.7m, N2.4b forfeiture case adjourned

    “This is just the second edition of the Heroes of Ijaw Nation Award Night, and we hope the third edition will be bigger and greater.”

    One of the awardees, a former Minister of Culture, Alabo Tonye Graham-Douglas, said it has been the duty of the Ijaw Republican Assembly to ensure that the Ijaw nation is properly and recognised.

    Graham-Douglas, who was honoured with the Ijaw Lifetime Award, regretted that Nigeria seems not to appreciate the efforts of IRA in the promotion of the Ijaw nation.

  • Rivers AAC deputy guber candidate defects to PDP

    The Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike Monday said that no one man’s interest is bigger than the state.

    Wike reportedly made the statement when he received the deputy governorship candidate of African Action Congress (AAC), Chief Akpo Bomba Yeeh, who defected to the ruling Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), Monday.

    Receiving the 71-year-old at the government House Port-Harcourt, Wike charged all leaders to work together to move Rivers State forward.

    Speaking during a solidarity visit at the state House where chief Yeeh apparently announced his defection to the PDP, Wike noted that history will be kind to him (the defector), for placing Rivers interest above personal consideration.

    The Former AAC Deputy Governorship Candidate was received by Wike and the PDP National Chairman, Prince Uche Secondus.

    Others present at the ceremony are the Rivers State PDP Chairman, Bro Felix Obuah, Ex-Governor Celestine Omehia, Senator-elect Barry Mpigi and other leaders of party in the State.

    Wike said: “History will be on your side. You have shown that the interest of the state is above personal consideration. God will not only protect you, He will reward you for this decision.

    “Rivers State is the only state we have. Everyone must work together to move this state forward. It is important to take this state to greater heights.

    “It is not everyone that can take this kind of decision. It requires maturity to take this kind of decision “.

    The Governor said all leaders of Rivers State irrespective of their political affiliations must work in unity to develop the State.

    He said: “All of us must work together in order to forge ahead. No one man’s interest is bigger than that of the State”.

    He accorded a warm welcome to the new entrant and promised to incorporate him into the group that will consolidate the development of the state.

    “You are welcome to the party that will move the state forward. Those on the other side must understand that you cannot kill people, just to be in power. With this bold decision, our brothers on the other side know that the end has come,” he said.

    He lauded the former Deputy Governorship Candidate for refusing to be allowed to be a tool for the destabilisation of the state.

    Also speaking, Secondus described the defection as a welcome development that will help move the state forward.

    He said: “This is a welcome development. This is what a normal situation is supposed to be. The people will see the reason why we must work together. This is an uncommon decision. You have taken a wise decision because you have the interest of the people at heart”.

    Secondus called on INEC to bring the Rivers election to a logical conclusion, so that the people can continue with their lives.

    The PDP Boss called on the Minister of Transportation, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi and other persons working with him to see reason they should stop destabilising the state and causing confusion.

    Earlier, Yeeh had said that the state developed by the founding fathers should be sustained by the efforts of all patriots.

    He said: “Today, I am in your midst to declare my defection to the PDP. Governor Wike is a man of vision. He is a man of compassion. It is his compassion that endears him to the people of Rivers State. I choose to identify with him to move the state forward.”

    He added that as a retired security personnel, he would work with Governor Wike to promote the security of the State.

    Yeeh informed Wike that he has officially withdrawn his candidacy for AAC.

    “I officially announce the withdrawal of my candidacy for the AAC. My loyalty is with the PDP. I cannot afford to leave the fast lane and go to the slow lane,” he said.

    On his part, Obuah said the new member has searched his conscience and decided to work with the PDP to develop the state.

  • Appeal Court affirms Lulu-Briggs as Accord Rivers candidate

    The Court of Appeal in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, has granted the application for a stay of execution on the judgment of Justice Obili of the Federal High Court, Port Harcourt, which ruled that Precious Baridoo and not Dumo Lulu-Briggs was the Rivers State governorship candidate of Accord.

    A statement by the Director of Communications, Dumo Lulu-Briggs Campaign Organisation, Sotonye Ijuye-Dagogo, said Justice A. Lamido delivered his ruling yesterday.

    The statement added that the ruling was in respect of an application by Wilcox Abereton (SAN), Lulu-Brigg’s lead lawyer.

    It said the judge granted the application for stay of execution and further granted an injunction restraining Precious Baridoo from parading himself as the Rivers Accord governorship candidate.

    The statement reads: “By this ruling, Chief Dumo Lulu-Briggs remains the INEC recognised Rivers State governorship candidate of Accord, and the person whose name was legally submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) by the party’s National Working Committee.”

    The Accord in Rivers State has been in crisis over the party’s candidate, resulting in the former Chairman, Precious Barido, approaching a Federal High Court in Port Harcourt to challenge the candidature of Dumo Lulu-Briggs.

    The Federal High Court ruled in Barido’s favour few days to the governorship election, but Lulu-Briggs and the party filed an appeal.

    While the case lasted in the Appeal Court, the party’s national leadership said Lulu-Briggs remains the Rivers State governorship candidate as only his credentials were submitted to INEC.

    The National Chairman, Muhammad Lawal Nalado, described Precious Barido as an impostor, noting that at no time before, during and after his tenure as the state chairman did he notify the national leadership of his interest in the governorship polls.

    According to him, Barido didn’t buy any form from Accord to contest the governorship, and was never the party’s candidate.

  • Man, 31 remanded in Prison for robbery

    A chief Magistrates Court in Port Harcourt, Rivers State has ordered the remand in prison custody of 31-year-old man, Yusuf Lawan for alleged armed robbery.

    The suspect and others presently at large allegedly robbed one Chief Seleipiri Bob-Manuel of his belongings valued at N810,000 while armed with matchetes and Kitchen knives.

    A document obtained from the court alleged that the suspect and his accomplices dispossessed their victim of his 42″ plasma LG television valued at N350,000, Samsung S+8 phone valued at N250,000, Samsung S+6 phone valued at N200,000 and a DSTV decoder valued at  N10,000.

    Read also: Man stabs cousin to death over N500

    The two-count charge of armed robbery levelled against him was not read out to him; the court apparently lacks jurisdiction to hear the matter which according to the criminal code falls within the capital offence charge, hence he did not take plea.

    The offence was committed on March 5, 2019 at Woji community area of Obio/Akpor Local Governmnet Area of the state.

    The presiding chief Magistrate,  Sokari Andrew-Jaja ordered that the suspect be remanded in prison custody and his original case file be forwarded to the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) for advice.

    The chief Magistrate later adjourned till April 22 for report of DPP advice.

     

  • Lagos, Port Harcourt, Kaduna and Enugu: Tale of four cities

    There has been so much controversy on who owns Lagos in recent times between the indigenes and the non -indigenes, between “omoEko” (indigenes) and “araEko” (residents) that a little knowledge of the history of Lagos May remove the blinkers from our eyes. The indigenes of Lagos have a saying “Awori lo l’Eko” meaning, Lagos belongs to the Awori. The Awori were the original settlers of Lagos and their settlements still exist in various Awori settlements from Iddo, Iganmu, Apapa, Isheri and so on up to Otta. These Awori settlements were founded around the 12th century during the evolution of similar political entities in Yorubaland.It was not until the 15th century that Oba Ewuare the Great sent an expedition to the island now known as Lagos for the purpose of making it a slave port for evacuating war captives to Europe through the Portuguese, the first Europeans to make contact with the Benin Empire. The Bini settlement or camp (Eko) was separate from the Awori villages and settlements and there was no attempt by the Bini camp to lord it over the Aworis. Waves of people from neighboringIjebu, Remo and Egba territories came to Lagos virtually overwhelming the Awori and the Bini camp. But since they were all of the same culture, there was no acrimonious contention about indigenous rights and the rights of newcomers. The Bini group hunkered around their settlement at IghaIdugaran (pepper farm). The prestige of the Benin Empire made the settlement to be respected and the place grew into a kingdom replicating in a small way, the royalty of Benin and its palace chiefs on the island the Portuguese named Lagos but which the Yoruba’s appropriating the Bini word for camp called Eko. The independence of the Awori settlements on the mainland continued to be respected even until today and throughout the colonial period. The sister empire of Oyo also put down a toehold at Ajase, west of Lagos, which the Portuguese called Porto Novo for the same purpose of the slave trade. Benin influence on the island of Lagos is a historical fact, but this does not mean Lagos is not part of Yorubaland. The Benin influence extended to the dynasties of such places in eastern Yorubaland like Ado, Ikere, ItaOgbolu, IgbaraOke and Akure. This does not make the people from these towns Bini. The fact for example, that the ruling monarch in England is German does not make England part of Germany. Also the Bini inspired monarchy in places like Onitsha and the western periphery of Igboland does not remove the fact that Onitsha and kingdoms west of Onitsha are part of Igboland neither does the replacement of the ogisos in Bini by an Oduduwa dynasty make Bini part of Yorubaland. What is important to note is the dynamic relationship of people in the Bight of Guinea in the past and that the whole area shares a common cultural similarity.

    When the British took over Lagos and its mainland in 1861 after naval bombardment of the town, it signed a treaty of cession with the oba who surrendered his suzerainty to the British crown. From that time onwards, the people of the crown colony became British subjects while the rest of what later became Nigeria was “terra incognita “at least for a while until the heydays of European imperialism of the 1880s to 1900s.

    At amalgamation of all British territories in Nigeria with the colony of Lagos in 1914 with Egbaland remaining still independent until its independence was abrogated at the outbreak of the First World War, Lagos became the capital of Nigeria.

    The then Governor General hated Lagos with its “insalubrious climate and seditious press “and its “trousered niggers, dressed in Bond-street attire who send their laundry for dry cleaning in England” and decided to build a new capital in the centre of the country. He found this centre on River Kaduna which gave the new capital its name. Lugard embarked on feverish development of Kaduna using the same tax on “trade gin” banned from the north as well as revenue from custom levies and proceeds from palm kernel and palm oil and cocoa trade. The development of Kaduna continued during the Great War at a less frenetic speed as before. The whole idea of moving the capital to Kaduna was ended by Sir Hugh Clifford, a different kind of governor from Lugard. Sir Clifford, the successor of Sir Fredrick Lugard said he was not prepared to administer Nigeria from “specially fabricated isolated centre in the middle of the country”. Development of Kaduna was however never quite abandoned and its effect is the well planned Kaduna city compared with the chaos of Lagos. Hugh Clifford tried to improve Lagos by developing the so-called” Ikoyi plains” in the 1920s.

    Contemporaneous with the Kaduna project were two other new towns built by Nigeria. Port Harcourt was conceived by Sir Fredrick Lugard as an alternative if not an outright replacement for Lagos. Lugard felt Lagos port was too shallow and its development constituted a drain on Nigeria’s exchequer. The principal officers in the colonial office in London were not persuaded about Lugard’s project and to outwit them, Lugard named the port after the secretary of state for the colonies Sir Lewis Harcourt. Sir Lewis fell for it and action for the new port began in 1913. The city around the port was well planned by British architects which accounts for the town’s sobriquet as “garden city “. Any visitor to Port Harcourt before the deluge of people from the hinterland would have described it as “little Lagos”.

    With the outbreak of the First World War, it became difficult to get British ships to bring coal from New Castle to Nigeria. Coal was absolutely necessary to run the railways which crisscrossed the country from Lagos to Kano and from Port Harcourt to Jos. Coal was also needed to fire the generators to light up the European government reserved Areas ( GRA) . It was in this circumstance that the colliery in Enugu was developed. The native Wawa people were too primitive to work in the mines so people were recruited from all over the country to work in the Enugu coal mines. Enugu owes its well-planned layout to its colonial origin. Another town that developed around the tin and columbite mines in the plateau was Jos. In fact, the European impact was such that a certain part of Jos was known as “Anglo Jos” perhaps until recently.

    There is no doubt that our British colonial heritage brought together heterogeneous population many of who had very little in common. This has led to bloody frictions in Jos between the indigenes and the Hausa who claimed that they built Jos. Old Jos was an amalgam of Hausa, Birom, Naraguta, Yoruba, and Urhobo; the Igbos were late arrivals after the tin mines had become unprofitable. It seems a modus vivendi now exists between the natives and the Hausa in Jos.Enugu has not experienced too much conflict between the indigenes and other Igbo settlers with the exception of resentment of the natives against those who exploited their backwardness to alienate their land to themselves during colonial and post-colonial rule when Enugu was the capital of the entire Eastern Region.

    Port Harcourt’s indigenes in Diobu and the Nkwerre people resented the dominance of the up country Igbo during the colonial and post-colonial period. In fact up till the 1940s, Port Harcourt was reasonably cosmopolitan. The Nigeria civil war and the creation of a Rivers State allowed the local people to ventilate their feeling against their Igbo neighbours by seizing their landed property and converting it to their own use under the rubric of “abandoned property”. When the war ended, the Rivers people even though a large percent of them speak the same language with the Igbo in the hinterland, refused to give up the properties of the Igbo.

    Now to Lagos the big elephant in the Nigerian room. Lagos is like New York big apple which everybody wants to have a bite of. Lagos since 1861 up to the amalgamation of all British territories to form Nigeria became a frontier of opportunity for Yorubaland and other immigrants from all across West Africa as well as the returnees from Brazil and Sierra Leone. After the amalgamation, Lagos was opened to all comers from the whole country. The colonial and post-colonial governments have spent considerable amount of money to make the place livable.  Facilities such as newport, new airport and housing estate to decongest the unwieldy urban sprawl of Lagos sprang up. Those who were displaced by the civil war and other ethnic conflicts up country always found home in Lagos. Incredibly people tend to find a way of living together in spite of differences in socialization from urban to village type of life.

    Now this seems to be coming under severe strain by those who want to use the force of population to seize control from the owners of the place using spurious arguments about how one can move from one state to another in America to contest election. Africa is an old continent and not like America that is a recently settled country. Until recently, you couldn’t become a German except by blood! It is foolish to deny the power of ethnicity in African politics as much as we deprecate it. It will be unreasonable for me to enjoy the right to contest in Lagos and in Ekiti at the same time or as Igbo propagandist TV has been threatening that an Anambra man will be the next governor of Lagos. Ideally that should be wished for through evolution but not by threat of unproved superiority of one ethnic population and tax contribution over those of the quiet majority who have been very generous to non-indigenes whose properties were preserved for them during the civil war with accumulated rents collected unlike what happened in neighboring states.  We need to build on trust that existed in the past and respect each other. There is no need for ethnic bellicosity and jingoism because at the end of the day, it is the poor people who are merely eking out an existence who will suffer. We need to preserve the past civility and not rock the boat because of electoral politics. Nobody disputes the ownership of Kaduna Enugu and Port Harcourt; why is Lagos different?

  • Soldiers recall night of horror in Rivers

    They recall the night with fear. A routine job of guarding an election results collation centre suddenly turned bloody for two soldiers.

    Doctors are battling to save the lives of Capt. Adams Salami and Corp. Adeosun Adebayo of 6 Division, Nigerian Army, who were on guard duty on March 9 at the collation centre in Obio/Akpor Local Government Council Secretariat, Rumuodomaya, Port Harcourt, Rivers State. A crowd of thugs descended on the place, shooting. The soldiers were hit.

    Capt. Salami and Corp. Adebayo are on the danger list in hospitals.

    With the invaders was Governor Nyesom Wike (the soldiers alleged), who has dismissed it all as a joke peddled by “clowns”.

    The soldiers spoke to reporters from their beds in Military Hospital on Aba Road, Port Harcourt and the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH).

    The 6 Division’s Deputy Director, Army Public Relations, Col. Aminu Iliyasu, in a telephone interview yesterday evening, described the “unprovoked shooting” of the soldiers as “very sad and quite barbaric”.

    The three agents of African Action Congress (AAC) during the March 9 collation at Obio/Akpor Local Government secretariat, Dr. Lawrence Chuku, Chikordi Dike and Chief Alex Wele, also claimed that Wike led over 200 thugs to abduct and beat them up.

    They were later dropped off his (Wike’s) vehicle, but went with the LG’s Electoral Officer (EO), a woman, the result sheets and other electoral materials.

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Edwin Oludi, urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to disqualify Wike for invading the collation centre with thugs, abducting the EO and others and hijacking result sheets and other electoral materials, contrary to the Electoral Act.

    Another APC chieftain, Ike Chinwo, insisted that no collation of results had been done at the secretariat, prior to the invasion, stressing that the hall was under lock and key. The EO sat in the office of the LG Chairman, Solomon Eke, before she was taken away, he said.

    Captain Salami said: “At about 23.00 hours (on March 9, after the governorship and House of Assembly elections, we got information that hoodlums were trying to invade the Obio/Akpor LG collation centre. So, we were asked to provide security in that area, which we did, in liaison with policemen posted there. We agreed that there would be limited access into the premises.

    “Five minutes later, to my surprise, the Rivers governor’s convoy came in (into Obio/Akpor LG council secretariat) with about 30 to 40 cars with hoodlums and thugs. Some were in police uniform, shooting sporadically within the premises. As usual, we decided to step back. I was pleading with them, as a soldier, to resolve the matter amicably.”

    Corp. Adebayo said: “I was deployed in Obio/Akpor LG collation centre and the crowd was too much. So, we had to reduce the crowd. It was then that the policemen in the governor’s convoy started mobbing us and hitting us with their weapons. I could not figure out the reason, because nobody asked anybody any question. The policemen were hitting us with the nozzles of their riffles.”

    The three collation agents of AAC, who are chieftains of APC, but decided to work for AAC, since APC had no candidates for the governorship and House of Assembly elections, also narrated their near-death experiences to reporters in Port Harcourt.

    Dike, the leader of APC in Obio/Akpor, who is also a former Chairman of Obio/Akpor Local Government Council, said: “I am the collation agent for AAC in Obio/Akpor LGA. As an agent of the party, after the elections on that day (March 9), we proceeded to the collation centre, which is Obio/Akpor LG council secretariat. While we were in the council secretariat, wards’ INEC officers were bringing their results. Different wards’ INEC officers were coming to the LG council, though it was late; between 11 p.m. and 12 midnight.

    “We had the presence of Nigeria Police inside the LG council secretariat while the military personnel were outside the council secretariat, at the gate, providing protection for the collation centre. Surprisingly, the Governor of Rivers State, Barr. Nyesom Wike, came with over 200 fully-armed persons. Some were wearing army uniform, some were wearing police uniform and some were in mufti. Their vehicles were over 100. They stormed the LG council secretariat.

    “Before he (Wike) came, the Electoral Officer for Obio/Akpor LG was inside the council, at the LG council Chairman’s office. The governor came and invaded the place. His men were shooting and everybody was scampering for their lives. In the process, I was abducted by Rivers governor, alongside with Chief Alex Wele and Dr. Lawrence Chuku. Also abducted was the Electoral Officer for Obio/Akpor LG. He (Wike) then carted away all the electoral materials.”

    Narrating his own ordeal, Chuku, a former Chairman of Obio/Akpor LG council, who was Wike’s deputy when he (Wike) was chairman of Obio/Akpor LG council, described the experience as “highly traumatising and very horrible”.

    Chuku said: “As party agents, we arrived at the collation centre, which is Obio/Akpor LG council headquarters before collation started. When we got there, we noticed that the collation centre was locked. Some wards’ INEC officers that had come in were only hanging around, probably waiting for collation to begin.

    “The Electoral Officer and the Collation Officer were at Obio/Akpor LG Chairman’s Office and we were waiting for the collation to begin, when Rivers governor and his men invaded the collation centre. We heard gunshots from the main gate and, suddenly, the governor’s convoy came in.

    “Later, after our abduction and carting away of electoral materials to an unknown destination, we were dropped off at Rumuola, Port Harcourt at about 1 a.m. by Rivers governor himself. We now heard that the military men that were posted to safeguard lives and property within the perimeter of Obio/Akpor LG council secretariat were manhandled.

    “So, there was no collation in Obio/Akpor LGA on March 9. There was no single collation of any result from any ward, because we are the authentic agents of the party. We are calling on INEC to discountenance whatever result anybody will bring in.”

    Wele said on March 9 at Obio/Akpor Local Government Council Secretariat, while he and other collation agents of AAC were waiting at the venue, for the collation to commence, they were exchanging pleasantries across party lines, but later heard that Rivers governor was coming with his entourage.

    Wele said: “It was like a war situation. I was thoroughly beaten and my AAC’s agent’s tag was torn.”

    Rivers State commissioner for Information and Communications Emma Okah, who doubles as the Director of Information and Communications of the PDP Campaign Council, described the  leaders of AAC and APC as clowns.

    Okah said: “No such thing (invasion on Obio/Akpor LG council secretariat by Wike and thugs) happened. The APC and their ally, the AAC, failed in the elections. They are doing everything possible to divert attention from their shameful failure. Why would anybody abduct them? Of what use is their abduction? To gain what?

    “They should bury their heads in shame that they were moving with soldiers to thwart the wishes of their people. How can people who were moving with heavily-armed soldiers and supervising rigging of elections, also be abducted?”