Tag: Rivers State

  • Rivers State and her fair-weather friends

    Rivers State and her fair-weather friends

    There has been no dull moment in Rivers State since 2023 when Siminialayi Fubara upon inauguration chose to fight his own government. But with the Supreme Court’s February 28 declaration that there has been no government in Rivers in the last two years, in spite of all the drama, including bombing of the assembly complex, conducting LGA election in defiance of court order, and presentation of budget to a three-man assembly, we now know all have been noise without substance or ‘a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing’ (William Shakespeare).

     No thanks to Rivers fair weather friends led by the likes of Ikenga Ugochinyere, an Imo member  of the House of Representatives, who today claims to speak on behalf of opposition lawmakers coalition in the House. His undefined mission during most of his N6.5m one-hour “news commercialization’ appearances, seems to be targeted at further destabilization of PDP or prolonging the nightmare of people of Rivers State. Of course, we also have sympathisers of Labour and PDP in borrowed toga of Arise TV journalists whose motive for fighting Fubara’s war like a slave is Wike, his estranged impetuous and abrasive godfather.

    Fubara by virtue of the February 28 Supreme Court ruling had an opportunity to dig himself out of the hole. President Tinubu’s call on him to stoop to conquer because ‘compromise is democracy’s highest badge of honour was another chance. Fubara however chose to keep huffing and bluffing because of backing by meddlers like Ugochinyere and Arise TV. Last Thursday, the former gave vent to this by first taking an hour slot of “news commercialisation” in TVC and later the same day in Arise platform to embark on his usual monologue.

     And what did he fritter the N6.5m on? The assembly’s alleged intention to seek court order to stop the conduct of the local government and, the assembly’s plan to amend the Rivers Independent Electoral Commission law.

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    It is sad Fubara thinks some windbags from outside his state love his state more than the state’s elected lawmakers who by the way, do not need permission of interlopers to make laws.

    And as for Arise TV, its last Thursday’s analysis of Wike’s Wednesday chat with some journalists was a disservice to journalism. There were misrepresentation of facts, outright lies, odious comparisons and an attempt to set the Ijaw nation against other nationalities in the Niger Delta region.

    First, Arise TV along with Jake Epelle, their invited quest, agreed that Governor Fubara has been thoroughly humiliated, ridiculed and dishonoured because of his humility. They all agreed Fubara needs to become more Machiavellian since his humility has become a burden. They declared with shocking finality, that Tinubu was behind the crisis in Rivers even without proof.

    They falsely claimed Rivers House of Assembly locked out the governor. How do you lock out someone who was not being expected? Governor Fubara himself confirmed he was on a road show or out to play to the gallery by branching at the assembly quarters when he was scheduled to commission some projects in Okirika at 10am. He left with the following parting words “maybe they are still working on the letter and will later get in touch with me”.

    On impeachment, it was unfair to impute meaning to what Wike said in an answer to Arise TV question. He had said impeachment which is enshrined in our constitution is not criminal and that heaven will not fall if anyone who committed impeachable offence is impeached. In any case, if anyone slammed with impeachment charges is a good politician, he will know what to do, he added.

    It was also pure mischief to give the impression that Wike was disrespectful of the Ijaw nation during the chat. In fact what can be taken away from what he said was that those making threat to destroy pipelines are politicians in government; that Ijaw whose sons including Tompolo secured the contract to protect the oil pipelines cannot at the same time be threatening to blow off the pipeline. He said people should stop arrogating power to blow off the pipelines only to Ijaw as other groups within the Niger Delta are also capable of doing the same.

    The fact that the Ijaw national body has denounced the Ijaw Youths making such reckless statement seem to have vindicated Wike’s claim that such threats were planted by politicians in government

    I am not sure the issues of the population of Ijaw nation, the fourth largest group in Nigeria was the focus of discussion. Wike’s reference to Ijaw during the media chat was to the effect that except in Balyelsa State, the Ijaw nation does not constitute a majority in Akwa Ibom, Delta, and Rivers; that in the spirit of live and let live, he and some illustrious Ijaw elders agreed the gubernatorial ticket should be ceded to Ijaw in 2023. Arise TV only demonstrated its partisanship by exhibiting such  disdain for Wike who they said does not know Ijaw constitutes the fourth largest population because of what they attributed to his academic deficit!

    Finally, attempt by Arise TV to draw a parallel between the tragic mismanagement of our crisis of nation-building by President Nnamdi Azikiwe and Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa which led  to the collapse of the first republic and current crisis in  Rivers where an elected governor is at war with an arm of his government is borne out of mischief.

    And what are the facts?

    S. L. Akintola, the Premier of Western Region was legally removed by his party, a decision upheld by the Privy Council in London, the highest judicial body at the period. Akintola then sought the help of Zik and Balewa, coalition partners at the centre against his principal.  The duo had been bitter enemies of the West out of envy for her giant strides and for leading the battle for the creation for the Calabar-Ogoja-Rivers (COR) and Middle Belt states from the east and the north respectively.

    Zik and Balewa, who did not see the need to declare state of emergency in the east or in the north where Isaac Boro’s Niger Delta Uprising and Tiv’s popular uprising had to be suppressed by the military, illegally declared state of emergency in the West because a few NCNC member started throwing chairs just as vote of confidence was about to be passed on Adegbenro by the Western House as enshrined in the constitution. (Premiers Ahmadu Bello and Okpara had earlier breached the constitution by their refusal to recognize Adegbenro).

    The first victim of the state of emergency was Awo who was detained in mosquito-infested Lekki while Akintola who had been constitutionally removed and Fani-Kayode of NCNC were imposed as Premier and deputy premier of Western region by Balewa and Zik.

    In breach of constitutional provision which disallowed the centre from interfering in the affairs of the regions, Zik and Balewa decided to probe the administration of Western Region between 1952 and 1962. At the end Awo was indicted and  accused of theft while his deputy who single-handedly controlled the affairs of the region from 1959 was let off the hook because he served as the prosecution witness.

    To ensure Awo will be too old to ask how Nigeria was being run by the time he gets out of prison, he was slammed with  treasonable charges which provided an excuse for Zik and Balewa, the coalition leaders, to send Awo and his colleagues to 10 years imprisonment.

    The Yoruba waited patiently for the 1964 Western Regional election to liberate themselves but Fani-Kayode publicly swore he and Akintola would win the election whether the people voted for them or not. Zik and Balewa, as coalition leaders, went on to massively rig the 1964 election in favour of their stooges – Akintola and Fani-Kayode.

    It was at this point the people of the West resolved that ‘those who sowed the wind must reap the whirlwind’. Violence, code-named “Operation wet e” broke out with dead bodies littering major streets of major towns in Yoruba land. The battle was against those Yoruba identified as traitors.

    We cannot trivialise the above historical facts by attempting to draw a parallel between it and Fubara’s self-inflicted 2023 crisis when he blindly decided to fight his own government. And except for those engaged in mischief to give a false narrative of our past history, there is no basis to compare Zik and Balewa’s malevolent handling of Western Region crisis with President Tinubu’s handling of Fubara’s disagreement with an arm of his government.

    President Tinubu did what a statesman should do by making Fubara sign a truce with the warring members of an arm of his government in the presence of Rivers elders. If he breached his undertaking, it was because he, as an office holder, who does not know that in a democracy, rulers rule but others dictate the tune, allowed himself to be misled by Arise TV and non-politicians in politics who probably do not know better.

  • Daggers and logger heads in Rivers State

    Daggers and logger heads in Rivers State

    Sir: Rivers State is in danger of being turned into a full-blown circus thanks to a puerile political crisis.

    In 2023, Nyesom Wike, who had been governor for eight years, needed a successor.. To replace him, Wike installed Similanayi Fubara. He had worked closely with Fubara during his time in office and there was the unmistakable feeling that there was nothing anyone could have done to prevent Fubara from becoming governor.

    Fubara duly won the election and was sworn in, but as with many political alliances in Nigeria, it did not take long for it to emerge that all was not well.  It began with a series of expensive rumours and explosive whispers before moving really fast into the complete degeneration of the relationship of two men who had called the shots in Rivers State.

    As the battle for supremacy between both men has heated up, so many things have happened in the state. The House of Assembly Complex was demolished with the lawmakers splitting into camps while controversial local government elections were conducted with some local government secretariats razed. Recently, following the judicial intervention of the Supreme Court which has upturned the local government elections as well as restored a camp of the lawmakers to the leadership of the state House of Assembly, things have become especially heated in the state.

    Yet, maximum caution must be exercised lest an uncontrollable conflagration is started. Fire usually starts small but can really spread quickly.

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    In case Wike and Fubara need to be reminded, they are only but two indigenes of a state which counts millions of others. Thus, the state cannot be allowed to burn because of them. Political differences are part of the game, but they must have the dignity and discretion not to let their political differences affect governance in Rivers State as it is currently doing.

     It is also important for the loyalists of both men to understand that their loyalty is owed first to the constitution and then the good people of the state. This must not be lost especially on the legislators in the state House of Assembly who are showing that they are ready to go all the way to serve their political interests.

    It is because of feuds like these that many people in Nigeria consider politics to be a dirty game.

    Whatever it is, it makes only rotten sense clandestine arrangements reached in self-interest and nothing more are allowed to disrupt governance, especially the delivery of the dividends of democracy to those who need them most.

    •Ike Willie-Nwobu,Ikewilly9@gmail.com

  • Rivers: Anxiety over budget as assembly adjourns indefinitely

    Rivers: Anxiety over budget as assembly adjourns indefinitely

    The Rivers State House of Assembly hurriedly adjourned indefinitely yesterday, sparking fresh worries over the state’s budget which Governor Siminilayi Fubara had proposed to formally present to the legislature on Wednesday.

     His first attempt last Wednesday was aborted  after the road leading to the legislators’ quarters was blocked, thus denying him and  his entourage entry.

    The 27 pro-Wike lawmakers had claimed the governor did not follow due process before setting out for his visit.

    But 24 hours after  writing a new letter to Speaker Martin Amaewhule expressing his “desire and intention  to  present the 2025 Budget” to the assembly on Wednesday March 19,2025  “by 11am ,or any other date within March 2025 that you may consider convenient,” the House resolved to  adjourn indefinitely.

    The governor’s camp said the legislators’ action smacked of mischief.

    The sacked Chairman of Obio-Akpor Local Government Area, Chijioke Ihunwo, accused them of obstructing Fubara from presenting the Appropriation Bill.

    “Nobody can remove Governor Fubara,” he said, and urged Rivers people to remain resolute in their support for the governor.

    However, a principal member of the assembly, who does not want to be named, said the House was yet to receive the new letter written by the governor.

    “We only saw it on social media, and as I speak to you, the House has not received the letter,” he told The Nation yesterday.

    The source also said there was no cause for alarm over the lawmakers’ decision to adjourn their sitting sine die.

    “This is just an expression to say that there is no definite date for them to reconvene. This means that they can reconvene any date they deem fit.

    “It can be tomorrow, a week’s time or a month as the case may be.

    “If they receive the letter from the governor, they may reconvene to consider it.

    “So, I don’t see why the expression is generating controversy.”

    No mention was made of the governor’s letter at yesterday’s plenary session.

    The main business of the day was the passing of three bills which they sent to the governor for assent.

    One of them was the Rivers State House of Assembly (Powers and Privileges) Bill, 2025, which grants the House powers, privileges and immunity to perform its legislative duties.

    They also passed the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission (RSIEC) Bill, 2025, which seeks to repeal the existing State Electoral Law of 2018, and to re-enact a new one to provide for the establishment, composition and functions of the Commission in line with the Electoral Act of 2022 and the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

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    The third was the Rivers State Local Government Bill, 2025, which seeks to repeal the State’s Local Government Laws of 2018, 2023 and 2024, and to re- enact a new Local Government Law that will be in sync with contemporary laws in the administration of the local government councils.

    Speaker Amaewhule, said the House was simply domesticating the Legislative Houses (Powers and Privileges) Act of 2017 which confers certain powers and privileges on the legislature in the performance of its function.

    Amaewhule said that the RSIEC Bill was crucial because of the need to make the commission to be in tandem with the Electoral Act and the Constitution.

    He said it was important to make the Local Government Law reflect certain constitutional provisions, adding that the State House of Assembly would continue to perform its legislative duties in the best interest of the people.

     Members unanimously voted in the affirmative for each of the three bills and passed them for onward transmission to the governor for his assent.

    The speaker commended members for their doggedness and resilience saying  they sacrificed their recess in the interest of the people, adding that history would be kind to them.

    He extolled them for going the extra mile in working for the state and the people and later adjourned the House sine die.

    RISIEC now in possession of updated voters register

    The State Independent Electoral Commission (RISIEC) announced yesterday  that it had received the updated voters’ register and the current list of registered political parties.

    The Commissioner in Charge of Media and Civic Education, Tamunotonye Tobins, said the development was part of the preparations for the August 9 local government elections.

    He said the two important documents were released to RISIEC on March 13.

    “The chairman and members of the commission reassure the good people of Rivers State of the commission’s resolve to conduct credible, free and fair elections,” he said.

    PANDEF asks Tinubu to call Wike to order

    Speaking on the Rivers State political crisis yesterday, the Pan Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF) asked President Bola Tinubu to warn Federal Capital Territory Minister Nyesom Wike, over his “inflammatory” remarks about the group.

    Wike had dismissed PANDEF as “the worst organisation anybody can rely on” following the group’s meeting with the President on Tuesday.

    The meeting was part of ongoing efforts to resolve the Rivers crisis.

    Former governor of Akwa Ibom State, Obong Victor Attah, who spoke for the group yesterday, said that contrary to Wike’s view, President Tinubu did not give the impression that he was meeting with the “worst organisation anybody can rely on.”

    Attah, who doubles as chairman of PANDEF reconciliation committee, said Wike’s comment explained the reasons for his refusal to meet with the committee on the crisis.

     “We made it clear to Mr. President that there was a need for him to impress upon the key personalities involved, one of whom is his cabinet minister, the necessity of prioritising peace,” he said.

    “We were firm in our resolve that an amicable resolution must be secured. Such a resolution can only be secured by negotiation, hence our setting up of the peace and reconciliation committee.

    “We brought to the attention of Mr. President, the difficulties that we were experiencing in trying to secure the cooperation of his cabinet minister for the federal capital territory, Chief Nyesom Wike, since all our attempts in the past to meet with the Hon. minister had been rebuffed.”

    National Chairman of PANDEF Godknows Igali rejected Wike’s description of the groups as “unacceptable, unwarranted and deeply inappropriate”.

    He said Fubara was disposed to meeting with the group while Wike was not.

    He asked the President to prevail upon Wike to retract his “inflammatory statements and extend due respect to these eminent Nigerians and traditional rulers”.

    Kalabari/Ijaw reception for Wike to proceed

    A reception being organised by Kalabari/Ijaw stakeholders in honour of Wike at Abalama Town , Rivers State today is proceeding despite earlier misgivings, The Nation gathered yesterday.

    The Forum of Traditional Rulers of Kalabari Ethnic Nationality had called for the outright cancellation of the event on the grounds that it could degenerate into a bloody clash between two groups.

    They said the two groups, the NEW Associates and the Ijaw Youths Council (IYC) Eastern Zone, were dragging the same venue for different events.

    They said: “We call for an outright cancellation of all activities slated for Saturday, 15th March, 2025, at the Abalama Community Secondary School Field, regardless of whether permission was previously sought and granted or not, to avoid any crisis in Kalabari land. 

    “Better still, we advise both parties to choose different days and venues should they wish to hold such activities on our land”.

    Sources said the issues were settled and the civic reception is on course.

    It was learnt the venue of the reception had been prepared and the people were ready to receive the minister and former governor.

    A source close to Wike, who spoke in confidence from the venue of the event, said: “There is no cause for alarm. The event is going on as planned.”

  • The ruckus in Rivers State

    The ruckus in Rivers State

     Sir: Politics mightily bemuses with just how easy it is for relationships to go down the drain. For many politicians, the sage political advice that there are no permanent enemies or friends in politics is a coda.

    In 2023, Rivers State experienced a change of political guard. It was as smooth as butter, because Nyesom Wike who had been governor for two terms of eight years handed the baton to Similayi Fubara whom he had worked closely with.

    The transition in Rivers State was expected to be hassle free. In fact, given that it was the first time in sixteen years that an outgoing governor handpicked and installed his successor, it was not predicted that there would be any significant drama. To this extent, what has happened in the state since then has taken many by surprise.

    Nyesom Wike, the former governor and current minister of the Federal Capital Territory, has since fallen out of favour with Siminalayi Fubara whose conciliatory unassuming mien has belied the ferocity with which he has dug in to defy his former boss.

    While scores have accused Wike of being overreaching and overbearing, what is clear is that less than two years into his term in office as Rivers State governor, Fubara is locked in a supremacy battle with forces that supported him to be governor. From the local government chairmen that served under Wike to legislators loyal to him, the battle has been exhausting and ultimately distracting from the business of providing good governance in the state.

    A key consideration for Fubara however is that he seems to have the support of the Rivers electorate who are clearly desperate to know who to hold accountable for time spent in office. They do not want a proxy governor. They do not want a situation where the number one citizen of the state cannot call his soul his own.

    The Supreme Court has sent all the parties back to the drawing board by voiding the local government election held in the state and reinstating the sacked House of Assembly members. These decisions may be a kick in the teeth for Governor Fubara but whatever it is, all the parties involved must sheathe their swords.

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     The state has been in the news frequently in recent times and not because projects are going on at an unprecedented pace, but because two politicians have cast caution to the wind and turned the state into a war zone.

    Because both Fubara and Wike have channelled resources into their unseemly spat, the focus on providing the dividends of democracy to the people of the state has been lost. Instead, what has happened is that the state has incurred heavy losses for example when some local government secretariats in the state were razed and again when the state House of Assembly complex was bulldozed. 

    The madness in the state has gone on for far too long  and it should now be brought under firm control. Rivers State does not belong to one person or a select few. The long-suffering people of Rivers State are bone-tired of hearing the same things over and over again. They must now be governed in the peace they deserve. It should never be the case that few people should deprive an entire state of serenity.

    •Kene Obiezu,keneobiezu@gmail.com

  • Supreme Court clears political fog over Rivers

    Supreme Court clears political fog over Rivers

    ANALYSIS

    The much-awaited certified true copy (CTC) of the Supreme Court verdict on the Rivers State political crisis which was released on Thursday has ended all legal disputes among the feuding parties. With the court’s profound findings, any matter pending in court has died a natural death. The court without mincing words defined the status of the 27 lawmakers led by Speaker Martins Amaewhule as authentic, adding that it is the only body that Governor Siminalayi Fubara can do business with.

    Until the decision, Fubara was comfortable dealing with the then Victor Oko-Jumbo-led three-man assembly, claiming that the Amaewhule group had defected from the Peoples Democratic (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC). Even after the Court of Appeal affirmed a Federal High Court order that it was constitutionally wrong of him to deal with only three of the 32-man assembly, Fubara  disobeyed the orders. He insisted on having his way, boasting that the “house exists at his pleasure”.

      Rather than do as directed by the high and appeal courts in Abuja so that peace can reign in the state, he went to a state high court in Port Harcourt to obtain an order to enable him present the 2025 budget to the Oko-Jumbo group, even after his presentation of the 2024 budget to the same set of lawmakers had been declared illegal. It was an error on his part. The apex court was unsparing in its reprimand of the governor, who it described as a despot that collapsed the government of the state so that he could have his way. Indeed, it was needless for him to have gone to the high court, while pursuing a cross-appeal at the apex court, which pronouncement would swallow whatever the lower court comes up with, no matter how brilliant.

    Fubara was only buying time and postponing the day of reckoning which finally came on February 28 . Still he did not see the handwriting on the wall when Amaewhule and co., went to court to stop him from further receiving allocations from the central bank and the accountant-general of the federation as he was not operating a valid budget. The high court decided in the plaintiffs’ favour. The governor went on appeal and won. The appeal court held that it was a constitutional matter on which the high court had no jurisdiction. The Supreme Court disagreed. It restored the high court order. Quoting from the appeal court verdict, the apex court held:

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    “The objective of the high court case is to stop the release of funds to the governor so as to compel him to cause the making of the appropriation law by the Rivers State House of Assembly properly constituted as prescribed by the 1999 Constitution… the Court of Appeal also acknowledged that based on two of its judgments as at today the Amaewhule group who allegedly defected are still legitimate members of the Rivers State House of Assembly and empowered to conduct the business of the Rivers State House of Assembly”. It said it was therefore wrong of the appeal court to have declared that the high court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the fund allocation case.

       According to the apex court, Fubara’s fear of impeachment led to his cat-and-mouse relationship with the Amaewhule group. Justice Emmanuel Agim, in the lead judgment, held that the governor started the prevention of the sittings of the assembly as constituted by its members as prescribed by Section 96 of the Constitution. His reliance on Sections 102 and 109 of the Constitution and the Doctrine of Necessity, His Lordship said, “is to continue the brazen subversion of Rivers State House of Assembly, the 1999 Constitution and legitimate government in Rivers State. Having by his own admission engaged in a series of illegal activities just to prevent the other 27 lawmakers from participating in the proceedings of the House to carry out their legitimate legislative duties which they were elected to do, his resort to the aforesaid Sections 102 and 109 and the Doctrine of Necessity on the basis of his allegation that they have defected is a red herring to perpetuate his subversion of the Rivers State House of Assembly, the 1999 Constitution and democratic government in Rivers State”.

    The court was not done: “The governor had collapsed the Rivers State House of Assembly. Therefore, no question about any member having lost his seat in that House due to defection can validly arise. There must be a House of Assembly for any constitutional processes therein to take place. The claim that the 27 members are no longer members of the House on the basis of an alleged defection is a continuation of his determination to prevent them from participating in the proceedings of the House. It is an engagement in chicanery. What is clear is that the 27 lawmakers are still valid members of the Rivers State House of Assembly and cannot be prevented from participating in the proceedings of the House by the governor in cahoots with the four other members. Sections 102 and 109 cannot be invoked in aid of this unconstitutional enterprise”.

    Berating the governor for choosing to collapse the legislature to enable him govern as a despot, the apex court declared: “As it is, there is no government in Rivers State… political disagreements cannot justify these attacks and contempt for the rule of law by the governor of a state or any person. What he has done is to destroy the government for the fear of being impeached”. With this decision, the case before the Port Harcourt High Court seeking to sack the 27 lawmakers for alleged defection has become mere academic exercise. It is as dead as a dodo.

  • RISIEC to unveil timetable for fresh council poll today

    RISIEC to unveil timetable for fresh council poll today

    The timetable and guidelines for a fresh Local Government election in Rivers State will be unveiled today.

    Chairman of the state Independent Electoral Commission (RISIEC) Adolphus  Enebeli announced this through a statement made available to reporters in Port Harcourt yesterday.

    The announcement of the proposed election came barely five days after last week’s Supreme Court judgment that nullified the October 2024 council poll in the state.

     A hitherto unknown Action People’s Party (APP)  won   22 chairmanship positions out of 23 in the state.

      It was, however, learnt that the plan for a new council poll might deepen the bad blood between the state  House of Assembly and Governor Siminalayi Fubara .

    Part of the key resolutions of the House on Monday was its  decision “to amend the Local Government and RISIEC laws to be in tandem with the Electoral Act and pave the way for the commencement of plans for fresh local government elections in the state.’’

    While the Amaewhule–led House believes that preliminary procedures and requirements for a fresh local government election,  including a valid appropriation law were not ready yet, the state government feels that the process for another poll must begin immediately in line with the Supreme Court verdict.

    The  House had also given the governor a 48-hour ultimatum to re-present the state’s 2025 Appropriation Bill. The deadline expires today.

     As of 9 pm yesterday, Fubara had made no comment on that.

     But Enebeli,  in his statement, invited leaders of all registered political parties, Non-Governmental Organisations,  traditional rulers, security agencies, religious organisations, and the media, among others to RISIEC’s secretariat where the date for the election would be made public.

    “The highlight of the meeting will be the unveiling of the timetable and guidelines for the 2025 local government elections in the state,” he said.

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    Just as Enebeli made the announcement,  22 Rivers indigenes elected as council chairmen nine years ago added a new twist to the crisis over the leadership of the local governments.

    The 22, who were elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) during Rotimi Amaechi’s tenure as governor,  said they were the rightful chairmen and should therefore be reinstated.

    They said in a statement yesterday that their demand stems from the outcome of last Friday’s Appeal Court judgement in Port Harcourt which upturned the    July 5, 2015 Federal High Court verdict that removed them from office. 

    The sacked council chiefs added that the ‘’vacancy’’ created by last week’s  Supreme Court judgment was another good reason for their demand.

    ‘’The rightful persons to occupy the vacant positions at the Local Government Councils in Rivers State are the council chairmen, vice chairmen and councillors duly elected in 2015, and having been lawfully recognised by the court of Appeal after a protracted legal battle,’’ they said in the statement by the then ALGON Chairman, Imie Benson.

    INC, IYC disagree with RRM on alleged impeachment move against Fubara

    Also yesterday, the   Ijaw National Congress (INC)  and Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Eastern Zone,   differed with the Rivers Restoration Movement (RRM) on the feud between Governor Fubara and the Amaewhule-led House. 

     While the INC and IYC  warned against any attempt to impeach Fubara, RRM advised the House of Assembly   not to  ‘’hesitate to wield the big stick of impeachment if the governor continues on the part of illegality.’’

    Chairman of the INC, Benjamin Okaba, warned that any attempt to undermine the office of Governor Fubara would have dire consequences for national peace and economic stability, especially in the crude oil and gas-rich Niger Delta.

    Okaba  accused  the  Ikwerre    of seeking  to frustrate the first riverine governor in decades and  said  that the Ijaw  would defend Fubara “with every pint of blood in their veins.”

    He also faulted the  Supreme Court judgment, saying it was capable of plunging the entire Niger Delta into crisis.

    Calling  on President Bola Tinubu to intervene in the crisis, Okaba enjoined Fubara to, as a law-abiding citizen, work with all duly constituted arms of government in the state.

    Also, the IYC  warned those hiding under the Supreme Court verdict to destabilise  Rivers State to have a rethink.

    The group, in a statement by its  Chairman  Datolu Sukubo, Secretary Tamunokuro Dango and Information Officer, Odia Igbikis,  described the 48-hour ultimatum by the House as a move to impeach  Governor Fubara.

    The statement partly reads: “We are deeply concerned over the current tense political situation in Rivers State, following the recent Supreme Court judgment nullifying the election of local government council chairmen.

    “This decision has created an environment ripe for manipulation by those who do not have the best interests of Rivers State or the Ijaw nation at heart.

    “We are aware of alarming plans by certain elements to destabilise Rivers State and undermine the mandate given to our elected officials.

    “The purported 48-hour ultimatum issued to the Governor, Sir Simin alayi Fubara, by the defected Martins Amawhule-led House of Assembly to present the 2025 budget is a clear indication of an orchestrated effort to create chaos and potentially impeach the governor.

    “This is not only an attack on our leadership but also an affront to the will of the Rivers people who have entrusted their governance to one of our own.”

     “The IYC firmly warns that we will not stand by and allow detractors to steal this mandate. We are committed to defending our rights and ensuring that the voices of the Ijaw people are heard and respected.

    “We call upon President Bola Tinubu  and the National Security Adviser(Nuhu Ribadu) to intervene immediately and halt the ongoing madness that threatens to plunge Rivers State into an avoidable crisis.’’

    But the RRM, in a statement by its Director-General, Johnson Georgewill and Secretary, Sarima Akpata, urged Amaewhule and his colleagues to defend democracy in Rivers State.

        “The time for us has come to ensure all illegal appointments, spendings and actions by the Rivers State Government are halted until a proper budget is presented,’’ it said.

  • Gunmen abduct Catholic priest, two others in Rivers

    Gunmen abduct Catholic priest, two others in Rivers

     Gunmen have kidnapped a Catholic priest and pastor-in-charge of Saint Patrick’s Church, Isiokpo, Rivers State, Reverend Father Livinus Maurice and two others.

    Maurice and two others were kidnapped while returning to Isiokpo, which is the headquarters of Ikwerre Local Government Area of the state, from Elele, where they had gone on hospital visitation.

    A statement by the Catholic Diocese of Port Harcourt, said the incident occurred on Wednesday, February 12, 2025, along the Isiokpo-Elele Road in the State.

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    The statement, which was signed by the Chancellor of the Diocese, Reverend Father Bernadine Anaele, on behalf of the Bishop, Most Rev. Camilus Etukudoh, however, said the matter has been reported to the security agencies.

    It called on Catholic faithful of Port Harcourt Diocese and Nigeria at large, to intensify prayers for the safe and unconditional release of the priest and those with him.

    The statement added that the kidnappers had already contacted the Diocese and were demanding ransom.

    The Rivers State Police Command was yet to issue any statement on the incident.

  • Protests in Rivers community over alleged killing of resident by policeman

    Protests in Rivers community over alleged killing of resident by policeman

    • Shooter arrested, detained, say police

    Residents of the Omagwa community in Rivers State have protested the killing of one of their own identified as Bright Chikuma Egbule by a trigger-happy policeman.

    It was gathered that the victim was shot at his residence by the policeman in the early hours of yesterday over a minor understanding.

    The killing was said to have jolted youths, elders and women, who took his body to the police station in Omagwa.

    It was learnt that following resistance by the policemen at the station, the aggrieved residents took the body to a major federal road and frustrated motorists from having access to the road for some hours.

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    A source, who spoke in confidence, expressed fears that the protest could escalate if the police failed to fish out the killer.

    The source said: “We fear the protest may escalate if nothing is done to address the matter and bring the rogue policemen to justice . This is a very unfortunate incident.

    “In recent times, my Omagwa people have been victims of harassment from security agencies.’’

    The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Superintendent of Police Grace Iringe-Koko, said: “The command is aware, and the CP is on top of the situation. Normalcy has been restored, and adequate security is present on the ground to prevent any breach of peace.

    “The body has been deposited at the morgue while the police officer has been detained while investigation is ongoing. The command consoles the family members that justice must be served.”

  • Cultists kill seven in Rivers community

    Cultists kill seven in Rivers community

    • Residents beg Fubara for help

    About eight persons have been reportedly killed by suspected cultists in Obelle Community in Emohua Local Government of Rivers State.

    It was gathered that the cultists operated in the community unchallenged on Wednesday night, killing the victims.

    The killers were said to have attacked the victims in their  homes deploying various weapons, including guns to kill them.

    A resident of the community, who gave his name as Obinichi, said the killers trailed their targets to their various houses, broke in and killed them.

    He said the gunmen entered the community various weapons, adding that some of the victims were decapitated and dismembered.

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    He said the police had visited some of the scenes of the crime and recovered two dead bodies, adding that about three of the victims were later buried by their families.

    One of the local vigilante leaders in Ibaa and Obelle, who spoke in confidence, called on security agencies to rescue the community from the stranglehold of notorious cult groups. The source said the cultists were holding the community hostage.

    He recalled that late last year, the same gang killed an OSPAC member and that they had continued to operate unchallenged.

    He called on Governor Siminalayi Fubara and the Emohua Local Government Chairman, David Omereji to come to the aid of the community.

    It was gathered that while state Police command had yet to issue a statement on the incident. But, the DPO in charge of Rumuji Division and JTF commander in Ibaa had visited the scene of crime.

  • JUST IN: Three killed in Rivers cult clash 

    JUST IN: Three killed in Rivers cult clash 

    Three people have been killed and three others arrested in a renewed bloody clash between rival cult groups in Onne, Eleme Local Government Area of Rivers State.

    It was learnt  that one of the groups first launched an attack on its rival, killing two on Friday and led to a reprisal on Saturday.

    The police confirmed that one of the notorious cultists identified as ‘small lighter’  terrorizing the area was among the victims of the clash.

    Some residents of the area were said to have fled their homes following gunshots fired by the cultists while others sent messages warning people to avoid the area. 

    Spokesperson of the State Police Command, SP Grace Iringe-Koko, confirmed the incident and said three people died in the bloody encounter.

    Iringe-Koko said: “Yes I can confirm the cult clash. Three persons were killed and three suspects arrested.

    “From the information available to me, one of the suspects called ‘Small Lighter’ who has been terrorizing the Eleme axis killed one person from the other cult. So in retaliation they went after him and killed him. One other was killed earlier, so, three persons in all.

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    “Our men (Police) have been deployed to the area and calm has been restored in the area. Investigation is ongoing to fish out other fleeing suspects and ensure they are prosecuted”.

    The Chairman of Eleme LGA, Brain Gokpa, promised to assist the security operatives to ensure the arrest and prosecution of those behind the killings,

    Gokpa, while reacting to the cult clash however called on youths of the Onne community to remain calm and refrain from taking laws into their hands.

    He said:  “Security agencies have been deployed to Onne. Everything is under control because we are working with the relevant security agencies so there is no need for panic.

    “Let me also use this medium to advise Onne youths to be calm. Nobody should take the laws into their hands as security agencies are on top of the situation.”