Tag: Rivers

  • TUC calls for transparency in Rivers election

    The Trade Union Congress (TUC), Rivers State chapter has called for transparency in the re-run legislative elections coming up tomorrow.

    In a statement, TUC Chairman,  Rivers State chapter, Comrade  Hyginus Chika Onuegbu, urged eligible voters to come out and vote for candidates of their choice.

    Onuegbu said  the Inspector-General of Police, the Director-General of Directorate State Security and Service Chiefs of the Armed Forces should provide adequate security to ensure  free and fair re-run elections, adding that no voter, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) personnel or accredited election observer should be intimidated, hurt or killed.

    “By now, we expect that the security agencies working in collaboration with the INEC should have their election security strategy that cover all phases of the electoral process and aimed at protecting electoral integrity. It is important to state clearly that the greatest threat to the Rivers State re-run elections is insecurity, as many of our people are scared going by the level of insecurity in the state.

    “The INEC as the umpire must ensure that the elections are free, fair and credible. It is important that election materials arrive early to the polling stations, so that voting and accreditation can be completed on time in line with the guidelines for the elections,” he said.

    Onuegbu said the youth should shun  violence and embrace peace, adding that political parties and their candidates should work towards safe and peaceful re-run elections.

    “Once again, we appeal to all Rivers people, especially the youth to embrace peace and shun all acts of violence. Indeed, acts of violence of whatever kind should be frowned upon by all and strictly shunned and punished collectively as it diminishes our democratic culture and whittles down the remaining collective respect we have as a people and as a state,’’ he added.

  • Enough of Rivers killings

    •Tomorrow’s re-runs should be a civic celebration to harvest votes, not a barbarous war wasting lives

    Twenty-four hours to the Rivers State National Assembly and House of Assembly election re-runs, voided for irregularities in the 2015 general elections, there is heightened anxiety, if not outright angst, in the land. The reason is not far-fetched.

    Rivers, in the build-up to the re-runs, has turned a crimson creek from heinous killings. News reports claim no less than 34 have already been slain: beheaded, clubbed to death or burnt, in fearsome violence. That an irate crowd in Omuku, bore aloft the headless remains of Franklin Obi, a local politician, in protest against his cruel decapitation, just epitomises a helpless people traumatised into sheer savagery!

    The violence that heralded the voided elections, held in March and April 2015, was hardly better. Indeed back then, opposing partisans, backed with election observer reports, claimed no less than 100 were slain, most of them traced to partisan rage, aided and abetted by the subversion of the state security apparatuses.

    Given the unfortunate turn of events, the verdict of the Supreme Court on the Rivers governorship election (voided by the Rivers Election Tribunal and the appellate Court of Appeal, but upheld by the apex court) may have inadvertently legitimised electoral violence. It would appear a classic case of how a court’s application of brute legalism tended to have turned the people involved into near brutes!

    But after all said and done, what is the state’s duty tomorrow? Simple: to conduct a peaceful, orderly and, as the cliché goes, free and fair election. It is a moot point however, given the heralding violence, if the election could again be free or fair. This is because of the palpable tension, resulting from the terrible sabre rattling, from both sides of the partisan divide.

    The emotive angling of what should otherwise have been a simple and straight-forward election is even more scary. If it is not a tussle for supremacy between incumbent Governor, Nyesom Wike and former Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, both Ikwerre sons, it is dubbed, by the Wike side, an invasion of federal security forces, to “subdue” and “electorally enslave” Rivers people.

    Ironically, it was the same “federal invasion”, skewed towards the Wike side, when the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was Nigeria’s ruling party, that was responsible for the murderous impunity that turned the polls into an orgy of violence and slaughter, which eventually rendered the results nugatory.

    On the other hand, the new All Progressives Congress (APC) Federal Government is framing it as a bounden duty to secure the polls, and make them free and fair. President Muhammadu Buhari’s vow to deal with sponsors of electoral violence in Rivers State, saying it is “primitive, barbaric and unacceptable”, issues from that very logic.

    Given the rivers of blood that troubled state has turned into of late, that cannot be unreasonable. Indeed, it is imperative the bloodshed be stanched; and the big sponsors of the partisan violence be arrested, tried and punished according to law.

    But what the APC Federal Government cannot afford is slip into the subversion mode of the former Federal Government under President Goodluck Jonathan. It was that government’s willful commission and omission that have snowballed into the present Rivers mess. Rather, it must secure the election with no partisan bias. So, any officer of the law caught aiding or abetting rigging or violence must be apprehended and punished.

    It does not matter which side wins the Rivers election. What matters is the process: transparent, free, fair and peaceful. That way, the process wins; and the democratic system is further deepened.

    But equally important: every perpetrator of violence, both at the 2015 election  and tomorrow’s in Rivers — and elsewhere — must be fingered and lawfully punished. That is the only way to dam the Rivers threatening but steady dissent into savagery and barbarity.

  • Scare tactics in Rivers election re-run

    SIR: The spate of killing of APC members and ascribing same to cultists is the most disingenuous electoral wool-gathering ever concocted in the history of electoral democracy. The bloodshed being orchestrated is an attempt to scare away electorates with allegiance to APC’s electoral fortunes.

    Needless to say that the discountenance of the killing interlude by the Supreme Court in its determination of the governorship election petition has emboldened murderous gang in Rivers State.

    With insecurity at its peak, the re-run contest seems to favour the PDP whose members have the unbridled electoral space to express their franchise.

    Drafting huge numbers of security agents is not enough going by past experiences; the federal government may have to wield the big stick in declaring a state of emergency if the carnage persists.

     

    • Bukola Ajisola,

    Victoria Island, Lagos.

  • Buhari condemns political violence in Rivers State

    Buhari condemns political violence in Rivers State

    *Vows to deal with violence sponsors

    *Says new national airline not his priority

    *Says anti-graft war will be merciless

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday in Malabo condemned recent political violence in Rivers State.

    According to him, killing of people over political differences was primitive, barbaric and unacceptable.

    In a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, Buhari said: “We will deal decisively with all sponsors of violence. I have given the security services clear directives in this regard.

    “We will show that violence in any form will no longer be tolerated before, during or after elections,” the President said at an interactive meeting with Nigerians resident in Equatorial Guinea.

    President Buhari said that the Independent National Electoral Commission will be encouraged to explore the possibility of Nigerians abroad voting in the 2019 general elections.

    Noting that some African countries have started allowing their citizens resident abroad to vote in national elections, the President said that he fully empathized with the desire of Nigerians in the Diaspora to vote in national elections.

    He said that he will therefore do all within his power to fulfil that desire.

    “I want all Nigerians to know that I respect them and their right to choose their leaders,” he said

    The President also said that establishing a new national airline was not currently on the Federal Government’s list of priorities.

    He said that his administration’s main area of focus now was reducing the level of poverty in the country.

    The President said that developing the infrastructure needed to boost production in all sectors of the economy and creating more jobs for young Nigerians, and other actions that will directly improve the living conditions of ordinary Nigerians will continue to be prioritized by his administration.

    President Buhari was responding to complaints by members of the Nigerian community about the absence of direct flights between Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea.

    He assured them that his administration’s war against corruption will remain “fearless, relentless and merciless”.

    “We will be merciless and relentless in pursuing all those who abused public trust. Nigerians will see how some of the elite conspired to run the nation down,” he said.

  • APC leaders under gun attack in Rivers

    APC leaders under gun attack in Rivers

    National and Rivers State leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC), top politicians and reporters yesterday came under gun attack from suspected thugs of the Peoples Democratic Party in a near ambush in Rivers State.

    But the heavy presence of security forced the assailants to take to their heels.

    The attack came between Omoku, the headquarters of Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government Area of Rivers state and Big Elele, on the way to the Port Harcourt International Airport Road.

    Rivers State PDP Chairman Felix Obuah, hails from the local government.

    The National leaders of the APC, lead by Deputy National Chairman (South) Chief Segun Oni, who represented National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, and state leaders led by the deputy governorship candidate during the April 11 last year’s election, Asita Honourable, were in Omoku to sympathise with the victims of the politically-motivated killings and beheadings. Most of them are members of the APC.

    With Oni from Abuja were the National Women Leader Ramatu Tijani and National Youth Leader Ibrahim Jalo, among others.

    The sympathy meeting took place at the APC’s local government secretariat in Omoku, a town now deserted for fear of attacks ahead of Saturday’s run off elections.

    The trip started from the party’s state secretariat in Port Harcourt, around 8 a.m when party leaders, headed for the Port Harcourt International Airport, Omagwa, to receive the visitors from where they all moved to Omoku.

    Travelling to Omoku in a long convoy, the normal speed of about 100 kilometres per hour was observed, but the return journey witnessed a snail speed of 20 kilometres per hour.

    While at Omoku, the APC leaders got information from undisclosed persons that suspected PDP thugs had laid ambush on the route they took to Omoku, to attack them. They were told to consider taking another route to Port Harcourt.

    The APC deputy national chairman, however, called the bluff of the rampaging gunmen and insisted that the return journey must be through the same route (Big Elele to Port Harcourt International Airport). Security was immediately beefed up.

    Rather than speeding during the return journey, the convoy drivers opted for slow movement, with many fully-armed and battle-ready soldiers, operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS) and riot policemen on hand to protect the convoy

    But the assailants remained in the bush from where they were shooting sporadically. They could not move to the busy highway, and instead ran into the bush.

    The NWC members were received by APC’s National Vice Chairman, Southsouth, Hilliard Eta, and the party’s Assistant National Secretary, Oji Ngofa, who is a former Chairman of Eleme Local Government of Rivers State, among other chieftains of the party.

    Speaking in Omoku, the National Chairman of the APC described the situation in Omoku and other parts of Rivers state as genocide and called on President Muhammadu Buhari to take immediate action to halt the madness.

    Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike and the Rivers Chairman of the PDP, were directly accused of being behind the politically-motivated killings across the 23 Local Governments of the state, which the PDP leaders described as supremacy battle among cult groups.

    The APC leader said: “I am surprised that innocent people are being killed, beheaded, maimed and annihilated on a daily basis, while Wike is describing it as a cult war. The killings are politically-motivated, not cult war. I feel very sad, angry and ashamed that people are being gruesomely murdered and beheaded in Rivers State.

    “This is the height of barbarism, wickedness, criminality, debasement and bestiality. I never thought Nigeria would degenerate to this level. We must not allow the killings to go on. We will speak for you (relatives of the victims) and we will not abandon you. Public inquiry must be put in place.”

    Asita, who was weeping while speaking at Omoku, stated that the victims were killed for being members of the APC, declaring that heavens would not fall, if President Buhari took drastic action to halt the killings of political opponents and others in Rivers State, to show the presence of government.

    The Rivers deputy governorship candidate of the APC wondered for how long the members of the party would be paying with their blood, their loyalty to the APC, declaring that they would prefer to be members of the party and still be alive.

    Asita noted that when the Supreme Court, on January 27 pronounced Wike as the duly-elected governor of Rivers, the APC members thought that would be the end of the killings in the state, but said they were wrong.

    Welcoming members of the NWC of APC to Omoku, a former Rivers Commissioner for Power, Augustine Wokocha, said killing of APC members had been a daily occurrence in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government and other parts of the state.

    Wokocha stated that the Federal Government must rise up to the security challenge in Rivers State, describing the killings as the height of criminality, a deliberate attack on the members of the APC and an attempt by Rivers PDP chairman to deliver Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LGA to the PDP, in spite of Obuah’s unpopularity in the area.

    Addressing the teeming members of the APC at The Arena in Port Harcourt, the deputy national chairman urged them to come out en masse on Saturday and vote for only the candidates of the APC, to restore sanity to Rivers.

    Oni noted at the meeting, which was also attended by a member of the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the APC, Chief Sam Sam Jaja, that the horrendous bloodletting must stop forthwith.

    Former governorship candidate Dr. Dakuku Adol Peterside, the newly-appointed Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), said: “Wike’s government is reckless. When you have a government that is foisted on you, what you (NWC members) saw in Omoku would be what would be experienced. The violence was foisted on Rivers people. We sought redress at the tribunal and in court, but the Supreme Court said the current government was validly elected.

    “We accepted the verdict of the Supreme Court. We thought it would bring an end to the madness in Rivers State. Quite unfortunately, Rivers people are now being subjected to a lunatic government. Our people are being slaughtered on a daily basis.

    “The irresponsible government that we have in Rivers State cannot defend the people of the state. The Federal Government should rise up and defend Rivers people, who want to cast their votes for their preferred candidates for the first time in five years. In free and fair election, APC candidates will win 80 per cent in Rivers State’s 309 wards.”

    No fewer than 100 members of the APC were gruesomely murdered by thugs working for the PDP, before, during and after the 2015 general elections, across the 23 LGAs of the state.

    PDP leaders in Rivers also claimed that many members of the party were killed by rampaging gunmen, who they alleged were members of the APC.

    Most pathetic among the APC members killed before last year’s general elections was the case of a former Chairman of Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government Council of Rivers state, Chief Christopher Adube, who was assassinated in his Obrikom home in the LGA on April 3, 2015.

    Chief Adube, who was buried on December 12 last year, was assassinated along with three of his biological children: Lucky, Joy and John, as well as a family friend, Mr. Iyke Ogarabe, and the Adubes’ driver, Samuel Chukwunonye.

    Two of the children of Chief Adube: Paul and Ogechi, who survived the gunshots, and their mother, Patience, were among the persons at yeaterday’s meeting in Omoku.

    Paul, who was still in a wheel chair yesterday, because of spinal cord injury, caused by the assassins’ bullets, could not defecate by himself, while someone must assist him to pack the faeces, with iron rods used to support the legs of Ogechi.

    In the same Omoku on February 12 this year, no fewer than 24 APC members were again killed and mostly beheaded, with their heads taken away by the gunmen.

    At 9 p.m. on March 5, masked gunmen shot dead and beheaded a chieftain of the APC, Franklin Obi, and also killed his wife and 18-year-old son, Bestman, at his residence on Rutachi Street, Omoku.

  • Police’ll meet  force with force in Rivers, says DIG

    Police’ll meet force with force in Rivers, says DIG

    • NSCDC deploys 2, 000 personnel

    Deputy Inspector-General of Police of Zone 6, Calabar (DIG) Sotonye Wakama has warned those planning to foment trouble ahead of the Rivers rerun.

    Wakama urged them to relocate or incure the wrath of the police.

    He gave the warning when he visited the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) office in Port Harcourt, the state capital, yesterday.

    The police chief assured the management and staff of the commission of protection during and after the elections.

    The DIG, who is from Okrika, said the poll would likely be contentious, and assured all  that the police would deal with anybody instigating trouble  according to the law.

    Wakama was accompanied by his assistant, Adisa Bolanta.

    “We know the rerun elections in Rivers are likely to be competitive, if not contentious. A lot has happened that calls for concern to indigenes and residents. It is for this reason that I have come to the state to speak to stake holders and reassure INEC of safe polls.

    ‘’I am also warning that if anything happens in this state, if we see anybody for any reason doing anything untoward, which will harm any individual or destroy any property, we will stretch the elasticity of the law in respect to that offence to the fullest and deal with such person(s).

    “However, we are not carrying a knife to a gun fight, but should anybody bring out a knife, we will bring out our own; if they bring out guns, we will bring out our own and if they want to harm anybody, we will ensure that they will be decapitated.”

    He assured eligible voters of securityduring and after the elections and urged them to come out and vote in accordance to INEC stipulated rules.

    The police chief added that those with no reason to come out should remain in their houses until after the elections.

    Asked about his plans for the flashpoints, he said adequate arrangements had been made to ensure nothing goes wrong.

    “Already, flashpoint areas have been identified and we have made arrangements in  those places.

    Also speaking, a former Acting INEC Chairman, now National Electoral Commissioner, Hajia Amina Zakari, said INEC was ready to conduct peaceful, free and fair polls, but he appealed for a conducive environment.

    “ INEC is committed to doing the right thing in a conducive environment.”

    Resident Commissioner (REC) Aniedi Ikowak reiterated that card readers would be used to avoid irregularities.

    The Commandant General  of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, (NSCDC), Abdullahi Muhammadu, yesterday, approved the deployment of an Assistant Commandant General (ACG), four commandants and 2,000 personnel for the rerun.

    A statement by NSCDC Public Relations Officer, Emmanuel Okeh said Abdullahi urged political actors to abide by the rules, and parents to restrain their wards from being used as thugs, as anyone cauwould be dealt with.

     

  • Rivers Election: IGP deploys DIG, AIG, CPs, 6000 officers for re-run election

    • Nwuche: killings beyond cult clashes

    Inspector General of Police (IGP) Solomon Arase has deployed a Deputy Inspector-General of Police, an Assistant Inspector-General of Police, three Commissioners of Police and 6,000 officers for Saturday’s re-run elections in Rivers State.

    The IGP directed the Deputy Inspector-General of Police (DIG) in charge of Department of Operations, Sontoye Wakama, to proceed to Rivers to hold meetings with stakeholders and police officers on the need for peaceful conduct before, during and after the election.

    Also, the Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG) in charge of Zone 6 Calabar, Adisa Baba Bolanta has been directed to relocate to Port Harcourt on March 14 for pre-elections preparation.

    The Police High Command explained that the deployment is with a view to emplace conducive environment for free, fair and credible election.

    A statement in Abuja yesterday by the Force spokesperson Olabisi Kolawole said three Commissioners of Police (CPs) have also been deployed to supervise security arrangements within the three Senatorial Districts of the state, Rivers East, Rivers West and Rivers South East.

    In addition to the senior officers,  the police boss also stated that 6000 conventional Policemen and 14 Units of Police Mobile Force personnel (MOPOL), would be deployed to compliment the personnel of Rivers State Command during the election.

    The IGP, while assuring the electorates of a secured and enabling environment to exercise their franchise, warned all security details to desist from accompanying their principals and politicians to polling booths and collation centres during the election.

    He noted that only security personnel specially assigned for election duties must be seen within and around the election designated places.

    Former House of Representatives Deputy Speaker Chibudom Nwuche yesterday condemned the “brutal and unrestrained” killings going on in Rivers State.

    Nwuche asked the Federal Government to urgently intervene in the crisis in order to avert anarchy and further loss of innocent lives in the State.

    He insisted that the victims of the killing spree are mostly members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) or the party’s sympathisers.

    The former Deputy Speaker in a statement released in Abuja at the weekend, “bemoaned the fact that Rivers State had, in the last six months, degenerated into a terrible state of barbarism and brigandage with wanton killings, beheadings, brutal assaults, kidnapping, rape, destruction of property and near total breakdown of law and order have become daily occurrences.”

    He noted with regret in the statement entitled “Rivers Killing fields: A descent into anarchy” that the unrelenting killing spree unleashed on the state by organised criminal groups has led to the death of several Rivers sons and daughters.

    He underscored the fact that even though “the perpetrators of these heinous crimes against humanity are well known to the law enforcement agencies, the perpetrators have somehow always succeeded in evading arrest and prosecution.”

    The situation, he said, has invariably led to the loss of further lives and total collapse of human rights and dignity.

    While urging the Federal Government to urgently take immediate steps towards bringing to an end “what is now known as the unbridled homicidal killings in Rivers State”, Nwuche condemned “the penchant of high-ranking Rivers State government officials, some sections of the media and Non-Governmental Organisations, as well as some law enforcement personnel to label what are clearly organised crimes against the people as mere cult clashes.”

    He said the tendency by these groups of persons to diminish the barrage of horrific and organised acts of criminality currently engulfing the state smacks of cover-up and complicity.

    He added, “One would have expected that these groups and individuals to be in the fore-front of efforts to end  the ongoing human crises in Rives State, as well as help bring the culprits to book , rather they are spiritedly trying to play down the scope and magnitude of the crises.”

    Nwuche asked, “What are these cults? Who are these cultists? Do they include the hundreds of victims of these heinous crimes such as hordes of defenseless and aged men and women killed in Omoku and the fourteen persons recently murdered in cold blood in one fell swoop at Ula Upata, Ahoada East Local Government Area or the 44 person assassinated so far plus sixty-nine persons kidnapped in Ahoada, as well as Kingsley Obi who was beheaded and Chief D. C. Ena who was assassinated in his palace?

    “How come these victims are invariably members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) or their sympathisers? Why are the victims always un-armed while the perpetrators of these crimes are heavily armed with sophisticated weapons?”

    He lamented that as a result of the bloody onslaught, the value of life has greatly diminished in the state under the present Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration.

    Nwuche noted that a lot of notable persons who ordinarily reside in the state have fled to set up abode in other states out of fear for their lives.

    He said it was wrong to categorise him as sponsor of the organised killings for his constructive criticism of the happenings in the state.

    Nwuche said he would not be deterred from insisting on the urgent intervention of the Federal Government to curb the obviously sponsored genocidal killings.

    He said, “I and other concerned stakeholders have in the past six months, been constructively engaging the authorities and law enforcement agencies in trying to ensure an immediate halt to the mayhem going on in our state.

    “No amount of spurious and laughable allegations will stop us from getting the authorities to bring to an end this sad and painful saga in the history of our state, as well as bring the perpetrators to book.”

  • IGP deploys DIG, AIG, CPs, officers for Rivers re-run election

    IGP deploys DIG, AIG, CPs, officers for Rivers re-run election

    As part of efforts to prevent electoral violence in the forthcoming re-run election in Rivers state, the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase has deployed his men to the state.

    The rerun election is scheduled for Saturday,19th March 2016.

    According to a statement issued in Abuja on Sunday by the Force Spokesperson, Olabisi Kolawole the IGP directed that the Deputy Inspector-General of Police in charge of Department of Operations (DIG) Sontoye Wakama, proceed to Rivers to meet with stakeholders and Police officers in the State Command on the need for peaceful conduct before, during and after the election.

    The Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG) in charge of Zone 6 Calabar, Adisa Baba Bolanta has also been directed to relocate to Port Harcourt on14th March, 2016 for pre-elections preparation.

    The Police High Command explained that the deployment is with a view to emplace conducive environment for free, fair and credible election.

    According to the statement, three Commissioners of Police (CPs) have also been deployed to supervise security arrangements within the three Senatorial Districts of the state; Rivers East, Rivers West and Rivers South East.

    In addition to the senior officers, the police boss also stated that 6000 conventional Policemen and 14 Units of Police Mobile Force personnel (MOPOL), would be deployed to compliment the personnel of Rivers State Command during the election.

    The IGP, while assuring the electorates of a secured and enabling environment to exercise their franchise, warned all security details to desist from accompanying their principals and politicians to polling booths and collation centres during the election.

    He noted that only security personnel specially assigned for election duties must be seen within and around the election designated places.

  • Rivers killing fields

    Rivers killing fields

    • Residents on edge as vicious cult gangs seize state

    It was a danger waiting to happen. Those who expected the violence that characterised the 2015 general elections in Rivers State to abate were proved wrong soon after the election, with the violence exacerbating every day, as different cult groups remained locked in supremacy battles.

    Last Saturday, yet-to-be identified gunmen murdered Franklin Obi, an APC chieftain, his wife, and 18-year-old son in their residence in Omoku, Ogba-Egbema-Ndoni Local Government Area of Rivers State.

    The gunmen invaded the house at about 9pm, beheaded the lawmaker, who was the chairman of ward 4 in Omoku.

    While the state was still mourning the killing, another member of the APC, Ofinijite Amachree, was burnt alive in Buguma, Asari-Toru Local Government of the state midweek.

    Amachree was beaten up and burnt. Five persons were clubbed to death between last Saturday and Sunday.

    Before the latest killings, vicious cult gangs in the state had consistently attacked communities in Ogba/Egbema Ndoni, Abua/Odoni and Ahoada East, Ahoada West and several other local government areas of the state.

    During a recent attack in Ogba/Egbema Ndoni, Abua/Odoni and Ahoada East, Ahoada West local government areas, about 25 people were allegedly killed during the violence, with some of the victims beheaded. The governor of the state, Nyesom Wike, acted swiftly by suspending the three council caretaker committee chairmen whose local government areas were affected by the violence. Their suspension was lifted after one week.

    Despite the suspension order, many residents of the state have described it as a little drop of water in the ocean. According to them, suspending the council leaders without a corresponding strong security policy to checkmate the activities of cult members and their sponsors in the state would be meaningless.

    The upsurge in the activities of cult members in the state started shortly after the take-off of civil rule in 1999. Back then, residents of the state lived in fear. For them, the fear of a cult member was the beginning of wisdom.

    Business activities ended in most parts of the state by 5:30pm, as the people struggled to get to their various homes before darkness falls. By 6pm, the streets are deserted, and whoever dared the cult groups did so at the expense of his or her life.

    During the period, cult members assumed more powers, with greater authorities than even the monarchs, who themselves were left at their mercy. And for most residents, it was no longer strange to wake up in the morning and see headless bodies on the street. And sometimes, the cult members go from house to house in broad daylight to dispossess the people of their belongings, and those who resisted them were killed or maimed.

    But the tide changed with the entrance of Governor Chibuike Amaechi in 2003. He went to work by putting a task force that not only curtailed the activities of the cult groups but also made their activities unattractive to young men.

    Part of the brief of the task force was to arrest and hand over any suspected cult member to the police for prosecution. And within a short period, normalcy returned to the capital city, as the members of the cult groups fled to seek refuge in the neighouring communities.

    Soon after, some of self-confessed cult members came out and denounced their membership of the various groups. One of them, Kennedy Johnson, better known as Coffin, said: “When Governor Amaechi came on board, he did not only declare war against the cult groups, he also ensured that their activities discontinued,” noting that so many cultists at that period were killed, while some repented and others ran away from town to their various communities.

    He continued: “I thank God that today,  I’m  no longer in the system, though I had a close shave with death before I surrendered. Before Amaechi became the governor of Rivers State, cultists were being pampered, we had a lot of prominent individuals with interest in our activities. Then, only two groups, Degban and Dewell, were operating. We didn’t kill innocent people and we punished our members who go against the law or who work against us. But at a point, our activities and the fact that the people were afraid of us, made us attractive to some of the politicians in the state. That was how cult groups became involved in politics and we were provided all the necessary instruments to deliver clean deal.  And when the job is done, the man won’t be able to retrieve all the arms he had supplied us.”

    He disclosed that cult activities became lucrative as a result of the sophisticated weapons at their disposal. “It is simple logic, you don’t give a man the kind of weapon in the hands of cultists today and expect that he will not go mad when he knows that some of the security men  don’t have such weapons. It was from here that they became interested in kidnapping, armed robbery, attacks on oil pipelines and other illicit activities.

    “And, no amount of war against the cultists can stop them, because they have tasted money. Do you know how much they make during election periods? Do you know how much they make from kidnapping?  Some are working as private security officers to some of the top business men and politicians in the state. Some of the mansions you are seeing in Port Harcourt today are owned by kidnappers who are also members of cult groups.”

    Investigations by The Nation also revealed that when Port Harcourt city became too hot for cult activities during Amaechi’s administration. So, many of the cult members moved down to the villages where they became lord of the local politics and decided who became the monarchs and chiefs in the communities. A study of the activities of the cult groups in few local government areas showed how cult groups have terrorized and destroyed many communities in the state.

     

    Ikwerre LGA

    Ikwerre Local Government Area, which has the ancient city of Isiokpo as its headquarter, is made up of 14 communities. Among these communities, about nine have been colonized by cult groups. Many  young men have been killed, while others remain missing as a result of a supremacy battle among them. The cult groups that terrorise Ikwerre are Degban and Islander.

    Amadi Gift, one of the youth leaders in the area, told The Nation that Ubima community was turned to a ghost town on October 28, 2005, when cult groups turned the community into a battle ground. “Ubima people will never forget in a hurry how cult activities started in the area. On October 28, 2005, our people relocated to the neigbouring community over a cult clash.  The supremacy battle started with serious shooting in the morning, and they came back in the night when some members of the rival groups were still sleeping with their families. They descended on them and set their houses on fire.

    “The next night, the other group whose houses were set on fire, retaliated and demolished over 30 houses belonging to their rivals. Many members of the community were rendered homeless because some of the houses destroyed were family houses. Till today, some families have not been able to rebuild their houses. That was how the crisis started. And, till today, the community has recorded more killings due to cult clashes.”

    An Ikwerre man, who pleaded anonymity for security reasons,  said after the killing that took place in 2005 and 2007 in Ubima community, the cultists were able to maintain peace in the various communities of the local government. He said the cultists resurfaced again four years ago with sophisticated weapons when politicians in the area began to see them as a means to achieve their political goal.

    “For the past four years, when the cultists resumed their activities in our various communities, more than 100 residents of Ikwerre have been murdered, while more than 50 are missing. Take a look at cult activities in Ubima community alone, it was reported that over 15 persons have been killed and seven missing. As I‘m talking to you now, the residents of the community are living in anxiety over incessant killings. The recent killing of one of the leaders of Degbam, popularly known as Juju, has become another problem to the people of the community. This was because the rival cult group in the area has vowed to avenge the death of Juju with 50 heads.

    “The two dreaded cult groups in this area are being protected by political parties. That is why the police find it difficult to arrest some of them. It was because of their alliance with the political parties and community leaders that made them to have access to sophisticated weapons. And with these weapons, they were able to diversify into kidnapping, robbery and other forms of crime. Of course, cultists are becoming stronger and fearless in the state today because some of their leaders are today public office holders.”

     

    Emohua LGA

    Emohua is a sister local government to Ikwerre, and the two have many things in common. They have almost the same tradition, with similar language and have one supreme council, called Ogbakor Ikwerre, the highest decision-making body in Ikwerre ethnic nationality. Some of the residents of the area, who spoke to The Nation, said Ikwerre Local Government is suffering from the activities of the cult groups. It will be recalled that the people of Ogbakiri were sacked from their community seven years ago by cult groups in the area. Properties were destroyed and human beings were slaughtered. The crisis kept them out of their communities for more than five years before returning home recently to rebuild their damaged homes.

    On January 18, 2016, Elibrada community in Emohua Clan woke up to discover that their community was on fire, following a clash between two rival cult groups in the area. The following day, members of the community went after the cult members, killing two of them.

    A community member, who pleaded anonymity, said: “It was a relief that the cultis were killed. The people of the area openly rolled out their drums, singing and dancing when the news broke that the terror cultist, popularly called, DD the White Lion, has been beheaded. In the third week of December 2015, a close friend  of DD the White Lion, who was also an alleged cultist, was killed and beheaded. DD the White Lion was the leader of one of the cult groups that have been terrorizing Emohua people.”

    Elder Ohiakwe Amaechi, a community leader in Emohua, said cult activities in the area have inflicted pains and agony on the residents. “What happened in Rumuekpe, Ibaa and Ogbakiri  should discourage people from patronising cultists. These three communities have more dreaded cultists than you can find in other parts of the state. The insecurity in Ibaa,  Ogbakiri  and Rumuekpe communities, which started seven years ago, degenerated to such a level that community members abandoned their homes and became refugees in another man’s land for years.  Ogbakiri, for instance, experienced a total breakdown of law and order that resulted in massacre and deadly chieftaincy tussle in the area.”

    It will be recalled that on the 3rd of February, 2014, some cultists suspected to be members of Islanders and Degbam fraternity, clashed at Ibaa community, killing nine persons, while properties worth several millions of naira were destroyed over territorial control. The fight led to the Joint Military task force taking over the community for more than one month, during which the residents were forced to relocate to neighbouring communities for safety.

    A brother of one of the killed victims in Ibaa, Anthony Davies, told The Nation that the situation in the community during the clash was akin to a war front.

    “My brother was among the nine people killed, though he was not a member of any cult group.  When we heard gunshots that early morning, he was frightened, and he stepped out to find out who were shooting. That was how one of them called him by name and shot him point blank. He bled for about 30 minutes before he gave up the ghost.”

     

    Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LGA

    The incident of February 12, 2016 will linger for a long time in the memory of residents of Omuku, Ogba/Egbema/ Ndoni Local Government of Rivers State. On that day, cult members went on the rampage. And by the time the smoke from their guns cleared, several young men lay dead, with many of their heads cut off and taken away by the cult members.

    According to sources in the area, kidnappings and secret killings are the major business of young men. Abductors are said to collect between N40,000 and N200,000 as ransom from indigent parents whose kids are kidnapped.

    About 12 persons, including Chief Christopher Adube, the All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain, and his family, were murdered in one day in the area.

    However, when our correspondent visited Onelga, it was observed that there are many companies operating in the area, putting a lie to the excuse by many that joblessness and idleness are responsible for the high rate of crime in the area. And recently, 25 people were reportedly killed in the area, with 10 of the victims’ heads cut off and taken away.

    Elder Benedict Ajie, who lost two sons, said, “The gunmen entered our compound by 9: 30 pm on that day and started shooting their guns. It was after we stopped hearing the sound of gunshots that we decided to come outside to check what happened. It was at that point that we discovered that two of my sons were dead. In our street alone, more than eight young men were killed.’’

    A community leader, Mr. John Awe, said: “They killed about 25 people. It was a battle between the two strongest cult groups in the area.  Despite the presence of security agents and several check points mounted on major junctions in the area, the killers operated freely without any fear.

    “For the past two years, cultists have taken over some villages in the area. You can see me sitting here, four of my cousins were among the victims and two were beheaded by the gunmen who took away their heads. In Omoku, we are living at the mercy of cult groups. You need to be here during the election period to see how these bad boys dined on the same table with politicians.”

     

    Etche LGA

    Etche Local Government Area has been reeling under the pains of cult activities. The area is said to be under the control of the dreaded cult group, Umuoma boys, which allegedly originated from Obibi near Ozuzu Etche. Ironically, Umuoma, when interpreted, means ‘good children’. But their activities are everything but good.

    On the 5th of January 2014, Obite community was attacked by gunmen, during which scores of the residents were left injured. The attack also left one Miss Chikodi Nwankwoala dead. Her remains were found under a tree in front of her house.

    According to Chief Linus Nwankwoala, one of the elders who consulted the oracle to find out what killed her, “My sister was not sick when she retired to bed, only for us to wake up in the morning and find out that the door to her room was forced open. This is not the first time they are killing people silently in this community. The insecurity in this area is unbearable.’’

    Soon after the attack on Obite, another community in the area, Akpokwu, suffered a similar fate, during which four people were killed and 20 houses burnt down.

    Speaking on the rate of insecurity in the area, a youth leader, who pleaded anonymity, said the activities of the Umuoma Boys and other killer groups in the area started as mere support groups for politicians in the area.

    According to him, “In every election year, the young men receive visitors from other local government areas whom they work for as hired assassins, election thugs and other illicit activities. The Umuoma Boys are very powerful and deadly. Etche has become a place where residents of Rivers State find it difficult to travel to due to insecurity. Though everybody knows Umuoma Boys are responsible for most of the kidnappings and robberies in this area, nobody has been able to do anything about it. The system of using hoodlums as thugs for political gains has made Etche unsafe, especially during election period.”

     

    Ahoada East/Ahoada West

    The situation in Ahoada, whether East or West, is almost out of hand. Armed youths have for long turned the area to a no-go for most residents. The Nation gathered that residents of the area now contribute money every month to pay the cult groups in order to stave off attacks and harassments.

    Investigation revealed that on Wednesday 20th, 2016, the entire Ubeta community in Ahoada West was thrown into chaos after cultists murdered two persons, one Prince Udoma and another man, said to be from Imo State. Properties were also destroyed during the attack.

    A community leader, who did not want his name in print, said: “Here, we are living at the mercy of cultists. Two weeks ago, the cultists struck again, abducting two indigenes in the process. The two people, Elder Augustine Esukpa Achakpo and Mrs. Fyne Henshaw Eligwe, were beaten severely and taken away by the cult members. The group abducted a third victim, one Elder Emmanuel Eketu, as they fled the scene. The three were later released after days of captivity, with ransom paid by their relatives..

    “Our women no longer go to farms for fear of being raped, molested or kidnapped. Our people are now dejected and hopeless. Some of the cultists are kidnappers and some are ready to kill at the slightest provocation. They are now initiating more youths into cultism on daily basis. They have also resorted to burning people’s homes. As I’m talking to you, the community is contributing the sum of N500,000 to give to cultists in the area, as directed by their leader. We are calling the state government to urgently draft security men to protect our lives and properties. We have held a security meeting with the Police authorities in Rivers State, during which the police demanded logistics support. So far, over 100 persons have been kidnapped and 65 houses burnt.”

    Mr. Samuel Ewo, a youth in the area, revealed that the cultists now operate in camps, from where they attack the members of the community. He said the cultists are now used as fighters in land disputes, chieftaincy tussles and hired assassins.

    Ewo said: “Recently, unknown gunmen invaded a secondary school in the area and abducted school children for ransom. What we are asking to know is who is giving these people those sophisticated weapons that even the police do not have? When some of them are arrested, some privileged individuals would secretly negotiate for their bail. You can imagine that a monarch’s house was demolished by cultists. What do you expect to happen to ordinary innocent citizens in this situation? Something must be done to make lives safe again in our various communities.”

    Speaking on the allegation that the police are afraid of the cult groups, the Rivers State Police Public Relations officer, A deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), Muhammad Ahmad, said there is no way a trained police officer would be afraid of cultists.

    Ahmad said: “I believe it is not true for anybody to say the police are afraid of criminals in whatever name, be them cultists or armed robbers or kidnappers.  I can’t imagine the same police that over the last one year have recovered high caliber firearms, such as AK 47 rifles, to the tune of 112 and 12,472 assorted ammunition from criminals, arrested and charged to court 391 suspected cultists and fatally wounded many of them in shootouts, can be mischievously and unpatriotically termed as a being afraid of criminals. I can’t also imagine the same police that in some instances lost their precious lives during gun duels with criminals cannot be supported and commended. Instead, they are said to be afraid of criminals.

    “My advice is, let it be known that the security of every community starts with the members of the community. There is need for mutual synergy between security agencies and the community to overcome any security challenge. Parents should counsel their children to shun crimes, and should they not listen to them, nothing stops such parents from reporting them to the police. It’s only when they have this at the back of their mind that security matters are a collective responsibility and work in concert with security agencies that we can have a situation of less crime in our communities.”

  • Rivers saves N1b through BVN

    Rivers saves N1b through BVN

    RIVERS State government saved about N1 billion through the  Bank Verification Number  (BVN) validation  of  civil servants, Commissioner for Information Dr Austin Tam-George announced yesterday.

    Addressing reporters after Executive Council meeting, Tam-George said  the biometric  verification would confirm  number  of  civil servants  for effective  planning.

     The commissioner  said following the state’s revenue constraints, the comprehensive  biometric  verification  became necessary  to boost its finances.

    Also, the resolved to hand over the Dr Graham Douglas Secondary School in Khana Local Government to the Ken Saro-Wiwa Polytechnic.

    According to the government, the resolution was reached because of the need to put the school facilities to use after several months of neglect.  The school will now serve as a campus of the polytechnic.