Tag: Rochas Okorocha

  • Imo women protest Okorocha’s suspension

    Hundreds of Imo women of the All Progressives Congress (APC) extraction on Saturday took to the streets to protest the suspension of the state governor, Rochas Okorocha by the APC National Working Committee led by Adams Oshiomhole.

    The protesting women led by the State party Woman leader, Theresa Ohanuha, insisted that the suspension be reversed immediately or they will be compelled to institute legal action against the party.

    According to some of the women who also spoke with journalists, Gertrude Oduka, Henrietta Jacobs and Josephine Udorji, noted that the suspension will do more harm than good to the party and should not be allowed to stand.

    Read Also: Updated: APC NWC suspends Amosun, Okorocha

    They said, “We feel aggrieved because of the injustice meted on our leader, Owelle Rochas Anayo Okorocha. We demand that APC National Working Committee should revisit it and resist Oshiomhole’s confusion that he has been visiting on the party across the country. He should resign because he is not worthy to be a leader of our party.

    “We have plans of making sure the APC that Okorocha brought in Imo State must remain strong. We are going to resist attempts to destroy APC in Imo”.

    The aggrieved women also warned that, “we may be forced to go to court to challenge this injustice. We are not going to relent. We are going all out to make sure that this suspension is reversed”.

     

  • Suspension of Amosun, Okorocha, will not affect our victory – APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) says the suspension of governors Rochas Okorocha and IbIkunle Amosun of Imo and Ogun respectively, will not affect the party’s victory in the March 9, Governorship and State House of Assembly election.

    Malam Lanre Issa-Onilu, the APC National Publicity Secretary, gave the assurance while speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on the development on Friday in Abuja.

    NAN recalls that the APC National Working Committee (NWC) at its Friday meeting, suspended Okorocha and Amosun, alongside the Director General of Voice of Nigeria (VON) Osita Okechukwu and the Minister of Niger Delta Usani Usani.

    “As to the effect it will have in the coming Governorship and State House of Assembly elections, the real negative effect will come when we allow our members who are in position of influence to undermine our candidates.

    “We need to get it clear to every member who supports such actions that the party is watching them, and similar fate may befall them,” Issa-Onilu said.

    He added that the suspension of the governors would not have come to the public as a surprise following their anti party activities over a period of time.

    He recalled that the two governors had been sponsoring candidates against those recognised by the party.

    This, he said, had been ongoing and so the party had to follow the right procedures; taking steps to first get them to see reason why they needed to retract their steps.

    NAN recalls that in Ogun, Amosun is said to be backing AbdulKadir Akinlade, the governorship candidate of the Allied Peoples Movement (APM) against APC’s Prince Dapo Abiodun.

    In Imo, Okorocha is supporting his son-in-law Uche Nwosu, the candidate of the Action Alliance, against Senator Hope Uzodinma, the APC candidate.

    “They occupy the position they are in today, courtesy of the ticket given to them by this party, to now use that opportunity to work against the interest of the party, you do not expect the party to look the other way.

    “More so when you realise that APC is a party of discipline that has come to establish the fact that to deepen democracy, you must subject everybody to the rule of law, and that there must be equality for all before the law,” he said.

    Issa-Onilu stressed that as far as the APC was concerned, no matter what position an individual held, the party would not give him any leverage when he flaunted the rules or the Constitution of the party.

    He added that the party’s leadership had at a point, issued queries to the two governors and cautioned them against their anti party activities.

    He recalled that when the APC presidential campaign train was led by President Muhammadu Buhari to Ogun, they were thoroughly embarrassed by a different party.

    Issa-Onilu said this was done with the support of the governor, who he said, brought in certain elements who were not APC members to the campaign venue to create problems.

    “This actually embarrassed our President, but we thought at that period, we were facing the Presidential and National Assembly Election and that it was not the appropriate time for us to do anything that might be destructive to our course, so we waited,” he said.

    He added that though there was a window for the governors to show remorse and act appropriately to convince the party’s leadership that they would play by the rules, they never did.

    He said rather Okorocha and Amosun came out openly to endorse their choice candidates against the party’s candidates.

    “Which ever way you look at it, that is anti-party activity, it is beyond the limit, and tolerating such, will mean that our change mantra is just a mantra without meaning,” the APC spokesman said.

    He further explained that the VON DG was suspended also, because of his anti party activities in the recent past, which he said had been documented.

    The APC spokesman said that Okechukwu had also engaged in actions that undermined the party’s performance in Enugu, his home state.

    He also explained that the Minister of Niger Delta was also found to have committed the same offence as the others.

    He maintained that it would be injurious for the party to allow such actions to continue, adding that the suspension still stood.

    He, however, said that the duration of their suspension would be determined by the time the report of the investigative committee on the matter was submitted to the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC).

    “I have forwarded the report to NEC, recommending their expulsion, the limit of the powers of the party’s NWC is to suspend; it does not have the power to expel.

    “It is only NEC that can take that action, so we have exercised what the Constitution of the party allows us to do, the report of our investigation will be put in place and passed on to NEC for further action,” he said.

    He added that the APC NWC had also decided to issue a query to Gov. Rotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State for anti party activities, adding that the party already had video evidence against him.

    NAN reports that Akeredolu had earlier been accused by the Ondo Mandate Group, an APC support group, of working against the party and the presidency.

    On the Minister of Communications Adebayo Shittu, Issa-Onilu said the party had noted his comments, but had not seen him working against the party.

    He said the minister had his grievance and had the right to express same within the law, but added that the APC, for now, did not have any evidence that Shittu was involved in any anti-party activity. (NAN)

  • Okorocha warns against rigging of Imo guber election

    Imo state governor and Senator-elect for Imo West, Rochas Okorocha, has cautioned against any attempt by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and politicians to rig the governorship election slated for March 9.

    The governor who was almost denied the Imo West Senatorial seat by the Collation Officer, Professor Ibeawuchi Francis, after garnering the highest vote, warned that the people will resist any attempt to rig the governorship election.

    Okorocha who addressed journalists shortly after been declared the winner of the Senatorial election, said that the action of the Collation Officer was embarrassment to INEC and the institution he represents.

    According to him, “what baffles me is the attitude of the returning officer in this our exercise. It looks to me that there was a script been played out, which is coming to me as a rude shock, especially the manner elections here have been conducted in Imo State.

    “May I put it straight that if election was conducted the way it should be and in line with our Constitution and electoral act, we would have won the entire election. What we see here is a lot of people changing the rule and doing certain things to favour a particular party in the State”.

    Read Also: Okorocha to Ndigbo: vote Buhari or forget 2023

    The governor added that, “I find it a bit surprising because right now as I speak results are not been collated the way it should be. The centers provided by the Constitution is not been used rather the INEC boss is making other arrangements not really clear to me, because as the result gets there, it is been changed. As I speak to you now, there are attempts to change the President’s results.

    “On my own election, after having recorded victory in 9 out of the 12 Local Government Areas that were announced, we heard that they are now trying to move the result sheets to Owerri but when we inquired why, the man said he is tired and doesn’t feel safe, when nobody was threatening him. At the end of it, we discovered he doesn’t have the declaration sheet. I wonder where this is taking us to. I hope INEC would change this system because we will resist them if they try it in the next election”.

    The governor continued that, “they should examine the Returning Officer to know his mental state. If he is not mental, then he must be a criminal to ever think of that. How could someone ask you to change the result of an election he has already won? My score is above 90,000 and the nearest to me is slightly above half of it, when you combine both Jones and Izunaso’s votes. They can’t match or contest against me in Imo State not to talk of Orlu zone. Am I even supposed to contest for senate in Orlu, I never campaigned but only declared and campaigned for 3 days.

    “I ask the INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner here to quickly correct these anomalies. The Returning Officer is a bloody liar who may be acting a script. I enjoin him to return the money he may have collected from those who understand only rigging in election”.

     

     

  • Okorocha wins Imo West Senatorial seat

    Imo State governor,  Rochas Okorocha has been declared Senator-elect for Imo West Senatorial zone.

    The Collation Officer,  Professor Ibeawuchi Francis, announced Okorocha winner, after he polled a total of 97,762 votes to defeat his closest rival, Jones Onyereri of the PDP who scored 63.117 votes.

    …Details shortly
  • Okorocha inches close to senate seat

    Imo State governor, Rochas Okorocha is cruising home to victory in the Imo West Senatorial election.

    The Imo governor has won eight out of the nine Local Government Areas where results have been announced so far.

    As at the time of filling this report, results from three Local Government Areas were still being expected.

    Imo West Senatorial zone is made up of 12 Local Government Areas.

    The results so far announced were:

    Nwangele LGA

    APC – 4997

    PDP – 4905

    APGA – 4253

    NKWERRE LGA

    APC – 5637

    PDP – 4905

    APGA – 662

    IDEATO SOUTH LGA

    APC – 24, 106

    PDP – 3,108

    APGA – 2834

    ORU EAST LGA

    APC – 8243

    PDP – 4614

    APGA – 2904

    ISU LGA

    APC – 7406

    PDP – 6524

    APGA – 1812

    IDEATO NORTH LGA

    APC – 8028

    PDP – 5174

    APGA – 2276

    NJABA LGA

    APC – 8549

    PDP – 5982

    APGA – 1875

    OHAJI/EGBEMA LGA

    APC – 8348

    PDP – 5928

    APGA – 3820

    OSU LGA

    APC – 7746

    PDP – 7746

    APGA – 2582

  • Thugs in Army uniform snatch ballot box in Imo

    Armed men dressed in millitary and Police uniforms have allegedly snatched sensitive election materials in Aboh Mbaise Local Government Area.

    An eyewitness said that the materials were kept at the Central school Mbutu in Aboh Mbaise where it will be deployed to  Mbutu, Umuhu, Ahiato and Enyiogugu Polling Units.

    Read Also: Army Chief: ballot box snatchers’ll be dealt with

    Meanwhile voting has commenced at the Governor Rochas Okorocha’s Ogboko polling booth 2 in Ideato South Council Area.

    There was massive turnout of voters, especially women and youths who queued to be accredited to vote.

    Meanwhile the governor, whose house is less than one kilometre from the polling Unit was yet to come to vote as at the time of filling this report

  • Postponement not fault of any political party – Okorocha

    Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha has said no political party should be blamed for postponement of the February 16, 2019 elections by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    In a statement in Owerri on Sunday, Okorocha attributed the postponement to challenges faced by INEC, recalling that this was not the first postponement of elections in the nation’s history.

    He further said that the ruling All Progressives Congress, (APC) was ready for elections, describing the postponement as regrettable.

    He urged INEC to ensure that all issues were ironed out within the week to ensure seamless elections in the country.

    “The postponement of the election by INEC is an unfortunate development and also regrettable, but it is important to note that no political party should be blamed for the postponement, but rather on the challenges facing INEC.

    Read also: Yari responsible for what led to polls postponement, says Marafa

    “This is also not the first time the nation will witness such development during elections, it happened in 2011 and in 2015 respectively.

    ” I only want to urge INEC to use the week of postponement to resolve all the challenges it has and ensure that Nigerians have a smooth, free and fair elections.

    “APC as the ruling Party is ready for the elections and it will be absurd to accuse the ruling party of being responsible for the postponement,” he said.

    He also urged Nigerians to show patriotism by maintaining peace and understanding.(NAN)

  • Election postponement: Okorocha urges Nigerians to be patriotic

    The Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Governors’ Forum and Imo State governor,  Rochas Okorocha, has enjoined Nigerians to show patriotism over the postponement of the Presidential  and National Assembly elections earlier scheduled to hold Saturday, February 16.

    The Imo governor, noted that though the postponement was regrettable, the Independent National Electoral  institutions (INEC), like every other institution could have challenges.

    According to him, “APC, as the ruling Party, is ready for elections any day and any time”, stressing that “no political party should be blamed for the Postponement especially when it is remembered that this is not the first time such development could take place in the nation’s elections”.

    Okorocha who was reacting to the postponement in Owerri, weekend, added further  that, “the Postponement of the election by INEC is an unfortunate development and also regrettable. But, it is important to note that no Political Party should be blamed for the Postponement, but rather on the Challenges of INEC”.

    Read Also: Okorocha to Ndigbo: vote Buhari or forget 2023

    He continued that  this is also not the first time the nation could witness such development during elections. It happened in 2011 and in 2015 respectively. It happens. I only want to urge INEC to use the week of Postponement to resolve all the Challenges it has and ensure that Nigerians have a smooth, free and fair elections.

    “APC as the ruling Party is ready for the elections and it will be absurd to accuse the ruling Party of being responsible for the Postponement. I call on all Nigerians to show patriotism by maintaining peace and understanding at this trial time in our democratic growth”.

  • Restoring equity in Imo State

    Not quite long after Rochas Okorocha rode to power in Imo State on the wings of our people’s emotions and the impact of a calculated and well-packaged propaganda in the later months of 2010, I told a good friend of mine that Imo people had, one, made a strategic error of choice and, two, disrupted a formula known as Imo Equity which the leading political lights in the state had carefully packaged in 1999 at Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu’s Glass House in Owerri. The formula ensures justice, peace, fairness and political accommodation in the sharing of important political offices among the three senatorial zones that make up the State. Essentially, the formula ensures that the Number One political office in the State, particularly, is rotated equitably among the Zones.

    It started with Orlu Zone and Chief Achike Udenwa from Amaifeke in Orlu took the first shot. It was a welcome political development that ensured equal political opportunities to every section of the State.

    In the spirit of the equity formula, the political ship, so to say, was to berth at Okigwe waters after Udenwa’s tenure as governor, and so it was.

    The man that Governor Achike Udenwa handed over the reins of government of Imo State to was Chief Ikedi Ohakim from Okigwe Zone. So far, the spirit of the formula was alive and active. Then came the 2011 governorship election in the State which could have allowed Okigwe zone to complete its own eight years, a bogus allegation of an assault on a Catholic priest by the incumbent governor or by one of his security aides, was released on the public space, and an unwary and unsuspecting public got hooked onto it and some believed it and took it to heart, not knowing that in political seasons, stories can be carefully and mischievously planted to achieve specific political objectives, as was the case in Imo State in late 2010.

    Okorocha, from Ogboko in Ideato South in Orlu Senatorial Zone, buoyed by a willing crowd of Owerri political elite led by Martin Agbaso, Captain Emannuel Iheanacho and a few other political heavy weight from the Zone, succeeded in dislodging the incumbent governor from Okigwe Zone and helped in handing political power back to Orlu, my senatorial zone. It was a bad calculation. Okorocha was given the mandate to occupy Douglas House on the strength of a powerful conspiracy. Since then, Imo State has never been the same again.

    My people have an interesting saying: Nwanyi luo di abua, ya amara nke ka mma (when a woman marries two husbands, she will know who is a better one).

    The crying and gnashing of teeth, the deafening complaints, the awareness that the State is under the jackboot of a mindless greedy man and his family, the hunger, deprivations, diminishing opportunities, the arrogance and the shameless determination by the incumbent to impose his son-in-law (also from Orlu Zone) on a State with so many political talents from Zones outside Orlu, proves, if any proof was still needed, that the mistakes and miscalculations of Owerri political elite in promoting and supporting the desperate ambition of Rochas Anayo Ethelbert Okorocha in 2011 were huge and tragic.

    It was an unfortunate misadventure. The chicken has finally come home to roost and regrets, blame game and anger have since set in  in relay.

    What to do! How do we restore a hitherto united, peaceful and fast-growing State back to the path of development?

    Many argue that the famous Equity Formula needs to be restored, by deliberately allowing candidates from Okigwe Zone to emerge. They point at the need to give Okigwe Zone the opportunity to complete its own eight years, otherwise the rest of us would be unfair and unjust to one of the three Zones that make up our State. This might sound simplistic and somewhat impracticable, given the multiplicity of political tendencies and political parties in Nigeria now. But there is always a way out of what may look like a quagmire. Yes, there is!

    Rochas Okorocha’s shocking emergence as our governor in 2011 was a product of a loose alliance between Orlu and Owerri Zones. And now that Orlu elite is becoming politically greedy and refuses, so to speak, to allow the office of governor to go round, political actors in Okigwe and Owerri now need to enter into strategic alliance and then enter into talks with the thinking and patriotic fraction of their counterpart in Orlu Zone. The aim is to restore justice, equity and fairness to the land. That will curb the greed and excesses of one man, and properly restore the seriously dented Imo Equity Formula, get our State back to work and on track once again. In the strategic alliance that I am putting on the table, I envisage an Okigwe/Owerri team that promises an all-inclusive government in which qualified elements from Orlu would deliberately be made to play significant roles in government. This will not be a difficult arrangement because Orlu Zone still has significant roles to play in stabilising Imo polity and economy.

    I suggest that the political ship should berth at Owerri waters after Okigwe would have completed its one term in office. Smoothly and effortlessly, our people of Owerri Zone will then bring out their best materials for us to choose from. Okigwe, like I mentioned earlier, has just one term to occupy Douglas House. Will those now running for the position of governor agree to serve out one term and vacate office for the ship to move on?

    So far, it is only Ikedi Ohakim who has made it clear and who is constitutionally restricted to serve only one term because he has governed the State for one term before. His second term bid was scuttled by a combination of social forces who felt that he had to go, and that Okigwe Zone should be short-changed and deprived of benefitting from an Accord freely reached by political leaders of the three senatorial zones, way back in 1999.

    There are obvious merits and advantages in getting Ikedi Ohakim in there on March 2, with our votes: He will hit the ground running from Day One; he is familiar with the terrain and knows the system fairly well. He is not going to be driven round the corner by any domineering Permanent Secretary or Head of Service. His candidacy should be attractive to the good people of Owerri Zone because by the constraints of the 1999 Constitution, Ohakim cannot serve more than one term.

    Every other person in the race in Imo State today angles for two terms. It doesn’t have to be announced, after all, didn’t Rochas Okorocha promise the political leadership of Owerri Zone in 2010/11 that after just one term in office, he would hand over to his Deputy who is from Owerri zone? But did he? Didn’t he heap many laughable accusations of corruption against the young man, Deputy Governor Jude Agbaso?

    But in the case of Ikedi Ohakim, who I said would hit the ground running hours after his inauguration, he has just one term of four years to complete eight years on behalf of Okigwe Zone, in the spirit of Imo Equity Formula.

    I have merely stated the facts as I see them. The options are clear and simple: we either embrace our Equity Formula that has ensured for us justice, peace and development by correcting a mistake that was made in 2011, or continue to wallow in our present confusion, injustice and continue to sink deeper and deeper into self-inflicted underdevelopment and “iberiberism” which showcases our dear State as a community of unserious citizens. In the popular saying of our people: *oluu anyi wu ina achu aja, ikpe mawazie ndi mmuo*  our duty is to perform the sacrifice and leave the blame at the doorsteps of the spirits. I have done my duty to my people. I am done

    • Esinulo was a Senior Media Aide to General Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu in exile in the Ivory Coast.
  • 2023: Igbo may lose a second time – Okorocha

    Imo State governor, Rochas Okorocha has warned that the Igbo may yet lose out in national polity if they fail to apply tact and political wisdom.

    Okorocha who recalled the fate of the Ndigbo since after the civil war, lamented that they are about making similar mistakes that put Ndigbo in a disadvantaged position in the Nigerian project.

    According to him, “The saying that there was no victor and no vanquished after the civil war is just a mere way to create unity for the country, otherwise the Igbo were the vanquished, ever since the Igbo has fared like the defeated but the most painful aspect is that Ndigbo are about to lose again”.

    The Imo governor disclosed that the recent political upheaval in his state, were sponsored by forces outside the state, using politicians from the state to pull him down ahead 2023.

    Read Also: Ohaneze’s adoption of Atiku baseless – Okorocha

    He stated that the calculation is that if he is allowed to continue gathering momentum he will give a good fight for the Igbo Presidency, adding that Ndigbo will be at the losing end if he is politically alienated.

    He said “There is more to the noise you are hearing about the governorship election in Imo, it is not about Uche Nwosu, it is about a plot to stop Okorocha by all means, otherwise why will Adams Oshiomhole and Rotimi Amaechi be interested in who governs Imo. The calculation is that if Uche Nwosu becomes governor and I go to Senate, I will be a strong force by 2023. The most annoying fact is that they are using our people to pursue that agenda”.

    The governor further gave reasons why he wants to go to the Senate, adding that “I want to go to Senate to remain politically relevant until 2023 and also to represent Ndigbo and the Nigerian masses”.