Tag: Southeast

  • Pushback against Operation No Okada

    In Awka, Anambra State’s capital, and Onitsha, its business hub, commercial motorcycle operators have until July 1 to find an alternative job. NWANOSIKE ONU reports that the operators, clergy and others are fighting the state government

    COMPARATIVELY, the July 1st deadline given by the Anambra State government for commercial motorcyclists to quit Awka, the state capital, and Onitsha, its commercial nerve, is coming late. In Lagos and some other states in the Southeast and Southeast , that directive was issued earlier, though operational in areas off the highways, in some cases.

    The overwhelming reasons for the ban on commercial motorcycles or okada are crime and safety concerns. Everywhere okada goes, criminality and ghastly accidents follow. In Lagos, okada accidents became so frequent and deadly that a special ward called okada was created at the famous Igbobi orthopaedic hospital.

    Still, no one can deny that okada operators took up the job not out of fascination for it but out of sheer necessity to survive in the face of crippling unemployment. Nor can anyone gloss over the fact that operators play a huge role in transporting people to places where buses and taxis are not found, and appreciably fast.

    In Anambra, the directive has become a source of worry to many people. Governor Willie Obiano had on May 22 banned okada operations in the two cities, which according to him, could be extended to other cities in the state in no distant time.

    The action has continued to generate controversy in the state. The National President of Motorcycle Transport Union of Nigeria (MTUN) Chief John Onedibe has called on the governor to give okada operators a sense of belonging in the state.

    Not only the operators that are irritated by the directive. The Anglican Bishop of Nnewi-ichi in Nnewi South Local Government Area of the state, Most Rev Ephraim Ikeakor said the ban might be costly and deadly, if the decision is not rescinded.

    Ikeakor, who spoke at the Saint Stephens Anglican synod in Nnewi-ichi, said rather than outright ban, their operational scope should be limited.

    The state government’s statement was issued by the Chief Press Secretary (CPS) to the Governor, Mr James Eze.

    He said the ban was in two of the major cities of Awka an Onitsha.

    Obiano further said the decision was taken to reduce crime and criminality in Anambra State, which he said was one of the things he promised Ndi Anambra

    But speaking in Nnewi, the national president of the union, Onedibe, while briefing reporters, debunked the claim that the operators were all criminals, but agreed there were some of them who were not clean in the business.

    Onedibe said, “It is not new that the essence of government is to make life easy and bearable for citizens and not otherwise. Government especially a democratic one such as ours, must consider the voice of majority and minority, the rich and poor for it to thrive and succeed in its governance of the people.

    “Where government considers what is good for the wealthy alone without thinking of how the poor class may feel, with due respect, it then means that the government is for the wealthy alone and such does not protect and represent the interest of all.

    “How can the government decide to ban Okada without first of all consulting the stakeholders or at least invite public opinion on the matter?”

    He gave the instance of how Prof Ben Ayade of Cross River State, who abolished all forms of taxation and levies on low income earners in the state, including Okada riders, which he said was what leadership should be.

    He stressed that the real reason behind the presumed banning of Okada in the state was still not clear to the people, especially the poor Okada riders.

    ”Even if there are genuine reasons to stop Okada riders from plying in the state, government should provide alternative jobs for them, instead of keeping them unemployed.

    Onedibe appealed to the government to support the operation of Okada riders in the state, instead of banning their operations, because many of them trained their children and were still training their children who he said would become medical doctors, engineers, nurses, lawyers, bankers, pilots, politicians, priests and what have you, from the proceeds of Okada.

    He said “There is no better and quicker means of inter-town transportation than Okada, whether the road is good or not is not what an Okada wants to know, as far as he would be paid after rendering his service unlike taxi cabs.

    Onedibe opined that the Union was ready to work with government at all levels to produce better and progressive state.

    “We contributed immensely to the success of this present government in Anambra State, during the past election, which resulted in APGA winning 21/21, a feat that has never happened in the history of Anambra State,” he said

    For the Anglican prelate, Ikeakor, the state government should listen to the voice of reason, instead of taking the action it did recently, adding that the consequences could be devastating in the state.

  • NNPC laments high rate of pipeline vandalism in South-East

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), has  lamented the high rate of pipeline vandalisation witnessed  in the south-eastern part of the country.
    A Statement issued by the Corporation’s spokesman, Mr Ndu Ughamadu on Sunday in Abuja also stated that  more than 50 per cent of petroleum products pumped through the Aba- Enugu pipeline network were mostly stolen.
    According to the  statement, Group Managing Director of the NNPC,  Mr.  Maikanti Baru, noted this during a visit to Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu State.
    He  said that d that at some point, about 700 breaches were recorded on the pipeline adding that the  situation had hampered efficient supply and distribution of petroleum products not only in the state, but in the entire South-East region.
    “The Osisioma and Nsirimo areas (both in Abia State) as well as Ishiagwu (in Ebonyi State) were the major vandalism flash points along the line where illegal connections for diversion of products had been observed almost on a daily basis.
    “Even after the Aba-Enugu pipeline was repaired, it still had to be shut down as the corporation hardly gets up to 50 per cent of the products pumped,” he said
    He described Enugu Depot as a major NNPC supply and distribution infrastructure in the entire South-East region which requires the support of all stakeholders bring back to life.
    He called on the governor to rally his counterparts in the region to work with the NNPC and security agencies to secure the strategic pipeline, which he said would go a long way in reviving efficient supply and distribution of petroleum products in the area.
    “This depot is not only strategic to the South East, it also serves as a bridge to Makurdi Depot in the North Central as well as the Yola Depot in the North East,” he noted
    Baru also charged the governor to collaborate with relevant government agencies to enforce the sale of petrol at  filling stations in the state at the government-regulated price of N145.
    “You wouldn’t want to watch as unpatriotic marketers profiteer over your innocent citizens. We still believe marketers anywhere in this country can make profit selling at the official pump price,” the GMD added
    Responding,  the Enugu State Government pledged to work together with the NNPC to revamp the strategic Enugu depot towards meeting the petroleum products demand of the entire South-East region and beyond.
     Ugwuanyi assured that he would rally other governors from the region to ensure that the Aba-Enugu pipeline was secured from the unwholesome activities of vandals.
    Describing Baru’s visit as timely, the governor  said he was now better informed as to why the Enugu Depot was not in operation.
    He assured that the Enugu State Task Force on Petroleum Products would work with NNPC officials and relevant security agencies to ascertain the exact incident spots with a view to securing the pipeline.(NAN)
  • ‘Rivers gov in 2019 must come from Southeast senatorial district’

    STAKEHOLDERS of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Rivers Southeast Senatorial District have declared that the governor of the state in 2019 must come from the district. They also called on the representative of the Rivers Southeast senatorial district, Senator Magnus Abe, to contest the 2019 governorship election in the state, on the platform of the APC.

    The APC stakeholders from the seven local government areas (Khana, Gokana, Tai, Eleme, Oyigbo, Andoni and Opobo/Nkoro) that make up the Rivers Southeast senatorial district, stated these yesterday in a communiqué issued at the end of their meeting at Saakpenwa, the headquarters of Tai LGA, noting that they endorsed Abe for governorship in 2019 because of their belief that he is eminently qualified within the APC to aspire for the exalted position. The communiqué, which was signed by the member representing Khana/Gokana Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, Maurice Pronen, and 12 others, assured the senator and the APC of their commitment to producing the next governor of the state. It read: “It is pertinent we demand that the next governor of Rivers State should come from the Rivers Southeast Senatorial District, for equity, justice and fair play.

    “We consequently demand that the governorship candidate of our party (APC) for 2019 should come from the Rivers Southeast Senatorial District, while appealing to other senatorial district and indeed Rivers people to support a Rivers governor from the Rivers Southeast Senatorial District, which we believe is right, just, fair, equitable and in synchrony with inclusive democratic ethos. “Politics, being a game of numbers, justifies this position as the Rivers Southeast senatorial axis is the largest voting block controlled by the APC in Rivers State.

    ‘To whom much is given, much is expected. “In beaming our political searchlight for a credible, experienced, competent, acceptable, tested and trusted occupant for the exalted office of governor of Rivers State in 2019, we have found Distinguished Senator Abe eminently qualified within our party to aspire, taking into cognizance his rich pedigree. “We assure Senator Abe and the APC in Rivers State of our commitment and dedication to this noble cause, which we believe will bring the required change and development to Rivers State. That we subscribe to internal democracy that promotes equity, which will ultimately guarantee victory for our great party in the state.” The stakeholders also pledged their loyalty, commitment and dedication to the APC and President Mohammadu Buhari, in his conscious and deliberate efforts in moving Nigeria forward.

  • Obiano and Southeast bask in electoral euphoria

    Obiano and Southeast bask in electoral euphoria

    GOVERNOR Willie Obiano’s victory in last Saturday’s Anambra State governorship poll was even more emphatic than pundits had anticipated. By all accounts, he was projected to win, but by a slimmer margin than the final count indicated. Shockingly, he won by a landslide, taking every local government and embarrassing and numbing his opponents to supine acquiescence. Despite his mollifying victory speech, he will probably read more meaning into the landslide than is really plausible. He won alright, but he won, in many significant ways, despite himself.

    In an age when most state governments have irresponsibly failed to pay workers’ salaries, in some instances for more than a year, or paid a fraction of the wages, Mr Obiano’s faithful adherence to workers’ welfare was exemplary. It was naturally expected that the electorate would reward him. He might have been quite liberal in the application of the state’s financial resources, as stridently alleged by former governor Peter Obi, but the populace on whose behalf the governor claimed to act were quite unfazed by the applied arithmetic of the state’s finances. Workers were paid, some projects were ongoing, even if not world class, and the state’s economy was not paralysed. Every other thing paled into insignificance.

    But the poll victory, particularly its emphatic margin, was more an endorsement of the separate and proud identity of the Igbo people in the national political mix than an endorsement of the salient qualities of the somewhat inarticulate governor. The election came at a time when there was so much hysteria about the place of the Igbo in the national scheme of things, especially as propagated by the ingratiating Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) vis-a-vis the intimidating and antagonistic federal government of President Muhammadu Buhari and his security forces. For a party that identified with the late secessionist leader, Emeka Ojukwu, and which continues to proclaim and celebrate its Igbo identity, the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) of Mr Obiano was bound to resonate with the electorate.

    It would be foolish to challenge a victory so clear, so determined, so indisputable. The internationalist governor of Imo State, the irrepressible Rochas Okorocha himself, suggested that no one could sensibly challenge a victory so uncomplicated. But whether he himself draws the right lessons from it is unclear, seeing how valiantly but futilely he struggled to drag the Igbo into the national political mainstream.  The Obiano victory does not suggest that the Igbo are unamenable to embracing the mainstream; it only suggests that after the Buhari presidency has so fouled the well of trust between the Southeast and the rest of Nigeria, the Igbo had in turn become defiant. That defiance, from which Mr Obiano has profited so immensely electorally, will most probably be carried into the next general elections.

    Ex-governor Obi shouted himself hoarse about Mr Obiano’s poor financial management ability. Though the governor and his team tried to rebut the allegations, the former governor was probably not too mistaken in his judgement of the governor’s capability. Mr Obiano has not been a financial exemplar, nor as visionary and charismatic as the feline-voiced Mr Obi and the indomitable and often excitable Chris Ngige, a former Anambra governor himself and now a minister in the Buhari cabinet. In fact, the governor was neither stirring in the governorship debate, which he had naturally expected to win to put a gloss on his administration, nor incomparable in his style of governance. Except his performance in his second term, which he has won with aplomb, is unequalled, it may be premature to write off the influence of Mr Obi in Anambra politics. However, the former governor misadvised himself and misread regional mood by coming out openly and frontally against the governor.

    The Anambra poll may signpost the future of Southeast politics. That region is not deluded to think that the Buhari presidency loves it, and it is doubtful whether the presidency can substantially redress the problem of mutual antagonism between Abuja and that region by embarking on furious projects funding and execution. The Igbo perceive the federal dislike passionately, and they seem desperate to requite it, believing that President Buhari’s conversion and conviction are only skin deep. If the APC is not to find extreme difficulty in winning the Southeast and South-South in the next elections, and struggle in the Southwest and probably in parts of the Middle Belt, the Buhari presidency will have to do a major rethink of its politics in the light of the Anambra poll result.

    Mr Obiano should interpret his victory sensibly and with restraint, for it may not carry as much good news as he thinks. Mr Obi should also re-examine his politics and methods all over again, and wonder whether he had not overreached himself and exaggerated his own influence. But above all, the Buhari presidency has the most unpleasant self-examination to carry out. With the doors shut against it in the Southeast and South-South, as it seems, and the windows also shut against it in the Southwest, it must ponder whether it had ruled like democrats or behaved like military autocrats, or whether it really understood Nigeria or it had been chasing a chimera all along.

  • Buhari’s visit to  Southeast begins today

    Buhari’s visit to Southeast begins today

    President Muhammadu Buhari will be in the South East today It is his first trip to the region since he took office in 2015.

    The renewed attempt by the Nnamdi Kanu-led Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) to renew the Igbo’s agitation for secession was stopped by troops, forcing Kanu to flee.

    He has not been seen and there have be conflicting reports on his whereabouts.

    “Mr President will be visiting two southeast states of Ebonyi and Anambra,” Presidential spokesman Garba Shehu confirmed in statement yesterday.

    President Buhari wil leave Abuja today (Tuesday) and return tomorrow.

    In Ebonyi, he will inaugurate many projects undertaken by the Governor Dave Umahi administration while in Anambra, he will campaign for the candidate of his party – the All Progressives Congress (APC) – in Saturday’s governorship election Tony Nwoye .

    Imo State Governor Rocha Okorocha had spoken of the need for Mr President “to come to the South East as quickly as possible, to begin to show his presence.”

    Okorocha said: “Luckily, the President will be coming to Ebonyi state, very soon and he will pass through Imo state to Anambra state.

    “So, covering three states within this short time will be a right step in the right direction, because we have come to realise in the Southeast that we are better of in APC than any other party in the Federal Republic of Nigeria,’’ he said

    Governor Umahi said last week: “We are fully prepared for the visit. We pleaded with Mr President for the visit and before then, we have been preparing, we are fully prepared.”

    The Ebonyi State Police Command yesterday warned the proscribed IPOB and political parties’ supporters against disruptive acts during visit.

    The state Police Commissioner  Titus Lamorde, gave the warning in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abakaliki.

    He assured that the command was well equipped to deal with all forms of security challenges before, during and after the President’s visit.

    According to Lamorde, any individual or group of persons that foment trouble before, during and after the visit would be severely dealt with, as people are advised to conduct themselves well.

    “I will not disclose the number of personnel we have drafted for security reasons, but I assure citizens that enough personnel have been deployed across the state to ensure a hitch-free visit.

    “The President’s visit is a welcome development as the citizens should cooperate with security agencies to make it a successful one,” he said.

    He stated that his officers had been adequately trained to relate well with the citizens during the visit and advised people to conduct their activities within the confines of the law.

    “We would not meddle into political issues as security outfit, but the visit is developmentally-oriented because of the numerous projects the President would inaugurate.

    “My officers would not intimidate or harass individuals or groups as the duty of ensuring a hitch-free event is a collective one,” he said.

  • Buhari to tour Southeast states

    Buhari to tour Southeast states

    President Muhamadu Buhari is to undertake a tour of Southeast states to improve his relationship with the Igbo, Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocah said yesterday.

    According to him, how to warm Buhari into the hearts of Southeasterners was one of the reasons he visited the President at the Villa.

    Okorocha is the only governor elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the region where the President scored the least vote in the 2015 election.

    Okorocha said there is the need for Mr President to come to the Southeast as quickly as possible, “to begin to show his presence.”

    “Luckily, the President will be coming to Ebonyi State, very soon and he will pass through Imo State to Anambra State.

    “So, covering three states within this short time will be a right step in the right direction, because we have come to realise in the Southeast that we are better of in APC than any other party in the Federal Republic of Nigeria,’’ he said

    The governors also expressed optimism that the membership of the APC in the South East would increase because many politicians had been joining the party.

    He said “the Southeast before now was not measuring up in APC, but we have worked out strategies and modalities on how to improve the relationship between the South East and the APC.

    According to the Imo governor, President Buhari’s qualification to run for second term in 2019 is not in doubt but that he must go through party primaries to avoid imposition of candidates.

    He said: “The gentleman is looking much more handsome than even before he went to hospital; he is looking stronger and so he has every right and qualifications to re-contest, there is nothing wrong at all.

    “But, we don’t allow imposition of candidate. It must be democratically done. If President Buhari will lead the ship in 2019  and I said, democratically done, transparently (done) to the amazement of the whole world, the way we do our things in APC and people will be happy.”

  • Southeast, Southsouth governors to adopt one political bloc

    Governors of the Southeast and Southsouth have resolved to take a common position on political issues and work as one bloc.

    The governors, who met under the aegis of the Southeast/Southsouth Governors’ Forum in Owerri, the Imo Stat capital, adopted a communiqué signed by its Chairman and Akwa Ibom State Governor Udom Emmanuel.

    They resolved to protect and bring benefits to the political future and interest of the people of the two regions.

    The meeting was attended by Governors Rochas Okorocha (Imo), Emmanuel Udom (Akwa Ibom), Dr Ifeanyi Okowa (Delta), Ben Ayade (Cross River) Nyesom Wike (Rivers), Okezie Ikpeazu (Abia), Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi (Enugu) and Sariake Dickson (Bayelsa).

    Anambra State Governor Willie Obiano was represented by his deputy, Dr Nkem Okeke.

    The communiqué reads: “The forum discussed issues bordering on the prevalent political atmosphere in the country and resolved that the two regions will go as a bloc in one direction that will protect and be beneficial to the political future and interest of the people of the regions.”

    The governors also resolved to remain committed to one indivisible and indissoluble Nigeria and scheduled their next meeting for November 26 at Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital.

    They governors said their binding force was more than political affiliations and other considerations.

    The governors expressed worry about the dearth of infrastructure and lack of Federal presence in the two regions.

    They urged the Federal Government to pay more attention to infrastructural and other needs of the regions.

    The forum, while discussing the proposed amendment of the 1999 Constitution, resolved to take a position that would be in the best interest of the people of the two regions.

    The governors hailed some patriots for instituting broad-based negotiations between the North and the Southeast, which led to the setting aside of the “quit notice” issued by some Arewa youths to Igbo residents in North.

    They hoped it would be the last time any person or group of persons would make any statement or take actions that would suggest any part of the country was a no-go area for other Nigerians.

    The forum praised the security agencies for bringing relative peace to the regions and other parts of the country.

    It said their efforts contributed to an increased and sustained oil production with the attendant benefits to the country.

    The forum also hailed the efforts of all stakeholders who had worked to ensure that the regions remained calm and safe.

    It hoped the efforts by the governors and other stakeholders to maintain peace and stability in the two regions would translate to increased dividends in greater attention to urgent infrastructural and other needs.

    The forum also praised Inspector General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris for organising security summits across the country.

    It hoped the outcome of the summits would lead to better policing in the interest of the citizenry.

  • Ndigbo in North for peace

    Ndigbo in North for peace

    Barely a week after northern state governors toured Southeast and Southsouth states calming nerves in the wake of unrest, Igbo leaders have returned the gesture, VINCENT OHONBAMU reports from Gombe

    After members of Independent People of Biafra (IPOB) clashed with the military in Abia State, and with some northern residents of Rivers State, northern state governors did their best to head off reprisals and save the country a possible second civil war. In Jos, Plateau State, where a clash reportedly claimed two lives, Governor Simon Lalong declared a curfew. His counterparts in other states of the region also mounted a spirited peace campaign. Not done, they headed southwards where they addressed northern residents of Abia and Rivers states, stressing that they were safe where they were and that no war was afoot.

    It worked. Tension eased, helped in part by the proscription of the secessionist group, and the Southeast governors’ constant appeal to their people.

    To bolster what the northern governors did, Ohaneze Ndigbo, the apex socio-cultural organisation of the Igbo, headed north with peace on their mind.

    In Gombe, the Gombe State capital, President-General of Ohaneze, Chief John Nnia Nwodo went down memory lane to remind everyone of the ugliness of war.

    He said, “I have come here because we are in unusual times in our country. The times we are in remind those of us who were old enough of 1966. In 1966, when our military leaders were unable to resolve [issues] on governance in Nigeria, there were frayed passions; the coup had happened, the counter-coup had happened, both characterised by the press as sectional.

    “And the Army which was supposed to make a unifying call for the defence of our country became divided along ethnic lines. Rhetoric became so heated and war broke out.

    “Where I come from in the Southeast, we lost over three million people during the war – 1.5million died in combat or air raids, one million people died of starvation and one million children who were sick of kwashiorkor and were flown out to neighbouring African countries without documentation never returned. Nigeria lost one million children she cannot reclaim anymore.

    “Statesmen of our age who had witnessed such catastrophe will have questions to answer before God if at this point in time we allow differences of opinion as to how Nigeria will be governed to arouse tempers to the point where we become so uncivilised as to plunge ourselves into another catastrophe.”

    The former Minister of Information and his team who had been on tour of northern Nigeria said the organisation conceived the idea of the visit before Operation Python Dance II and the visit of the Nigerian Northern Governors’ Forum to the Southeast.

    But the fact that the northern governors were in the East before Ohaneze’s visit indicates that both parties were “two people sleeping in the same bed, dreaming the same dream,” said Nwodo who flew into Gombe from Kano on Friday to see the governor and residents of the state, including the Igbo community.

    His mission was simple: to deliver a message of assurance from the chief executives, traditional rulers and leaders of Southeast states that “all non-Igbos who live in the Southeast of Nigeria will be protected with every available protective tool” and that “the South-easterners will be their brothers’ keeper.”

    The mission was also to seek the same assurances from the governor and people of the state as well as cooperation in dousing tempers across the country and achieving a more united and indivisible country.

    The elder statesmen in pursuance of their peace mission are visiting one state in each of the three geopolitical zones of the North. They were in Sokoto and Kano in the northwest because of the high density of Igbo population in Kano, and would be proceeding to Jos from Gombe

    He said they chose Gombe because it is the hub of the Northeast, the understanding and national exposure of its leadership and the belief that he has the ability, the sagacity and the patriotism to carry the peace message throughout the Northeast Nigeria.

    He said, “As long as this political impasse lasts, which we think will not be long; we (South-easterners) will emulate what the Sultan of Sokoto said a few weeks ago, that, any northerner who wants to kill an Igbo man should first kill the Sultan.

    “Our governors have told me say the same to the North that any Igbo man who wants to kill a northerner in Igbo land should first kill them as governors of the Southeast and I may well add as the leader of Igbo cultural organisation that they should also kill me first.”

    The President-General of the Ohaneze Ndigbo’s visit is not just about dousing tensions but also spreading the message of an ideal Nigeria which projects unity, such as he witnessed as a youth.

    Speaking further, Chief Nwodo said, “I am an example of what Nigeria could make in an individual. I grew up as a child seeing national unity dramatised in Enugu where I grew up. My father was a legislator in the Eastern House of Assembly, he was Minister under Dr. Azikiwe and Dr. Okpara with portfolios of commerce and industry and of local government. His party was the NCNC.

    “At that time, Enugu Municipality was governed by a Mayor who was elected in Adult Suffrage by the residents of Enugu City. My father’s party, the NCNC, sponsored a Katsina man, Alhaji Umaru Altini to vie for the Mayor of Enugu. We sang NCNC song for Umaru Altini, he beat other contestants flat and became Mayor of Enugu.

    “The Accountant-General then was a Yoruba man; the Private Secretary to the Government of Eastern Nigeria was Mr. John Umolu from Agenebode in what is now Edo State.

    “People really didn’t care where you came from. That is the Nigeria that I was brought up in. We could still go back there.”

    The Igbo leader also appreciated the northern governors for soaking up the tension so far, saying: “Your Excellency, I have come to thank your government because we’ve had flashpoints on the basis of hate speeches, on the basis of stories that are either truthful or very, very untruthful and exaggerated of lynches here and there.

    People have taken the law into their hands and attempted to retaliate and kill innocent people, who had no relationship to whatever conflagration. The military’s abuse of their position that happened in various parts of Nigeria, innocent Nigerians are being shot – no godly person will take up arms against someone that has done nothing to you and the rest.

    “Quite often, these situations have degenerated to chaos when elder statesmen have not had the courage to say enough is enough. We have come here Your Excellency to say enough is enough.

    He said, “We (Nigerians) are the envy of West Africa, we are the envy of Africa, we are a shining star for Africa to the rest of the world.

    “This country is gifted with diversity of so many cultures, so many gifts, so many enterprising characteristics, so much population; it is the envy of our adversaries that perhaps if we get our acts together, we could indeed be a pride to the whole world and there can be no question that no nation can grow without peace, without unity, without cohesion, without fear of God.

    “We bring this plea at Gombe state government to help us to attain this perfection and in the meantime, to arrest this boiling temper all over the country, so that we do not degenerate into a catastrophe.

    Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo was not around to receive the entourage. His deputy, Dr. Charles Iliya who did, said his principal, a few days earlier, called a meeting of traditional rulers, all security operatives in Gombe State, all religious bodies and gave them a message similar to Chief Nwodo’s

    He appreciated the former Minister of Information for broadening the understanding of the younger people around by going historical “because it is only when you know history that you will avoid it if it is not a good one or if it is a bad one.”

    “When people sometimes speak about the reasons why it seems Nigeria is not progressing, they do not include the devastating effects of the civil war.

    “Quite a number of people feel that a repeat of [the civil war] will destroy Nigeria.”

    Iliya said Governor Dankwambo was busy with other national assignments during the visit, but conveyed the governor’s message.

    “The governor has told me to tell you in clear terms that he would do his best to make sure that Gombe State stay peacefully, and we will make sure that we will continue to do what we have been doing to make the state peaceful.

    “In the history of Gombe State, we have never had a situation where a binding remark and a binding relationship has taken place as we are witnessing this afternoon

    “He said in Gombe state, you are safe. If anything is to touch any non-indigene of Gombe state, let it start with the indigenes of Gombe state because we are together.

    You have helped the economy of this state, you have helped the growth of this state, you have been a part and parcel of this state, we will never abandon you now. We are together with you

    After listening to responses from Sokoto, Kano and Gombe Chief Nwodo quoted Shakespeare: There is no art to finding the mind’s construction in the face.

    “But my interaction this time disputes Shakespeare because the mind’s construction on the faces of those I have visited have been so convincing, so persuasive and I would want to believe them rather than disbelieve them,” he said.

  • A peace tour amid chaos

    The northern states governors’ trip to Southeast and Southsouth played a major part in calming
    tensions when crisis brewed, writes OKODILI NDIDI

    There is no sacrifice too much for peace. This much was demonstrated by the northern governors when they left the challenges in their home states to embark on a truce mission to the Southsouth and Southeast states.

    They traversed major cities in Rivers, Anambra, Abia and Imo states preaching the massage of national unity and peaceful coexistence.

    The presence of the delegation led by the chairman of the Northern Governors’ Forum and governor of Borno State, Alhaji Kashim Shettima soothed frayed nerves and restored confidence in the people, especially after the Python Dance scare.

    The mission, according to the governors, was to emphasise the need for one indivisible Nigeria, “where every Nigerian can freely live in any part of the country without fear or molestation”.

    The delegation, which comprised governors Aminu Tambuwal (Sokoto), Abubakar Bagudu (Kebbi), Simon Lalong (Plateau), and Aminu Masari (Kastina), was received in Imo State by the ecstatic Hausa community, traditional rulers and other stakeholders.

    In the past, similar agitations like that of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) had resulted in killings and reprisals but the proactive measures adopted by leaders in the North and South saved the nation another bloodbath.

    The visit reassured the Hausa communities in the Southeast who were already apprehensive that no harm will befall them. Before the truce tour, the number of Hausas that crowd the streets plying one trade or the other had thinned down remarkable as majority of them had returned to the North for fear of possible attack.

    Receiving the delegation at the Government House, the Imo Governor, Rochas Okorcha said that “Nigeria’s problem has remained largely lack of communication and not being able to socialise with each other. Even in families with husbands and wives, when we don’t have good communication, breakup is inevitable. It is necessary that we communicate amongst ourselves as governors. We should equally communicate with the ordinary citizens on the streets.

    Speaking further, he said, “Today, you have come to Igbo land, I know you will be surprised with the kind of warm reception you have got. Your coming now bridges the gap and it can best be described as the right step in the right direction. We as leaders have not made enough effort to assure the Igbo, Hausa and Yoruba that we are one, meanwhile we meet at our houses and hug, interact with each other. To what extent have we encouraged the ordinary people on the streets of Igbo land or Hausa land to hug these brothers from the west and vice versa?  It is duly incumbent upon us as you have done today to reach out and give each other a sense of belonging”.

    He continued, “I want to state categorically that the Hausa living in Imo State are not different from Imo people living in the state.  Most of these Hausa can only be distinguished not by their conduct or character but only by their dress code. Most of them were born here and have lived here all their lives. So they are more of Igbo than Hausa despite having Hausa parentage. Having seen this, you can understand that we have no other option than to live as one united Nigeria.

    “Nigeria is passing through a very difficult time which many great nations have passed through before reaching to their points of greatness. We must see the happening now as a trial that will bring us to a level of triumph.  We are only passing through a moment and this moment will not last for long, when Nigeria will arrive at the Promised Land.

    “Your visit here is a reminder to all of us that we are one in blood and flesh, inseparable, despite the activities of those who have offered themselves as satanic instruments for the division of our lovely country.  Nigeria is better off as one united nation.  That is the pride with which we command respect in the whole of the African continent.

    “Many nations of the world especially the black race make reference to us as Nigerians, they respect us because of our population and sense of unity.  This is our place in history that we can never afford to lose”.

    “Let me remind all of us, that it does not only take government to speak about peace, it behooves on all of us to speak about the peace and unity of this nation wherever we find ourselves.  Peace is expensive but we must pursue it at all cost.  I salute no man who is so purposeful in destruction but I salute a nation builder”.

    Governor Shettima said that the challenge posed by IPOB is far more dangerous than that of the dreaded Boko Haram. He said while the Boko Haram insurgency is restricted to the Northeast, IPOB is a national threat that has the capacity to cause the nation to implode.

    He said, “We are here due to the seriousness of this challenge, we cannot afford to sit in our comfort zones and watch our country breakup because everybody will suffer the consequence. So it is everyone’s duty to ensure that we remain together as one united Nigeria.

    “We are here as a delegation from the Northern Nigeria to identify with the uncommon and exemplary leadership of the governors of the Southeastern region in this trying moment. In politics, perception counts especially in serious matters like this. We are here largely to identify with our governor colleagues, to visit the northern communities in the Southeast and reassure them that the governors are equal to the task.

    “This visit will equally help us to forestall the chances of mass exodus of Nigerians from one region to the other as it will send a very wrong signal.  We are equally inviting our brothers from the Southeast to visit the Igbo that are in large numbers in Kano, Kaduna and Katsina among other places to assure them of the safety of their lives and properties. “Nigeria belongs to all of us.  A small country like Syria with 23 million people knocked at the doors of Europe because of crisis and Europe started shaking and so Nigeria with over 200 million will cause a disaster in the event of crisis.

    ”The much maligned and demonised Owelle Rochas Okorocha is one of the few that stood his ground for national unity, togetherness and this has brought some developmental initiatives for the Southeast.

    Governor Lalong restated: “Nigeria is one. We have criminal elements everywhere. If somebody is giving a quit notice, we should ask, at what time did we agree?  That’s the beauty of democracy.  Ours as governors and leaders is to maintain peace and see to an indivisible Nigeria. Our political differences must not divide us. Before we go into politics we must have a country called Nigeria.”

    Governor Tambuwal said, “The work of making Nigeria one did not start today, it started with our elders and it is incumbent on us to sustain it and that’s one of the reasons His Eminence Sultan Maccido of blessed memory was able to confer on Governor Rochas Okorocha the title of Dajikan Sokoto, the foresight is to make us realise that Nigeria is one.

    “Nigeria is a country like no other where you have over 300 tribes with many languages spoken, yet have a single country.  No other nation in the world where you have 50% practicing one religion and another 50% practicing another religion.  Nigeria is a special creation for us to make it work.”

    Governor Bagudu said, “We as leaders must bequeath to our children a better heritage that we inherited because our young men and women will face stiffer competition in the world than the ones we are facing.  If we waste our time and energy fighting on those issues that should not even be dividing us, we will be doing harm to subsequent generations.”

    Governor Masari said, “The Hausa community living in the East should live in peace and support the various governments in their developmental strides as they stand to bequeath in their areas of residence more than in their areas of birth, since they make their living in the East.  There is need for the sustenance of these peace overtures across the length and breadth of this nation”.

    At the end of the parley, the tense atmosphere at the Sam Mbakwe Exco Chamber, venue of the meeting, was illuminated by smiles as Hausas hugged their Igbo brothers. It was an emotional moment that healed the pains and mended broken walls of friendship.

    Before the curtain was finally drawn on the historic meeting, there was an unspoken resolve to leave in harmony henceforth as one united people bound by brotherly love and unity.

  • Kanu holed up in Southeast as Turkey disowns video

    Kanu holed up in Southeast as Turkey disowns video

    As troops and security agents continue the search for fleeing leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) Nnamdi Kanu, there were indications last night that he was in the South-East.

    Security agencies have been placed on the alert at the airports, seaports and borders to watch out for Kanu.

    The Turkish Embassy in Nigeria clarified yesterday that it was not in support of secessionist activities in Nigeria

    A top security sourcesaid: “Intelligence gathering has shown that Kanu is still holed up in the South-East. We will soon fish him out of wherever he is hiding.

    “We are only trying to be constructive in our engagement to avoid huge cost. Security agencies  know what to do but they are just being careful.

    “We have identified some of his sympathisers who could harbour him. At the appropriate time, we will brief Nigerians.

    ” We know he is planning to escape from the country but we won’t allow him. We are determined to arrest him.”

    The Turkish Embassy in a statement said: “The Embassy of the Republic of Turkey wishes to inform the Nigerian public about the following:

    “Abdulkadir Erkahrahman, a Turkish citizen, has been sharing videos for some time against the Nigerian Government and presents himself as a Turkish diplomat.

    “Mr. Abdulkadir Erkahrahman is neither a diplomat nor a civil servant or an official representative of the Government of Turkey.

    “The Government of Turkey is committed to the territorial integrity and political unity of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “Furthermore, Turkey never supports secessionist activities against the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”