Tag: Uche Nwosu

  • Imo 2019: 20 lawmakers endorse Nwosu for governor

    Twenty  out of the 27 members of the Imo State House of Assembly on Friday endorsed the governorship ambition of the Chief of Staff to the Imo state governor, Uche Nwosu.

    Nwosu is married to the daughter of the state governor, Rocha’s Okorocha.

    The lawmakers said they took the decision to back Nwosu’s ambition after he was endorsed by the state governor.

    Briefing journalists on the position of the lawmakers, Friday, Hon Henry Ezediaro, member representing Oguta Local Area, stated that 20 members of the House appended their signatures for the endorsement of Nwosu after a meeting presided by the Speaker of the State Assembly, Acho Ihim.

    Ezediaro added further that “all the lawmakers involved have earlier led their constituents before Governor Rochas Okorocha at the government House to endorse Nwosu”.

    Highliting more on the reasons for supporting Nwosu, Ezediaro said, “Uche Nwosu was the pioneer candidate of APC in 2014, the party endorsed him to run for governor, he has not changed since then.

    “When  Governor Okorocha came back after he ran for President, APC leaders came together to say let’s give the ticket to Okorocha , the young man was loyal and said OK, what the young man did, son in-law or no son in-law , he would have said no ,at worst Okorocha will take back his daughter, what if he divorce his wife tomorrow, will that now qualify him to run for election? .

    The lawmaker who is also the Director General of Ugwumba Mandate, a campaign organ of Nwosu, added that the 20 lawmakers had endorsed Nwosu to consolidate the legacies of Governor Okorocha.

    He gave the names of the lawmakers in support of the endorsement as; Ugonna Ozuruigbo representing (Nwangele) Lugard Osuj, former Majority leader(Owerri municipal) Chukwuemeka Loyd (Owerri North) Ekenna Nzerue(Oru east) Innocent Egwim(Ideato North) Obinna Egu (Ngor Okpala) Ngozi Obiefula(Isu) and Uju Onwudiwe (Njaba).

    Others were   Victor Onyewuchi (Owerri west) Uche Agabiga(Orsu) Emma Orie(Ohaji/Egbema) Ikechukwu Anwunka (Idea to south) Henry Ezediaro(Uguta) Roman Duruji (Ehime Mbano) and Marcel Odunze (Orlu).

  • Imo 2019: It’s not a sin to be  Okorocha’s son-in-law -Uche Nwosu

    Imo 2019: It’s not a sin to be Okorocha’s son-in-law -Uche Nwosu

    In this interview, one of the governorship aspirants in Imo State, Chief Uche Nwosu, tells our Correspondent, Ndidi Okodili, why Imo electorates should look beyond his personal relationship with Governor Rochas Okorocha. Excerpts

    WHAT does being the son-in-law to one of the most controversial governors mean to you. Does the name Rochas Okorocha open doors for you?

    Of course the name Rochas Okorocha has opened a lot of doors for me. Owelle Rochas Okorocha, forget about attaching a governor to his name, is a man that is known across the country and even outside the country. Before he became governor, when you mention the name Owelle Rochas Okorocha in the North people are happy. There are some homes that when you mention the name Owelle Rochas Okorocha people will start clapping. It is so in the West and in the South-East. The name has opened ways for me. I have learnt a lot from this man called Rochas Okorocha. Most people don’t know the other side of Owelle as a family man, as a humanitarian and as an administrator. Of course being a son-in-law to the governor does not stop me from doing what I am supposed to do as a Chief of Staff of the state government. The man Rochas does not know whether you are a son-in-law or a brother or a sister. He is a man that your relationship with him does not justify your getting any position. In fact, he will even be happier to fire you if you are his relation and you are not doing your job well. He has a lot of in-laws, he has a lot of brothers but why has he chosen me to be his Chief of Staff?

    Your being the son-in-law to the governor is a major campaign issue against your governorship ambition. Now is there anything about you that people do not know?

    Yes, I am a son-in-law to Owelle Rochas Okorocha and I am very much proud to be his son-in-law. Today in most of the countries of the world, let me just start with President Donald Trump, his son in-law is an adviser; he is a member of his cabinet, America never went up in flames, why should Trump appoint his son-in-law as a member of the kitchen cabinet of his government? President Bush senior was the President and after his tenure, his son became President and America never went haywire, even at that his son was also a governor. What about the Bill Clinton family, while Clinton was President, the wife became a Senator, the wife became Secretary of State, the wife also came back to run for President, does that stop America from choosing the right person, does that bring food on the table of the poor masses? So being a son in-law does not stop Imo State from getting what they want to get, it does not stop the poorest of the poor in the state from having food on their tables. What you should rather ask is what do you have for the people of Imo, forget about the issue of being a son-in-law, being a son in-law to the governor is an added advantage because I have acquired knowledge, added advantage is not in the area that people say he wants to put his son-in-law; the Owelle I know cannot impose somebody on people. Naturally, the people will choose who they want to govern them. When you talk about Uche Nwosu, most people leave the issue of Uche Nwosu, the name they attach to it is son-in-law to the governor. Being a son-in-law to the governor, does that stop me from being who I am, Uche Nwosu; does being the son-in-law to the governor stop me from doing what I want to do as Uche Nwosu; so it has become a sin to be an in-law to the governor; these are the questions we should ask ourselves.

    People should have asked, as a son-in-law or Uche Nwosu as a Commissioner, what was I able to do in the Ministry of Lands, they should go back and check my records and legacy in that ministry. As a Deputy Chief of Staff of Operations, they should ask themselves, what has this young man done; they should also ask themselves, as a Chief of Staff what was he able to give to the society? Owelle Rochas Okorocha is not a man that will bring you to his cabinet because he wants to favour you; you must have something upstairs for you to work with Owelle Rochas Okorocha.

    But critics see your ambition as a third term agenda for the governor; will you not be tele-guided by Governor Okorocha or are you going to be your own man?

    I am telling you who the governor is, once Owelle Rochas Okorocha leaves the seat of power, the man I know very well will not even come close to this Government House; it is we that will be telling him please come and visit us. Rochas Okorocha has made a lot of people, senators, ministers, House members, how many times has he called to say I want to put this or that in the National Assembly or called any minister and say I want to get this from you? But that does not mean that whenever, as an elder statesman, just like we have Achike Udenwa, Ikedi Ohakim, we need advice, we should not go to them but the man I know very well, who I have worked with for over 20 years, is not a man who will leave a place and come back to that place and start saying this will happen.

    People have come from across the state to endorse you as their sole governorship candidate; do we explain this to mean that you are under pressure to run?

    If God Almighty has said that it is Uche Nwosu, nobody can stop it. So, the issue of endorsement, I believe it is coming from people’s heart and what they are saying is come and be our governor and if the voice of the people is saying come and be our governor, who are you to say no?

    Now do you think you can fit into the big shoes Governor Okorocha will be leaving behind?

    Once you enter into a position of leadership, the shoe will become your size but if it is not your size, keep matching it until it sizes you.

    How did you meet your wife, the governor’s daughter?

    The first day I set eyes on my wife was in Jos; then I was the Personal Assistant to the Owelle Rochas Okorocha. Then, he was the Adviser to the President on Inter Party Affairs and we went to Jos one day and we slept in Jos and we woke up one morning, I saw my wife, then a younger person, wash all the plates and after that she mopped all the rooms and when we went for the second time and she did the same thing and even the third time and I was asking myself that with all these wealth around the father, it was still possible for her to do this. She can still have time to sit down and wash the plates and not just the plates that her brothers ate with but both the ones used by other people including me. Plates somebody like me ate with, she just gathered everything and washed them. So to me a saw, a virtuous and humble woman, somebody who is not controlled by the wealth of the father; I saw a woman who is not moved by the riches of the father. One thing led to another, I developed interest in her and being a Personal Assistant to your boss you know it is difficult to approach your boss and say I want to marry your daughter but I took the bold step. One morning, I went to Her Excellency; I didn’t want to go to the governor because I was scared I didn’t know what to tell him. So, one morning I went to her and said I wanted to see you and she asked me if there is any problem and I said I wanted to tell her something private and she said I should come back in the evening. In the evening when I went to see her behold my boss was there I didn’t know how to say what I wanted to say and His Excellency looked at me and asked me if anything was wrong, I said no that I came to see Her Excellency so she laughed and said we should go downstairs and when we got down, I told her that I want to get married to your daughter. She sat back and looked at me and said you want to marry my daughter and I said yes, I think the boldness in me made her to start thinking that this young man that had the boldness to say openly that he wants to marry my daughter even as the PA to the father. She said ok and asked me if I had told the father and I said no that I wanted to tell her first but I asked her to start working on him for me, she smiled and walked away. Finally the day I told him, she was looking at me and he said I know, Madam has told me, he asked if I had spoken to her I said I have; I had already told her and he said if she says yes, that he can’t stop it. That was it; I could not believe it. If it were to be some families, they will not take that, Owelle Rochas Okorocha as a wealthy man that time would have wanted the son of a governor or another big man to marry the daughter but he Okayed it and before you know what is happening, we were married and God has blessed us with three boys.

    Apart from being the governor’s son in-law, who is Uche Nwosu?

    Uche Nwosu is an indigene of Eziama Obiere in Nkwerre Local Government Area of Imo State. I was born in a family of nine; we lost three, remaining six. My father was a clergyman in the Anglican Church and my mother is a trader. I grew up in the Church. From my birth till my father died, we lived inside the Church and when my father died, I moved down to Maiduguri with my uncle where I continued my education. I did my Primary School at Shehu Sandi Karemi Primary School, Maiduguri. I started my secondary school at the Government Secondary School, Gubiou in Bornu State. When I came back, I continued with my secondary school, first of all at Obazu Secondary School, Umuna, then I went to Sacred Heart College Ugwuagba then finally came back again to Comprehensive Secondary School, Eziama. But when I was in Aba, there is something that I will never forget; when I was in Aba things were very hard for my family. Our first son, a Customs Officer, who was the breadwinner of the family died, my sister who is the most senior, earned little money and we were six in number, as little as we were. I remember that whenever I came back from school, boiled corn and coconut is waiting for us in our hawking tray to go and sell; we did this believing that it will get better one day. At a time we had to sell pure water, not this type they have now but the ones they tie with white cellophane.

    That saw me through my secondary school before I got admission into the Imo State University. As a student of Imo State University, I was not looking solely on my mother to pay my school fees. One particular thing I did during my university days was that during the weekends, I will go back to my village and go to building sites and carry blocks for the mason men. I did that not minding that I was a university student. I did that because I had a goal; I did not mind where I was coming from, I was only determined on getting to where I was going to. Once I get back to the university, I will dress very well and put on my shoe and look very clean and you will not know. So when the issue of Student Union Government election came, I contested for the Director of Transport and I won. As a Director of Transport, I was able to acquire more knowledge in student unionism, in administration and leadership and it was during this time that I met the man called Owelle Rochas Okorocha. So, you can see from my growing up that I was not born with a silver spoon. Although my father belonged to the middle class, immediately he died things went down, coupled with the death of my senior brother. My mum was a very strong woman, when we come back from school, she goes to the market and we will be waiting for her to come back but she will send somebody from the market with garri and some other items to make soup.

    So my growing up was not an easy one but what I believed while I was growing up was that life does not end at the background where you come from; there is a future and I used to tell people that it is not written on your face that you will fail. For you to succeed in life, you must be the driver of your destiny.

  • 2019: Imo Deputy Gov rejects Okorocha’s Senate offer

    2019: Imo Deputy Gov rejects Okorocha’s Senate offer

    …says I can’t jettison my guber ambition

     

    Imo State Deputy Governor, Eze Madumere, has rejected his principal, Governor Rochas Okorocha’s offer to contest for the Imo East Senatorial election in 2019.

    Governor Okorocha had asked his deputy to contest for Senate instead of the governorship election to pave way for the Chief of Staff and his son in-law, Uche Nwosu, who he has endorsed as his successor.

    Read Also: Okorocha joins Imo West Senatorial race

    But Madumere who is from Owerri zone which has not produced a governor since the return to democracy in 1999, insisted that he has made up his mind to contest for the office of the governor in 2019.

    He vowed that there is no going back on the decision, adding that the ambition is not just about him, but the entire Owerri zone that has been sidelined and marginalized.

    The Deputy Governor in a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Uche Onwuchekwa, he has chosen his path towards realizing “God’s given vision to better the lot of Imolites”, adding that his fate “is in no man’s hands”.

    Describing the Okorocha’s offer as an act of betrayal, the deputy governor, argued that “ifJesus Christ could be ill-treated by those he called his friends and was later betrayed by Judas, how much more a mere mortal like me”.

    He said that he has been “molested, betrayed and insulted” by those he nurtured to “become relevant in life”.

     

  • Okorocha joins Imo West Senatorial race

    Okorocha joins Imo West Senatorial race

    …endorses deputy for Imo East Senatorial seat

    Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, yesterday declared his intention to contest for  the Imo West Senatorial seat in 2019.

    The Imo governor said his participation in the senatorial race will brighten the chances of President Muhammadu Buhari and other candidates of All Progressives Congress ( APC ) in general election in the State. 

    Okorocha who made the disclosure during the inauguration of members of Imo State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (ISOPADEC) at Government House Owerri, also endorsed his deputy, Eze Madumere for Imo East Senatorial seat.

    He also restated his earlier endorsement of his Chief of Staff and son in-law,  Chief Uche Nwosu as his successor.

    According to the governor, “if Uche Nwosu will be home for governor,  I will tell the deputy governor to go to Senate.

    “I told you earlier that my interest is the Presidency but since President Buhari will be running in 2019 I decided to put my ambition on hold until he completes his tenure.

    “But I have decided to run for the Imo West Senatorial zones because if I don’t, bad people will take the position “.

    Okorocha added further that, “if my name appears on the ballot paper as contesting for Senate, it will boost APC chances in the State. And many from my Senatorial zone have come to me and said they will not contest if I am interested “.

  • Okorocha picks chief of staff as likely successor

    Okorocha picks chief of staff as likely successor

    Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, on Monday revealed the identity of the person that would succeed him in 2019.

    The governor said at a meeting with members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) from Owerri Municipal Council Area, who visited him in the Government House in Owerri that he would support the governorship ambition of his Chief of Staff Chief, Uche Nwosu.

    He said his decision to support Nwosu fondly called Ugwumba stemmed from the fact that the chief of staff has “the qualities of ideal leader.”

    The governor, however, said Nwosu is yet to inform him of any governorship ambition.

    Okorocha said: “The monumental achievements of his administration will not be left in the hand of any how person.

    “The Chief of Staff has not told me that he wants to run for the governorship of the state. But if he comes out I will support him.

    “I have known him (Nwosu) over the years but does not know his parents and described him as an honest man who, whatever he tells you in the morning is what he will tell you in the evening.

    “Uche Nwosu is hardworking and never gets tired. He is a very humble young man. Not proud or arrogant. So, power won’t enter his head. Despite the position he occupies you can’t see him quarreling with anybody or maltreating anybody. He does not segregate against anybody whether from Orlu or Owerri or Okigwe zone. He relates with people enviously. I have checked him in and out, I have not found him wanting.

    “What the state wants is Imo governor and not Owerri Zone or Orlu Zone or Okigwe Zone governor. Zoning does not put food on the table of anybody. The young man is a team player, who does not use his office to molest anybody. He has the qualities of a good leader. If he says he will run for governor, I will support him.

    “Obviously it might be as a result of these qualities that most people are talking about Uche Nwosu for governor everywhere even when he has not declared for the governorship. It might also be the reason for the endorsements he is getting from all quarters. You see, you don’t hide a good product. And the joy of every leader is to have a worthy successor. You don’t mind political opportunists. We have done very well as a government and we should be concerned about what happens to the achievements after.

    “I am not from Owerri zone, but my administration has done more projects in Owerri zone and Owerri Municipal in particular more that the administrations before me had done put together. We need Imo governor and not a zonal governor. I have done in Okigwe zone what the man from the zone could not do for them. The records are there.”

     

     

  • Real reasons Gov Okorocha ERECTED  Zuma’s statue  – Imo Chief of Staff

    Real reasons Gov Okorocha ERECTED Zuma’s statue – Imo Chief of Staff

    All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain and Chief of Staff, Imo State Government House, Uche Nwosu, has given reasons the majority of his party members want President Muhammadu Buhari to run again in 2019. According to him, Buhari has done so well that Nigerians still need him to sustain the gains achieved in the last two years, as well as for him to do more. He believes the President has overcome his health challenge which could have been the only encumbrance. In this interview with INNOCENT DURU, he also speaks about the controversial statue erected for South African President Jacob Zuma in Owerri, saying that Governor Rochas Okorocha would soon unveil more statues in the state. Excerpts:

    RECENTLY, many APC governors who your boss, Governor Rochas Okorocha is their chairman, gave President Muhammadu Buhari the nod to run again in 2019. But while some of the governors think that Buhari deserves an automatic ticket, the opposition think that he is not fit enough to continue in 2019. What is your take on this?

    I support the governors that President Buhari should run in 2019 because I see him as a man who has come to lay a solid foundation upon which other presidents coming after him can build. I said so because it takes somebody like President Buhari to drag the country out of recession. It takes somebody like him to stand firm on the issue of corruption. It takes somebody like him to battle the issue of insecurity in the country. So, I am happy with the idea that he should run in 2019.

    Whether he is given an automatic ticket or not, I think what the APC governors, particularly their chairman, wanted to show to the world was that the APC has and respects internal democracy. And they want to demonstrate that Buhari can still win without people thinking that if he runs in the APC primary he will lose. They want to prove that if Buhari runs in our primary he will still win. So, it was meant to demonstrate to the world that APC has internal democracy, unlike some of these other parties where someone is given an automatic ticket. It is only when you are not popular that you will look for automatic ticket. Buhari is very popular. So, we believe that if the APC primary is conducted 100 times, Buhari will win.

    Why should the APC clamour for President Buhari to continue in 2019? Does it mean that the party has no alternative?

    I don’t really understand what you mean by President Buhari not fit. I wonder if the people saying this have come close to the President to ascertain his fitness. Anybody can fall sick. There is nobody above sickness. The matter is that when you are sick, you go to the hospital to receive treatment and thereafter continue with your work. So, President Buhari was sick and he went to the hospital to receive treatment and he is now fit and has since returned to his job, running like every one of us.

    Can you in all sincerity say that President Buhari has delivered enough dividends of democracy to justify his coming back in 2019?

    Yes, President Buhari has delivered the dividends of democracy very well. Remember that when we came into power in 2015, the country was going down. Remember what was happening in the North East—most of the local governments had been taken over by Boko Haram. Are we talking about the billions of naira and dollars stolen from the country? Are we talking about corruption which nobody cared what would happen? People thought that corruption was part of the system. Things were going wrong and nobody cared. Now, we should be proud to say that Nigeria has moved from what it used to be to a country that we can call our own. Nigeria’s reputation abroad now is something all of us can be happy with. Before now, when you got to any embassy, you would be ashamed of the green passport. And when you were on the queue, you would see Ghanaians and Cameroonians move pass the immigration in the US, but when it comes to the turn of a Nigerian, they would keep you and ask you so many questions. These are some of the things Buhari has corrected and we are happy about them.

    On the issue of recession, some countries go into recession and in two years they are not out of it. Today, Nigeria has come out of recession. This happened so soon because President Buhari has been able to manage the affairs of this country very well. Look at the internally generated revenue from the Federal Inland Revenue, it has gone up to trillions. But before now, all the money went into individuals’ accounts. Or is it the issue of agriculture? Nobody is talking again about foreign rice. If you go to Ebonyi,  Kebbi and even Lagos State and many other parts of the country, they are producing rice, and now the quantity of rice imported into Nigeria has gone down because most families now prefer to eat the local rice.

    So if you ask me, President Buhari has done very well. All we need to do as Nigerians is to support him. These are things that had gone bad for many years under the PDP. So we need to support Buhari fully so that the country can regain its lost glory completely. Now, people know that you cannot just dip your hand into the government coffer and think that nothing will happen. Buhari therefore is the only one who can strengthen the gains achieved and do more.

    How much of these dividends of democracy have come to the Igbo? Because the people of the South East still believe they have not got their due under the Buhari administration.

    When it comes to the issue of infrastructure and dividends of democracy to the South East, let me start from Agriculture. I know that Buhari, through the Central Bank of Nigeria, has intervened in rice production in Ebonyi State. Ebonyi is one of the states in the South East that is very good in rice production. The Federal Government has rendered some assistance to Ebonyi in rice production. So now, most of the people, including myself, eat Abakaliki rice. Nobody cares about foreign rice any more.

    On the issue of roads and other infrastructural facilities, just a few weeks ago, the Vice President told us that the Federal Government had released the sum of N2 billion for the Second Niger Bridge. Remember that this is the same bridge that we have had promises in the years past and nobody was able to do it until Buhari came in. On the issue of roads, if you go through the 2017 budget, you will see that most of the roads in the South East are captured in the budget. Let me give you examples from the one that cuts through my state, the Port Harcourt-Owerri Road, which was started by the Niger Delta Ministry, the Federal Government has promised to bring the contractor back to site to complete the road. Then there is the Aba-Owerri Road; work has commenced on that road. And the Enugu-Onitsha, Enugu-Aba roads are receiving attention from the Federal Government.

    When a budget is made, it does not mean that within two or three days, work will commence. It has to go through due process before work will commence. But the assurance the South East should have is that President Buhari will not forget the zone. The President Buhari I know will treat every political zone as one single entity and one country. So, I don’t believe that the South East has not got the dividends of democracy under Buhari.

    Even here in Imo State, we never knew that Imo as a state in the South East could have an international cargo airport. If you come to Imo today, the airport is almost 90 per cent completed. It was President Buhari who gave us Imo Cargo Airport. We never had any Airforce Command, but Buhari gave us one. The same with the Army Command School and so many other laudable projects. And it is the same thing in the other states of the South East. So, our people should support President Buhari to be part of the moving train.

    APC has been ruling Imo State in the last six years, but it appears the Imo people are not happy. Do you think that the governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, has done well in the state?

    When you say that people are not happy, I wonder the people who are not happy. Are we talking of many families whose children are enjoying free education from primary to the university level and in the polytechnics and colleges of education? Are we talking about the roads? Are we talking about the hospitals, other infrastructural developments and other things that have come to Imo through Owelle Rochas Okorocha?

    I think when a few individuals and those who deep their hands into government coffers, who feed fat on government, who do not have any other job apart from politics make noise because they have access to the press, you yourself can go to the streets of Imo and tell the ordinary people, like Keke riders or market women, that Owelle Rochas Okorocha is not working, and they will tell you that you are a new comer to Imo State. People are happy. Everybody who lives in Imo State is happy with Owelle Rochas Okorocha except those Abuja or Lagos-based politicians or those who are based abroad who never find time to come back home.

    Today, Imo State is one of the fastest growing states in Nigeria. Owelle Rochas Okorocha has done very well. Is it the free education, the eight-lane roads, the hospitals, the markets or the new taxi scheme? If you count the projects the governor has done in Imo State, they are more than 1,000. He has achieved what the PDP government could not achieve in 15 years.

    So, why is it that controversies are always surrounding Imo, from demolition of structures to building roads to the demolition of the controversial Eke Ukwu Owerri and the erection of the statue of the South African President, Jacob Zuma?

    To make an omelet, you have to break an egg. And for you to get the yoke, you must break an egg. No leader in any part of this world would allow himself to fail. And to succeed as a leader, you must take the bull by the horn. If you are a leader and you depend on sentiments or what people would say, you will never achieve anything. Owelle Rochas Okorocha is the man who has taken the bull by the horn.

    Let me start with the issue of road dualisation. Today, people are happy that we have eight-lane roads in Imo State. It can only take a governor with a vision, a governor with a strong mind to clear the shanties on the roads and make Imo roads eight lanes. Before now, Imo State capital was like a mini-local government where the only roads you could pass through were either Douglas Road, Wethdral Road or Bank Road. But today, we have the First, Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Inland roads connecting the new and old Owerri. We also have the Akachi Road. It takes a man of courage to achieve that.

    And let me correct an erroneous impression; the structures demolished were only illegal structures. There was no building built on the right place that was demolished except that person had encroached on the road or government lane. So, the demolition was carried out in the right direction, and those demolitions were mainly on shanties which gave way to the eight-lane roads.

    On the issue of President Zuma, I think people misunderstood the coming of President Zuma, the statue and the rest of it. Owelle Rochas Okorocha did not bring President Zuma to Imo State for a jamboree. What Okorocha brought was South African economy. Some people do not know the importance of a sitting president visiting a state, not a country. By the coming of the South African President, Imo businessmen can now travel to South Africa and do business there based on our relationship with President Zuma. The President Zuma Foundation is working hand in hand with the Rochas Foundation College. Most of our children from Imo State who want to study in the universities in South Africa from the Rochas Foundation College can now go to South Africa easily to study. The South African cargo plane will land in Imo State very soon because the South African Airline has now signed an agreement with the Imo State Government so that they can be part of this Imo Cargo Airport when it becomes functional.

    But some people don’t see all these. What they see is the visit of President Zuma. And when you talk of having the statue of President Zuma, it take a wise man who knows how to get something to act fast. There is this saying that when you want to catch a butterfly, you also fly and dance like a butterfly. For Christ sake, South Africa is not a small country. For you to get something from South Africa, you need to lure them into the state. So what Governor Okorocha did was to simply bring South Africa into Imo State, so that when Imo people go to South Africa they are warmly received there. So I believe that by that singular act, Okorocha has taken Imo State to the next level of business opportunities.

    Remember that the President of Ghana also visited Imo State and stayed for two days. The Prime Minister of Zambezi came to Imo State and stayed for two days too. I have not seen in the history of the Federal Republic of Nigeria where a president will move straight to a state on a private visit. I think I give it to him; he is a man with good vision and heart. It will take only my governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, to do this.

    But most Imo people believe that it was not wise to use a whopping N520 million to erect the statue of a foreign president. The money, they say, could be used to pay teachers and pensioners in the state. How do you react to that?

    I laugh at the people who say this. So, looking at a shrewd administrator and businessman like Owelle Rochas Okorocha, you think he can spend N500 million on a statue? This is laughable because I know my governor very well. This is a governor who, for him to bring out N100,000 for a project, he must first go to the place to see it. We are talking about Rochas, not about somebody who is used to swinging money around. Rochas is very prudent with money. Rochas would rather say let me go and stand there so that you can give me the N500 million and I use the money to build more roads and schools. By merely looking at the statue, you can guess how much it is worth. You can get an artist and ask him how much it takes to erect that kind of statue.

    There are other statues standing next to that of Zuma. When is the governor going to unveil them?

    I think on the day they will come for their merit awards. In Imo State, we are giving the highest awards to some of those people. Like Dr Alex Ekwueme got his own and his statue is there. The President of Ghana received his own, so his own statue is there. Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe’s statue is there. His is a posthumous award which we are going to give to his family.

    What we want to do is to create a space in Imo State where the entire country or world can come to read history about these people. Not only that, we also have the hall of fame for them. When you enter the hall of fame, you can read everything about Dr Alex Ekwueme, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, the present president of Ghana, President Zuma and others. So, it is not just about erecting a statue but what we are achieving with it; the end result. So, there is wisdom in what His Excellency is doing.

    Governor Okorocha is servicing out his tenure in 2019, but rumour has it that he is preparing you to take over from him. How true is this?

    People will always say that he is preparing one person or the other. As far as I am concerned, Owelle Rochas Okorocha is the governor of Imo State until His Excellency makes known who he wants to support. And as you know, he is a man that is full of wisdom, so he is not going to handpick somebody by saying you come and be governor. It is going to be a democratic process where his own people will say, ‘Your Excellency, this is the person we want to replace you.’

    So, many people don’t know him very well. They think that he is that kind of person that will just handpick somebody and impose him on the people. That is not the Owelle. My governor will first of all seek the opinion of the people, especially the party members and Imolites to know who they want to be their next governor. When this is done, we will now know whether it is me or any other person. For now, I don’t think the governor has made his mind known to anybody on this. We are still working for Governor Rochas Okorocha and Imo State.

  • Rochas  Okorocha  now a  grandfather

    Rochas Okorocha now a grandfather

    APART from the political success which the governor of Imo State, Rochas Okorocha, has recorded, these are definitely the best of moments for him as his first daughter, Uloma, who got married last year January to Uche Nwosu, a serving commissioner for Land Survey and Urban Planning, has welcomed twins.

    The wedding which was carnival-like drew who-is-who in the country. The marriage was consummated at the Holy Cross Catholic Church, in Owerri, capital of Imo State, following the traditional wedding at the bride’s family home in Ogboko, 3 January. Nwosu, we gathered, had been having an affair with Uloma before he was appointed commissioner.

    Uloma Nwosu is the Director General of her father’s foundation, Rochas Okorocha Foundation.