Sunday, August 30, 2009

A Thieving Mayor?

Chief Chris Mba, Secretary of Amankanu Development Forum (ADF) in Nkanu East Local Government Area of Enugu State, recently, secured his freedom from police detention. A battery of policemen had, in the early hours of Sunday August 2, whisked Mba from his New Haven residence, and hauled him into detention on charges of threat to life and malicious damage. (Pictures, left and right, show Hon. Ejike Ani, Chairman, Nkanu East Local Government Area of Enugu State) 

Arrested and detained alongside Mba on the fateful day were some of his Amankanu kinsmen, including Benneth Ikenna and his son, Tochukwu, Uchenna Mba, Simeon Akaeme, Patty Okoh, Monday Agbo and Samuel Ikenna.

Mba and his co-accused were nabbed following a case incidented against them by Hon. Ejike Ani, incidentally, chairman of their council, Nkanu East. The detainees did not breathe the air of freedom until the following day, Monday August 3, when orders from above led to release. The arrest and detention of the hapless indigenes was despite their plea for innocence.

The duo of Mba and Ikenna narrated that it was as a result of their crusade for good governance, probity and accountability in the council that Ani, the council’s chairman, procured the police to intimidate and clobber them into silence.

As part of his good governance crusade, Mba, particularly, fired a petition to the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) on June 14 this year, accusing Ani of monumental corruption in the running of the council. Mba, also, sent the petition to Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for necessary action.

The petition, entitled: ‘Report on Corruption and Abuse of Office of a Public Officer; Re: Hon. Ejike Ani, Chairman, Nkanu East L.G.A’, alleged that Ani has been siphoning the resources of the council through false claims and direct labor without due process.

Mba’s petition is, indeed, anchored on a report which the council boss, in February this year, submitted to Enugu State House of Assembly Committee on Local Government. And Ani had, in the said report, claimed that he built a mobile police post at Amechi Idodo community in the council at the cost of N3.4 million (N3,354,000.00).

But the petition contended that ‘the container he (Ani) dropped at the police post cannot worth more than N0.2 million (N200, 000.00)’. The petition, also, faulted the council chairman’s claim that he built a six classroom block in his Oruku community at the cost of N17 million (N17, 044,000.00), as well as constructed the Nyaba Bridge along Amagunze-Akpawfu-Oruku-Afor Ezza Road with 443 million (442,964,754.54).

Mba’s petition, further, alleged that the Mayor uses his personal friend and driver to carry out direct labor contract under the cover of Manifest International Limited. The cost of the project, which involved lateriting and grading of some community roads in the council, is put at a whopping N20 million.
Part of the accusation against Ani is favoritism in the running of the council. According to the petition, Ani only appointed his friends and kinsmen, to the exclusion of other stake-holders, into positions of authority in the council in disregard of geographical spread, arguably, the hallmark of democracy.

For instance, the council chairman allegedly appointed his younger cousin, simply called Inyaba, hitherto a gate man in the Ministry of Rural Development, the council’s Supervisor for Works. Other alleged favored appointments included Okoh Dennis, his uncle, (Education Secretary), Charlie Nnaji, his maternal uncle (Media Consultant), and Ikechukwu Agomuo, his Imo state friend, (Personal driver) among numerous others. In the main, the petition contended that Ani uses the appointments as a cover to loot the council’s funds.

Mba’s petition to anti-corruption bodies is just one out of legion travails of Ani. At the moment, the embattled chairman faces stiff opposition to his second term bid by a cross section of his kinsmen, who deprecate his style of leadership. Consequently, in a recent function of the Vita Abba-led state chapter of People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the angry stake-holders demanded the replacement of Ani with a candidate with ‘a human face’. The group, even, followed up this demand with petitions to Governor Chime, Hon. Eugene Odo, Speaker, State House of Assembly and the state PDP Chairman respectively.

Among other things, the group argued that the council needs a chairman who will ‘develop the entire grassroots communities instead of buying radio stations to tell lies; a non-discriminatory chairman; a chairman who is not proud and arrogant; a chairman who would not spend N19 million for consultancy on a bridge that never be, and a chairman who will not spend N17 million on a 6-bedroom block.’

In the petition to Governor Chime, dated July 29, 2009, entitled: ‘Passionate Appeal for Change of Leadership in Nkanu East Local Government Area’, the stake-holders, cutting across all the wards in the council, reiterated the ‘sins’ of Mayor Ani, and begged Chime to grant them his replacement in the forth-coming December 5 local government election in Enugu state.

Some of the 43 signatories to the petition to Governor Chime included Chief Hon. John Nwatu (South-East Zonal PDP Ex-Officio member from Ihuokpara Ward); Anthony Okey Mba (Managing Director, Enugu State Transport Company (ENTRACO), Isienu/Akpawfu Ward); Ralph Nwoye, former Caretaker Chairman, Nara Ward); Emeka Igweshi (Esq), (State Legal Adviser, PDP, Isienu/Akpawfu Ward); Sam Iyiogwe, (Member, Federal Board of Parastatals, Ubahu/Amankanu Ward); Alex Mba (Esq) (VIP Stake-Holder, Obinagu Ugbawka Ward); Patty Okoh (Liaison Officer to the Governor, Amafor Ugbawka Ward) and Alhaji Uche Mba (former member, Presidential Hajj Committee 2008, Isienu/Akpawfu Ward).

Others were Maurice Ede (former commissioner in the state, Idodo/Oruku Ward), Akaeme Simeon (Ubahu/Amankanu); Amos Ogwudire (Ihuokpara); Fidelis Arum (Isienu/Akpawfu); James Agwuegbu (Isienu/Akpawfu); Jerome Ede (Amafor Ugbawka); Felix Nweze (Nkerefi); Ogbu Sylvanus (Amechi/Idodo) and Thomas Ugwu (Ubahu/Amankanu) among others.

Urging Governor Chime to save them from the ‘fangs of a looting monster who is a dictator’, the stake-holders appealed to him (Chime) to allow them to pick a grassroots politician to fly the party’s flag in the council in the forthcoming poll. The stake-holders, specifically, want the chairmanship post to rotate from its present North to the southern part of the council.

“We agreed on rotation and, without mincing words, it is the turn of the southern part of Nkanu East, as the incumbent chairman comes from the Northern part of Nkanu East Local Area”, the petition stated.

As it were, several efforts to get the council boss to react to the allegations were unsuccessful. Ani neither picked calls from our correspondent, nor accepted an interview appointment as communicated him through a message sent to his mobile telephone handset.

For now, the people, especially, those opposed to Ani’s style of administration, look up to a trio of Governor Chime, the state PDP chapter, as well as anti-corruption agencies to dispassionately inquire into the council’s management, with a view to ensuring justice and equity to all.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Nigeria: A Country of Treasury Looters!

Director, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC), Tim Daniel disclosed that Nigeria loses $110 billion annually to treasury looters. (Photo shows President Barrack Obama of America and his team gazing at Umaru Yar'Adua, Presdent of the treasury looting Nigeria)

Daniel says the country cannot boast of tremendous development because of the large amount of money being siphoned out of its treasury for overseas country.

KlinReports discovered that every ministry, government’s agency and parastatal is enmeshed in treasury looting. As a matter of fact, Mrs. Farida Waziri, Chairman of Economic Finance and Crimes Commission (EFCC), during her first anniversary, volunteered that former governors, ministers and national assembly members alone have stolen N285 billion in the present political dispensation.

Is there any wonder, then, that Transparency International rates Nigeria high in corruption?

It would be recalled that the main reason the military overthrew the civilian government of Shehu Shagari in 1983, December 31, was corruption, which still walks on all fours in Nigeria.
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, had, in his own time, instituted a probe against the late Head of State, General Sani Abacha. This probe unearthed the looting of $3billion by Abacha from the country’s treasury.

Despite the tremor generated by the discovery, treasury looting has outrageously persisted in Nigeria.
It is discovered that political office holders’ in the country regularly siphon out money, through various means, from the treasury.
Just recently, Reverend David Ugolor, National Coordinator, Nigeria Network on Stolen Assets, disclosed that the recovered N65billion that Abacha looted has been mismanaged. Ugolor said Obasanjo’s government disbursed the funds devoid of transparency.
The same thing happened with the N16billion recovered from Tafa Balogun, former Inspector-General of Police. The recovered fund is reportedly missing without trace.

When Obasanjo assumed office in 1999, he set up the EFCC, headed by Nuhu Ribadu, on the pretext of fighting corruption. Ribadu’s agency, eventually, turned out a tool for witch hunting real or imaginary enemies of the president. Ribadu, once, disclosed that his agency had investigated the then serving governors, adding that 31 out of the 36 of them allegedly looted the treasury of their respected states, and would, as soon as their immunity expired, be prosecuted.

Curiously, when the tenure of these governors ended, only six of them who were said not to be in the good books of Obasanjo were taken to court by the agency. Not much was known about the extent of looting of the national treasury until the National Assembly started probing various agencies, ministries and parastatals.
The figures coming out from some of the probes that represent the loot is frightening. It was from the probes that Nigerians realized why the problem of the energy sector had defied solution and why the country has been in perpetual darkness. Over $16 billion, said to have been spent by Obasanjo’s government to find solution to the problem of electricity, went into private pockets.

The usual Nigeria’s conundrum was introduced in the probe, which consigned the report to the dust bin. The hunter later turned the hunted. Ndudi Elumelu, the head of the probe committee, is now facing trial with four others for alleged perpetration of monumental fraud of N5.2b.
Those involved are Chairman, Senate Committee on Power; Senator Nicholas Ugbare, his House of Representatives counterpart, Ndudi Elumelu; Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Power, Dr. Abdulahi Aliyu and Managing Director of Rural Electrification Agency, Samuel Gekpe.

Another sleaze at Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) involved N3billion allegedly stolen by the suspended Chairman of the agency, Dr. Ransome Owan and six commissioners. They are currently facing trial on 197-count at an Abuja High Court. Of this amount, N77million was said to have been spent on overseas frolicking and cost of living allowances.

The educational sector is not left out in the looting spree. While the United Nations Education Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) laments the high level of adult illiteracy in Nigeria, the literacy commission boss was involved in N271m fraud, which is part of the amount meant to reduce the illiteracy rate in the country.
According to latest report of UNESCO, Nigeria is classified as one of the countries at a serious risk of not attaining the Education for All (EFA) goal by 2015. The report claimed that there are about 60 million adult illiterates and 11 million out-of-school children in Nigeria. It rated Nigeria as one of the most illiterate in the world. In the face of this negative index, the Executive Secretary of the National Commission for Adult Education, Mass Literacy and Non-Formal Education, Dr. Dayo Olagunju and 19 officers of the commission are being prosecuted for the alleged fraud.

The Director of the Universal Basic Education Commission, Prof. Bridget Sokan and three top officers are also facing trial over N78million loot. Also, while the universities are crying of under-funding and lecturers on strike, Vice Chancellor of Imo State University, Professor I. C. Okonkwo, has been arrested in connection with N70million fraud. When his house was searched, the sum of N4.5million cash, $11, 200 and 700 Euros were found in his apartment in Owerri.

Former Minister of Aviation, Professor Babalola Borishade, NAMA’s former Managing Director, Roland Iyayi and two others were fingered in N19billion loot. They are, also, facing criminal charges in court.

The football house is involved in the rot. Recently, it was reported that $236, 000.00 was stolen from coffers of Nigerian Football Federation. Funny enough, the National Sports Commission, the supervising agency inaugurated a committee to trace the money. The committee, after collecting sitting allowance, did not come up with any finding.

The National Film Corporation has its share of the menace, as its Managing Director, Afolabi Adesanya and four directors were recently arrested for allegedly sharing of N11.8m belonging to the agency.

The Trans National Corporation (TRANCOP) is, also, in the news as it relates to corruption. Its Group Managing Director, Thomas Isegoli, is in the net of EFCC for fraud. The amount involved is more than N15billion. He is being held with the company’s Secretary, Mohammed Buba and another official, Mike Okoli.

The GMD is said to have, in connivance with other staff, severally abused the N100million approval limit given to him by the Board of TRANSCORP. He allegedly used organizations owned by his friends and associates to siphon money through bogus and overlapping consultancy projects, contracts and services.

Chairman, Federal Character Commission, Prof. Oba Shuaibu Abdulraheem, was, last September, accused of involvement in N262million scam. A petition on this issue was sent to President Umar Yar’Adua and Code of Conduct Bureau. Chief Bode George and others are, also, facing charges over scam in the Nigeria Ports authority.
Former Senate President, Adolphs Nwagbara with Prof. Ebere Osuji, former education minister and others are also facing corruption charges, likewise serving Senator Iyabo Obasanjo and Prof Adenike Grange, who are alleged to have corruptly enriched themselves to the tune of N300million.

At the peak of the Obasanjo campaign for the cancellation of Nigeria’s foreign debt, United Kingdom Minister for Africa, Mr. Chris Mullin disclosed, on February 2005, that about N315.5billion of Nigeria’s looted funds were frozen in various British banks.
He had said that Nigeria’s quest for debt cancellation would be a mirage if corruption and looting of the treasure persisted in the country. From reports, Nigeria’s stolen money kept in foreign accounts in 1999 increased from $50billion to $170billion in 2003.
This was buttressed in the June 2006 edition of The Africa Report by the former Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Mr. Raymond Baker, who had estimated stolen money from Nigeria and stashed away in foreign banks to be about 100b.
Baker, who put the total value of “dirty money” laundered globally at $500million per annum, also noted that about 50 percent of these funds, which come from developing economies end up in US dollar dominated accounts.

KlinReports learnt that the sum of N53.3billion owed failed banks in the country and now considered bad debts came about as a result of insider abuse or outright stealing by officials of those banks. Before the collapse of these banks, some of them went to the Nigerian Stock Exchange to raise funds to assist them come out of the woods. This ended with much of the funds being diverted to other uses by the unscrupulous officials of the banks.

Of all these funds stashed away in foreign banks, in 2006, the then Attorney General of the Federation declared that the Federal Government could only recover $1billion.
Nigeria, a Nation of Treasury Looting Indeed!

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Sanusi & the Bank Thieves!

In Nigeria, it is one week one trouble or even more. Some authors have described Nigeria as a theatre and Nigerians the actors. Less than a month ago we were talking about the Niger Delta crisis, the militants, and the federal government amnesty. (Picture right shows President Umaru Yar'Adua, Ex CBN Governor, Professor Chukwuma Soludo and incumbent Governor Sanusi; Left, Farida Waziri, EFCC Chair)

Hardly have we finished talking about the above did the Boko Haram crisis erupt. As the Boko Haram troubles were about to die down, then came what I call the “Nigerian banking crisis” (Central Bank of Nigeria’s sacking of five bank chiefs and the astonishing in house revelations).

By the time this crisis will die down, another national crisis will erupt. I want to be proven wrong.

The Central Bank Governor (Lamido Sanusi) has simply done his job by sacking some bank executives for what I call gross misconduct. However for him (the Central Bank Governor) to complete this job, he need to also sack those Central Bank officials that continued to grant these banks facilities, despite their ailing financial state.

Will this exercise started by the Central Bank Governor lead to another banking reform or full blown banking crisis? I will believe the later.

Be that as it may, I know there will certainly be changes with the commercial banks. I wish to use this medium to suggest to the Central Bank Governor (Lamido Sanusi) to use his position and stop our commercial banks from sending young ladies and men running after people begging for cash to be deposited in their banks. The amount of targets given to banks staffs to get is simply outrageous.

It appears that the special units at the Central Bank of Nigeria, who are responsible for monitoring commercial banks, have failed in their duty or they are part of these non performing loans. Otherwise why didn’t they prevent this mess from happening? Who and who were responsible for this unit at the Central Bank? Why did the ex Central Bank Governor (Chukwuma Soludo) tell the Nigerian Senate and Nigerians that all were good with all commercial banks in Nigeria?. Why did the past Central bank management connive to misinform the Nigerian public by deliberately covering these banks? Nigerians deserve a lot more explanations.

The Central Bank has also published the names, companies and their directors who have put these banks and the nation in this crisis. However this detailed list of these bank debtors has equally shown that, these are men and women who frequent the corridors of power such as Dangote, Otedola, just to mention but a few.

Let’s not forget that this same Dangote was unanimously voted Chairman of the Nigerian Stock Exchange. Transnational Corp of Nigeria Plc, who has Prof Ndi Okereke-Onyiuke as one of their directors, is also heavily indebted. Prof Ndi Okereke-Onyiuke is the Director General of the Nigerian Stock Exchange.

The Central Bank has asked these bank debtors (Dangote, Ndi Okereke-Onyiuke, Alhaji Arisekola Alao and so on) to pay their debts or the CBN will take appropriate legal actions to ensure payments.

Could the Central Bank be kind enough to tell Nigerians what these legal actions would be? Could this be a criminal case? Can the Central Bank move against these directors? Will the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission arrest these debtors?

I read that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arrested some of the sacked former bank chief executives. To achieve a balance and fairness, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) should arrest immediately the debtors and those Central Bank officials who failed in their duties to spot this. There is no point arresting or declaring only the bank executives wanted. The debtors and some Central Bank officials should also face the music at the same time.

The Central Bank should make public the financial state of the remaining banks. The federal government and the National Assembly should intervene immediately on this matter. The affected banks should also be nationalized pending when these debts will be recovered, and that is if it will ever be recovered. Those bank executives who have gone into hiding should report themselves to the EFCC immediately.

Nigerians should volunteer information to the law enforcement agents on the whereabouts of these people. Going underground means they have something to hide. Those that have relocated to abroad should remember the case of three British Natwest Bankers (David Bermingham, Gary Mulgrew and Giles Darby) that were extradited to the United States to face charges connected to Enron fraud case. The Nigerian authorities should sign extradition treaties (if there are none already) with western countries so that Nigerians who commit crimes at home and run away can be extradited back home to face charges.

The pains of this mess will eventually be borne by the innocent Nigerian masses that already have too much problems. The Central Bank should also use their privileged position to expose other shady financial transactions by all ministries, government departments and agencies, especially the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation. These revelations by the Central Bank might be a child’s play if the Central Bank should expose other sectors. Obviously this has made a mess of the banking reforms carried out by former Central Bank Governor (Soludo) who is also a beneficiary of the non performing loans that is causing this banking crisis in Nigeria.

The sacking of these bank executives and subsequent revelations about their financial state might trigger a ripple effect like mass withdrawal of funds. Nigerians know the pains of collapsed banks. Many innocent bank customers have died in the past as a result heart attacks occasioned by collapsed banks. Businesses have closed and many families made destitute as a result. I see no reasons why there will not be mass cash withdrawals as experiences have taught Nigerians bitter lessons.

On the international scene, this will further drive away foreign investors. Even the Nigerians in Diaspora will be reluctant to invest at this rate. Investor confidence is no more. Am sure local investors in Nigeria will be too scared which bank to do business with? Events are made worst due to global economic recession. Many sectors of the Nigeria’s economy will suffer as a result of this banking crisis. The “government’s economic policies” like vision 2020 might also be affected.

The Guardian newspaper of Wednesday August 19th 2009 (online version) reported that the Central Bank of Nigeria is planning a road show in the United Kingdom to explain its action and the soundness of the Nigerian banking industry to the international community. I think this might be a waste of time and resources because the international community will ask the Central Bank that is organizing the road show, why didn’t they spot these problems earlier and why did the (CBN) continue granting these five banks facilities when their books were not in order. The Central Bank should concentrate on cleaning up the banks. The positive impact of your (CBN) sanitization exercise in the banks will convince the international community. May God bless Nigeria.

Scripted By: Chinedu Vincent Akuta
An activist and leader of “Support Option A4 Group” Leicester-UK
akutachinedu@yahoo.com
http://briefsfromakuta.blogspot.com/

Monday, August 24, 2009

Imo: A State in Chains?

Nigeria has had 10 years of unbroken political climate. Nigerians stormed the streets last month despite misgovernance that has continued to greet the nation in the past ten years.

With all it is worth, this writer disagrees with several analysts comparing ten years of unbroken democracy with the years military stayed in Power, a comparison that is akin to comparing Atan Cemetery with a disused cemetery in far away Ikorodu town, however the truth remains that the worst civilian government is better that the best Military administration, although I have my doubts now with what has been happening in the country since 2007. (Left, Governor Ikedi Ohakim of Imo state; Right, Maximus Uba, Civil Rights Activist)

In the face of this mis-governance, several analysts were at loss at the fanfare exhibited by several state governments just to celebrate two years in office of stagnant performance. From Sokoto to Lokoja down to Uyo and other states Capitals, the celebration was more of competition in National dailies by governors who are celebrating just to buoy their egos and selfish interests.

The irony of this madness in that governors who should have covered their faces in shame for looting scarce resources of their states and for general non performance are the ones dominating the Pages of Newspapers in the name of two year anniversary.
A classic example here is the case of the man that has been superintending over the affairs of Imo state since 2007, a certain Ikedi Ohakim who, based on experience and qualifications, have no business in the first place mounting such sensitive Position as that of Governor of a state.

As I write, his two years of achievements in office is still running in several Newspapers including in Hausa and Yoruba tabloids. That’s not all! Bill-boards of several sizes are mounted in far away places like Minna, Abeokuta, kaduna and Lagos, while Radio Stations in Sokoto, Ogun states are daily singing his praises not only as a performing Governor but one who have more than the needed credentials to take over from an ailing Musa Yar’adua when nothing tangible is on the ground in Imo state.

Ironically, while the Government in Imo state under Ikedi Ohakim is gloating over the air waves and on pages of Newspapers on his two years of achievement in office even as he has spent only 150 days in Imo state as against over 500 days spent in Lagos, London, Abuja, a good governance non governmental organization based in Lagos, “Good Governance Initiative” which conducted an on the spot assessment of activities of Governments in the South East recently released a bag of woes as it concerns governance in Imo state.

A look at the said report which is yet to be made public shows unreasonable bank interest to the tune of over N930 million, an amount whose principal could not be traced to any meaningful project except lodgments into the accounts of the Governor and his brother.

The report of the “Good governance Initiative” also indicated that no new industries were built or rehabilitated while graduate unemployment has risen to a dangerous level. The report also linked the rising wave of kidnapping, Armed Robbery, Child Labour and graduate prostitution which is assuming a dangerous dimension to the vexed issue of unemployment ravaging the state.

Aside the above, the report also stated that there were no new roads constructed or Rehabilitated except badly built ones at Anara/Amaraku axis, the home town of the governor and his wife, while hospitals remained consulting centres and health centres have long been deserted due to poor personnel and funding.

Also part of the good governance report include covered massive fraud especially in Government House, transfer of funds without authority or due process, abuse of government directives as it concerns finance, non release of PVC for audit inspection, non return of Personnel cash advances as well as uncertified capital payments.

The report also indicted the Ikedi Ohakim led government on the disappearance of Excess crude money running into billions of Naira, massive unauthorized withdrawal from local government allocation now totally over 61 billion naira, outright stealing of government property, disappearance of vehicles donated by International Organizations, as well as disappearance of sensitive documents and files especially from the Ministry of Finance and Local Government.

Interestingly, the earth moving reports by Human Right Group is similar to the one done in 2008 and packaged by Imo Democratic congress, a democracy focused Socio/Political organization based in Owerri, Imo state.

In their own report which the Ikedi Ohakim government found no answers to, the Group stated that issue of financial discipline is not anywhere near agenda of the government of Imo state.

For example, the group said it uncovered acts like over invoicing running into millions of naira, lack of audit inspection of government establishment, huge payments for contract jobs not executed, double debiting, Lack of receipts to cover payments, contract inflation especially on road contracts around Amaraku/Anara axis, poor implementation of budget of 2007/2008 as well the supplementary budget.

Further to the above, the Group stated the irritating pain of driving on potholes riddles roads month after month and year after year, the epileptic Power supply, the unbearable experience of lack of potable water in may parts of the State especially Owerri and Okigwe are more that enough to turn the People against the Ikedi Led administration and justify the citizens taken the laws into their hand. In its conclusion the Imo group Stated that the above drawbacks is worsened by selfishness and absence of patriotism on the part of both the Governor, his brother who is the chief of staff, as well as his aides including the Local Government Chairmen whose idea of ADMINSTRATION is pocketing the entire allocation of their various councils and leaving the councils prostate.

The expectation thereafter was that the Imo State Government should look at the two damning reports not from the prism of opposition but as a subtle guide to getting governance on a sound footing in Imo but because the government is all about media hype, the reports of the two groups are now being proved right, no thanks to the worsening financial condition in state culminating in social crimes like kidnapping, Prostitution, armed robbery and child labour, crimes that have become the order of the day in Imo State. Ironically the government functionaries appear to be target to both the kidnappers and Armed Robbers.

We need not say here that the patience of Imo People who saw Ohakim as a young man without political burden appears to be running out and fast too, worse the legislature which should be the watch dog on the infantile executive is busy singing haleluyah vibes to the Governor, a fellow who in the last two years appears to have no agenda hence his dismal performance since 2007.

Now the Question on the lips of Imo People is, “if Ohakim can not give account of two years with surplus money coming from here and there, now with the bells already tolling for another election, where will the magic then come from? Also how can one expect performance from Ohakim now that the economy is battered in terms of revenue whereas precious time was wasted on frivolous matters? We ask again what happened to the N40 billion bond with UBA Plc? And why is Imo State servicing primary loans to the tune of 1 billion every month since 2007?

From the foregoing there is no doubt the fact that indeed Imo State a beautiful state blessed with fertile and productive landscape no doubt is “in chains” courtesy of rulers without vision. And we ask, Should Ohakim have celebrated two years in office in the face of all these? Who will save Imo State from the Ohakims who have since 2007 commandeered our common wealth and left us in chains? When will sanity be restored in the Land of Hope? Who will cut short this long and delayed take off of Imo to the path of sustainable growth and development?

But the question still remains: Who will remove the chains inflicted on Imo by the Ohakims and their co travelers? Only time will tell.

Maximus Uba sent in this piece from Mbaise, Imo State.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

65 Jostle to be Governor of Anambra

65 aspirants are falling on top of one another to emerge governor of Anambra state come next year. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has just fixed guber poll in the state for February next year.

This crowd of governorship hopefuls, KlinReports learnt, cuts across all the parties, with the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) producing over 30 of them alone. (Picture left, map of Anambra state; Right, incumbent Governor Peter Obi)

The tenure of incumbent Governor Peter Obi will elapse late this year, a situation which leads to the conduct of guber election in the state by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

Investigations reveal that this figure of governorship hopefuls in Anambra state remains the highest among the 36 states of Nigeria, including the Abuja Capital Territory.

Recently, Governor Obi expressed the view that the mammoth crowd aspiring to be governors of the state shows that his contenders are only after the commonwealth of the state.

Making the remarks while addressing members of Anambra State Development Union (ASDU), Lagos, at Governor's Lodge, Amawbia, recently, Obi said none of the contenders in the election had told the people what he would do for them or any unique thing to do for the people.
"If you ask them why they are in the race, their only answer is that I [Obi] should be removed because I do not behave like politicians by not carrying them along. And you may ask: what does carrying them along mean? All they are saying is that I don't bring public fund to share to with them. No way”, he asserted.

"Most worrisome," Obi added, "is that none of the aspirants live in Anambra state and share the feelings and hardship of the people to know what the problems of the state are. All these people roaming all over the place seeking to be governor, none of them lives here; none of them knows how the people suffer. When they get into office, they would rather increase your burden. We have been too selfish to ourselves".

The governor maintained that work to be done in the state was enormous, as a result of which he could not afford to divert public fund for purposes other than what it was meant for.

According to him, "I found out on assumption of office that virtually every sector of the state had collapsed because of neglect of past administrations. That is why I am working in all sectors after I initiated Anambra Integrated Development Strategy (ANIDS). It is not just in every sector, but in every local government so that those that had hitherto been neglected could be given a sense of belonging."

Obi regretted that some people who see themselves as leaders of the state have faulty life style and that the citizens do not seem to know what they want.
Obi pointed out that Lagos is developing very rapidly because of the solid foundation laid by its former governor, Bola Tinubu, stressing that he is, also, laying foundation, which his successors would build on in Anambra State and be celebrated.

In response, Public Relations Officer (PRO) of the Lagos group, Chris Mackool Nwosu, said members saw more than what they expected during their inspection of Obi’s projects across the state.

Stated Nwosu: "We have come and have seen more than most of us expected. We thank you and your team for a work well done. The developments bear testimony because in most of the projects visited old structures were still there".

He said that even Obi's most vicious enemies know that a lot had taken place in the state, even though there must be criticisms, adding: "It will rather be insane to stop this beautiful music."

On his own part, Chief Emma Anyadike, leader of the group, urged Governor Obi to do more publicity and sort out problems in the political front just as one of the few women, Mrs. Amaka Onwuama, said they would ensure that Obi is returned to power next year.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Ngige is Confused!

Anambra state Chairman of All People’s Grand Alliance (APGA), Akunwata Mike Kwentoh, has described Dr. Chris Ngige as not only confused but also suffering from what he called “projecto completo maniac”, which he explained as a disease that makes one to suffer loss of cognition regarding project executed in one’s state.” (Picture shows Dr. Chria Ngige)

Chief Kwentoh who made this known in a release he made available to the press yesterday was reacting to the claim by Dr. Ngige that the projects now completed by the Government of Peter Obi were the projects he initiated.

The APGA chieftain said that Ngige liked saying funny things to attract attention whenever he perceives that he has been completely forgotten as is the case in the Anambra State. He said that he suddenly discovered that apart from hired praised singers he plants at occasions to shout Onwa when he enters that the people of Anambra State had virtually forgotten him or see him sly in his ways.

The APGA chieftain said it was unfortunate for Ngige who claimed all along, even till last month that Governor Peter Obi was doing nothing and had abandoned all the projects he initiated now claimed that the projects the Governor completed are his. Going by his logic, Kwentoh said it means that the Governor started these projects three weeks ago to have completed them now.

While urging the Governor to intensify the advertisement of his projects even in the CNN, he said that the advert is working, as people come to appreciate all he has done prompting people like Ngige to change the tone of their music from “he is not doing anything” to “he completed our projects”

The APGA chieftain said that even in the brochure that contained the projects executed by the Governor, he explained those he started from the scratch such as the Secretariat, many roads, the Library, the stadia, the Business park, the Judges’ Quarters, Faculty Buildings in the state’s higher institutions and those he completed having been abandoned by even administrations that came before Ngige such as the SEMA Building, the Ministry of Justice building at Onitsha and some roads Ngige started in his one-point agenda restricted to roads in his local government Area. He challenged Dr. Chris Ngige to name one project that was abandoned by those that came before him that he touched.

On the claims by Ngige that he started the rebuilding of Onitsha General Hospital and School of Nursing and Midwifery Nkpor, Kwentoh challenged journalists to visit those institutions at his expense and find out from the management. He said that was how Ngige claimed to have fenced the State Secretariat that is currently being fenced. He said that he claimed to have built the structures at Amaku General Hospitals even when the foundations were laid from 2007. He enumerated some, among many projects, the Governor did which Ngige is claiming or inspecting as his to include the Zik Avenue, the odor Bridge, the Kenneth Dike Library, the Umueri General Hospital, the Faculty of Law building at Igbariam and advised him to stop being childish.

Kwentoh expressed happiness that Governor Obi and his aides have come to realize that Ngige is an unpleasant distraction as they no longer cross swords with him. He called on the people to watch Ngige’ claim to have initiated the building of the Permanent site of Anambra State university, which will commence in a month’s time.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Prescriptions for 2011 Polls

The ideal situation would be free, fair and transparent elections in Nigeria.
Presently, except there is a miracle and the National Assembly passes the Justice Uwais recommendation on electoral reforms, there will still be rigging (I want to be proven wrong). (Picture left shows Chairman of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Maurice Iwu)

Assuming the National Assembly passes this bill, it still needs to be tasted with an election so as to ascertain its efficacy or determine if it’s foul proof or not.

For me and my group, Option A4 remains the best electoral system, because it has been tasted and trusted. The present electoral system gives enough room for electoral fraud and manipulations, which in turn produces long and painful post electoral litigations. (I did a detailed article on post electoral litigations published on my web blog- briefsfromakuta.blogspot.com and other national and international media).

Am sure that as 2011 general election approaches, many corrupt politicians will be strategizing on how to rig elections. Patriotic Nigerians should also be thinking of how to counter electoral fraud or at best how to provide evidences to the law courts that will count against fraudulent electoral victories. Both the ruling party and the opposition parties might find my advice very useful.

I will suggest that Nigerians buy digital cameras and mobile phones with camera as part of our preparation for the 2011 general election. The whole idea will be for people to record every event that happens around each pooling booth, more especially to record on tape the actual number of voters that will turn up for voting. This method will automatically contradict any manipulation of numbers at the collection centers or when the authorities decide to announce something different.

Video records of elections should then be posted to all media houses, and those with internet access should upload to YouTube or other internet websites so that it will be transmitted worldwide instantly. Video evidences can change situations and force accountability. The video recording of where the leader of Boko Haram (Yussuf) was captured alive and his subsequent death in police custody has forced the Nigerian President (Musa Yar’Adua) to order immediate probe. The video recordings of Yussuf’s interrogation by the Nigerian law enforcement agents are already on the YouTube. As a matter of fact, the African Independent Television (AIT) showed clips of the YouTube video of Yussuf on Friday 7th August 2009 during their politics and current affairs programme (Focus Nigeria).

In the West Bank, B’tslem (an award winning human rights organization) distributed about one hundred video cameras to its activists to secretly record Israeli shooting of innocent Palestinians. The video evidences compelled the Israeli Defence Force to order investigations and offer explanations.

In the United Kingdom, a New York investment banker recorded a violent police action against a newspaper seller (Ian Tomlinson) just before he died during the G20 protest in London on April 1 2009. Scotland Yard (UK police in charge of policing the G20 summit are under serious investigation as a result of the video footage).

Citing the importance of video evidences, the British government installed more than five million close circuit televisions (CCTV) all over the country. There are more close circuit televisions (CCTV) in the United Kingdom than any where in the world. In addition speed cameras are every where in the United Kingdom and other western societies. These devices have proven very useful in the fight against crimes in the western societies.

In Iraq, Blackwater employees (staffs of a contracting firm that works for American diplomats in Iraq) who were on vehicle escort duty in central Iraq shot dead about seventy civilians whom they claimed threatened them. A key element that contradicted their claim was a video shot by someone who happened to be there. The video was broadcast to people and it immediately raised questions about the credibility of Blackwater. The video footage became a key factor for the political tide that turned against the Blackwater contractors. Within few months five Blackwater personnel were facing manslaughter charges in the US, and the State Department advisory panel recommended that Blackwater be dropped as a contractor for American diplomats in Iraq.

This equipment (digital camera and mobile phone with camera) can be pocket sized and within reasonable cost, meaning that many people can lay their hands on them. This method can reveal institutional vulnerability. Using the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as a case study, video recordings on each pooling station can mar attempts to rig elections or at least provide evidences that could give victory to actual winners. The entire Nigerian public needs to give serious thoughts to this advice.

Non Governmental Organizations (NGO’s), community groups, labour unions, political parties, students groups etc should teach themselves and others how to record events using this simple technology (digital cameras and mobile phones with camera). This should be in preparation for the coming 2011 general elections. People might take for granted this digital technology, whereas in actual fact, it could do a lot to force accountability on the part of government and most influential people. It will also guarantee information transparency.

Another method to enforce accountability on our rulers will be for Nigerians to increase their surveillance of our rulers. Rulers are public servants; therefore their lives should be a public concern. Nigerians should be free to spy and expose their rulers. In the western societies, spying on leaders are very common.

It’s a good mechanism to put leaders on check. In May 2009, spying on British MPs’ led to revelations about their expenses scandal. Over 182 MPs’ from all parties were indicted. British MPs repaid nearly half a million pounds in expenses money claimed since 2003. Many MPs are no longer standing for election due to this scandal. In a related development, Alan Duncan (a member of British House of Commons) was secretly filmed complaining about MPs’ pay and expenses. He apologized to the nation over his behavior.

Nigerians can adopt the measures outlined above in our efforts to build a better nation.

The key to succeeding in the above ventures will be when all of us become active participants or support one another to undertake the ideas so expressed. May God bless Nigeria.



Chinedu Vincent Akuta, an activist and leader of “Support Option A4 Group” Leicester-UK akutachinedu@yahoo.com http://briefsfromakuta.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Chime Probes Nnamani

After what seemed like an eternity, the Judicial Commission of Inquiry on the Activities of 17 Local Government Areas of Enugu State, set up by Governor Sullivan Chime on assumption of office in 2007, commenced its public hearing Tuesday, August 4. (Pictures show Chime (left) & his predecessor, Senator Chimaroke Nnamani (right)

The commission’s mandate was to investigate such mismanagement of council funds during the eight years of Senator Chimaroke Nnamani as governor of the state, that is, from 1999 to 2007. Governor Chime had launched the inquiry in the face of an asphyxiating cold-war between him and Nnamani, his predecessor and political mentor who, single-handedly, installed him governor in June of 2007. Both Chime and Nnamani parted ways even before the former’s inauguration as governor, a broken relationship that has refused to mend even with the passage of over two years of Chime’s administration of the state.

Chime set up the commission, headed by a High Court Judge, Anthony Onovo, sequel to a resolution by Enugu State House of Assembly, led by Hon. Eugene Odo, urging his government to probe former Governor Nnamani and the seventeen past local government chairmen over alleged illegal deductions from allocations belonging to the councils.
Thus Governor Chime, in February 2007, set up the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Activities of Local Government Councils in Enugu State from January 1999 to December 2007 to conduct the seemingly procured probe request. Other members of the commission were listed as N.A.U Ojike, Igwe (Dr) Chris Ngene, Chief L.O Ugwu, G. Obu, Mrs. J.U Ovaga and Henry Nwalu (Secretary).

Understandably, the setting up of the commission was trailed by suspicions from the camp of former Governor Nnamani which believed that it was politically motivated, Indeed, the camp remains of the view that the indictment and subsequent caging of Nnamani is the primary target of the exercise.

And to give the commission legal backing, past chairmen of councils were said to have been propelled to call for probe of the Nnamani era in the state. Operating under the platform of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON), the council chiefs (who were even part of Nnamani’s administration), fired a petition to the state legislature, bringing forth the allegations of embezzlement of council funds against his government.

These council chairmen, in a letter to the House, dated February 1, 2008, claimed that they had been inundated with calls by civil society groups, employees of local governments, press and other relevant stakeholders for an audit of accounts of past councils in the state.

Exonerating the legislators from the alleged looting of the councils’ funds, the council henchmen called on the Assembly to order a probe, as well as an audit of the accounts of the past local governments in the state within the stipulated time range.
"Furtherance to our collective resolve that the local government system in Enugu State must be transparent, accountable and service oriented, ALGON wish to call for the probe/audit of accounts of past local government councils in Enugu”, the petition stated.

No wonder, the subsequent House 7-man adhoc committee on the issue, chaired by former Speaker Abel Chukwu, came out with a damning report, prodigiously indicting the past government of Nnamani for mismanagement of the councils’ funds. Indicted alongside Nnamani by the House Committee, chaired by former Speaker, Chief Abel Chukwu, was Prince Sam Ejiofor, ex-Commissioner in charge of Local Governments.

Ejiofor was, particularly, allegedly corruptly enriched himself, using proceeds from unauthorized deductions from the monthly allocations to the local governments in the state. Chukwu’s co-panelists were Mike Onyeze, Chris Ugwu, John Anichukwu, Oke Nwoke and Chika Ene (Mrs).

It is worthy to note, at this juncture, that the Onovo commission seemed to have slipped into coma for several months Governor Chime inaugurated it until lately when opposition parties in the state, of course, led by Senator Nnamani’s Ebeano Political Family, peaked their activities aimed at stopping his (Chime)’s re-election bid come 2011. The opposition parties, including Action Congress (AC), Labor Party, Peoples’ Progressives Alliance (PPA) and the Ebeano faction of the state chapter of People’s Democratic Party (PDP), chaired by Barrister Ray Nnamani, former National Auditor, among others, recently, went into a rainbow coalition of sort, and pronounced what they termed ‘Project 2011’.

At the center of this pet-project of the opposition is the scuttling of Chime’s second term ambition and his subsequent replacement with a ‘more fashionable candidate’. Apart from Senator Nnamani, perceived as the rallying point for the realization of the project, Prince Ejiofor, also, plays a leading role in this ‘Operation Stop Chime’s Second Term Bid’.

It would be recalled that Prince Ejiofor was set to emerge the state’s Deputy Governor but for his arrest and incarceration by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), in January 2007, over alleged financial crimes. Other prominent politicians involved in the ‘Project 2011’ include Okey Ezea, governorship candidate of the Labor Party in the past election and KGB Oguakwa, a member of the Federal House of Representatives from the state.

Findings by the magazine show that Governor Chime’s ouster, similarly, tickles the fancy of some other politicians in the state, especially, those who contested for the PDP guber ticket with him before he got anointed by Nnamani. Those who struggled for PDP nomination alongside Chime included Ezenwata Okey Itanyi, Deputy Governor then, Dr. Walter Oji, incumbent Chairman of Udi Council, Okey Ezea, Prince Ude Maduka, an Abuja high flying businessman and politician, US based John Nwokeabia and Group Capt. Joe Orji (Rtd), just to mention but a few. It was after Chime’s emergence that aggrieved aspirants like Ezea sought succor in Labor party, on the platform of which he ran for the plum position. It is instructive that, apart from Oji and, perhaps, Itanyi, to a limited extent, most of these PDP aspirants, including those of other parties, are said to have suffered one form of alienation or the other from Governor Chime.

It will be recalled that the duo of Chief Ugo Agballah of Accord Party and Dr. Oscar Egwuonwu of Democratic People’s Party (DPP), also, contested the governorship of the state, and gave a good account of themselves. It is yet to be deciphered whether they have rosy tales to tell about their relationship with Chime’s government.

Although many of these personalities are yet to mouth open support for the ‘Project 2011’, there are indications that it is a matter of time for the interested persons to come up with their own game plan on the 2011 governorship election.

With the peaking opposition against Chime and his second term dream, it is, therefore, not surprising that the ‘sleeping’ Onovo commission was whipped into action at this point in time. So far, the commission has summoned over fifty past council officials and contractors across the state to come before it to testify on their dealings with the councils under Nnamani as governor. And the grand finale of the public hearing is expected to be the invitation of Senator Nnamani himself to appear before the commission. And Nnamani’s appearance is going to be as tension-laden, as it is expected to be dramatic. That is, if he accepts to present himself for such a probe.

The on-going public hearing, however, followed an interim report to Governor Chime by Onovo’s commission. Although the report is yet to be made public, the magazine gathered that the commission established cases of corruption, misappropriation and diversion of council funds, fake projects and other sharp practices by those who operated the local government system within the period under review.

Assuring openness of the probe, Onovo confirmed that some discoveries had already been made from the records made available to the commission and from oral interviews already granted to the people.

Speaking before commencement of the public hearing, Justice Onovo disclosed that the commission has painstakingly gone through the books and payment vouchers provided by the 17 councils in the state. The senior jurist maintained that members of the commission have also undertaken a tour of the 17 local governments for the purpose of project inspection and verification, as a result of which, according to him, an interim report was submitted to Governor Chime.

Onovo disclosed that the commission was, after a long period of indoor investigations, opening its doors to the public, adding that so doing would enable those the commission summoned to come forward and shed some light on some of the transactions and documents in its possession. The commission, Onovo said, would, also, give an opportunity for interested members of the public to come forward for testimonies.

"As you are aware already, this is Judicial Commission of Inquiry. In line with the Rule of Law, which is the bedrock of every decent society, fairness, equity and justice and to afford fair hearing to all the parties, we cannot conclude this hearing without hearing from all those who had in the past operated the system," the jurist stated.

Stressing that the commission has resolved to be fair and to offer reasonable opportunity to all concerned to air their views on what transpired at the local government councils in the past, the Judge gave an indication that the public hearing would be concluded by October 31.

"I am certain that at the end of the day, we shall all be happy with the outcome of the inquiry - at least if for nothing else, that what happened in the past and the recommendation of this commission would guide the future conduct of those in charge of government at the local level and at other levels of government and in all spheres of our public life”, Onovo enthused.

For now, all eyes are on Onovo Commission. Will the commission, eventually, acquit former Governor Nnamani? Or, will it indict him as forecast by his camp? Time will tell.

Culled from THEWEEK

Monday, August 17, 2009

Who Wants Journalist Uzoechi Dead?

Steve Uzoechi, Imo State correspondent of National Daily Newspapers, is one journalist that upholds the principle that the media should serve as a watchdog of the society. Uzoechi, therefore, goes about his noble journalism profession with passion and good judgment. (Picture shows Imo State Governor, Chief Ikedi Ohakim)

But the life of this professional is, at the moment, under threat courtesy of one of the stories he recently published in his newspaper. The story, involving one Chief Zeek Martins Nnadozie of Zeekford Consultancy Services, centered on an alleged N6 billion buy-back scandal in the settlement of debts owed former council officials of Imo state between 1999 – 2002 and 2004 – 2007. Nnadozie and one Chief Dan Okehie of Brick-Red Financial Consultancy Limited featured prominently in the scandal.

Uzoechi, in a press statement entitled: ‘My Life is in Danger’, alleges that Chief Nnadozie is after his life. The press release, dated August 9, 2009, claims that Nnadozie, once, confided in someone that he would unleash assault and mayhem on him. Nnadozie is, also, said to have told a fellow journalist that he was mobilizing ‘protesters’ to invade the home of Uzoechi’s parents.

Uzoechi says the threat came to a head when Nnadozie, in a recent media interview, accused him of having a hand in the kidnap of his (Nnadozie)’s wife, demanding N1 million ransom from him. Nnadozie, similarly, accuses Uzoechi of castigating the person of Imo state Governor, Chief Ikedi Ohakim, through his publication.

‘One Steve Uzoechi of national Daily made a lot of frivolous claims libelous (sic) writings and ranting and made a lot of castigations on the person of the governor. A position he can never, never in his life think of not to talk of dream of’, Nnadozie stated in the interview, adding: ‘It is very unfortunate that such a man who I am also accusing of having a hand in the kidnapping of my wife because he made a very serious threat to me that I should give him a million Naira; that if I don’t give him a million naira that I will see what he and his boys would do to me’.

Journalist Uzoechi says Nnadozie could not identify him in person, pondering how he could have negotiated the deal of N1 million. He adds that Nnadozie asked a colleague for his phone number amidst death threats, but the colleague refused to give him.

Uzoechi recalls how Nnadozie had earlier commissioned one of his colleagues to prevail on him to drop the story in question, but he resisted the temptation.
The journalist adduces several reasons Chief Nnadozie is threatening to kill him. Nnadozie and his collaborators, he says, bagged multi millions of claims in the buy-back deal for the Imo State government, maintaining that, as a result, he (Nnadozie) and his accomplices are looking forward to a repeat in the buy-back settlements of benefits owed special advisers and development Area Coordinators that served Imo State.

Uzoechi is, also, of the thinking that the report filed against the first transaction could threaten the subsequent ones, saying that Nnadozie could not afford to lose the handsome loot, a situation which compels him to adopt any measure to stop him, including assassination threats.

Uzoechi is worried over the death threats because, according to him, there is a pattern of framing up journalists in the state and, subsequently, doing them in. He cites the recent instigated hounding of an editor of a local newspaper in the state by the police on a trumped charge of gun running.


Scripted By: Henry Onu

Saturday, August 15, 2009

A Professor’s Painful Death

What a heart-renting way to die! A collapsed wall crushing a Professor to death? Just like that? Why, God? Why?

Alloysius Aghaji, famous Professor of Urology, University of Nigeria, Enugu Campus-Nigeria, met his tragic death in the night of Sunday, August 9, from a collapsed wall in his Aghaji Crescent, GRA residence, Enugu. (Pictures show Professor Aghaji & the collapsed wall that killed him)

A specialist teacher in Prostrate Cancer and Urinary Diseases at the Surgery Department, Aghaji was, until his death, Dean of the university’s College of Medicine before his demise.

The tragedy occurred when Professor Aghaji came out of his one storey-building residence (which, also, served as his private clinic), during a rainfall, to check out something near the wall. The pillars (of the wall) suddenly caved in and stapled the cerebral Professor to the hard earth. He died instantly!

It is pathetically recalled that Aghaji’s dog was similarly killed by the same that collapsed earlier. And the Professor had just finished the rebuilding of the collapsed wall when it (the wall), in turn, crushed him to death.

KlinReports dare say, the most tear-evoking aspect of this tragedy is the realization that Professor Aghaji’s death was preventable, as the collapse of the wall was caused by flood from the nearby Coal City Gardens Estate built by Enugu State Housing Development Corporation (ESHDC). Is it not revolting enough that there is no proper drainage system in this estate which shares the fence with Aghaji’s home? An estate which comprises over 100,000 housing units, a Presidential lodge, and a shopping mall!

It, therefore, stands to reason that Aghaji died from negligence on the part of the Housing Corporation, and this is very, very painful! Painful that such a man who had contributed enormously to mankind would just die from the carelessness of some irresponsible government agencies.

Aghaji was a man of no mean discoveries. One of his rare feats was a discovery that accidental injury to the bladder is not uncommon, and that open gynecological procedures are the commonest cause in females, while blunt trauma is the commonest in males. This discovery largely derived from a research on 'Accidental Injuries To Urinary Bladder: Enugu Experience' which Aghaji co-authored with Fred Ugwumba in 2003.

KlinReports joins millions of Nigerians in condoling with the family, relations and friends of Professor Alloysius Aghaji over this painful and irreparable loss. May His Soul Rest in Perfect Peace!

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Police Brutality Unlimited!

This 23 year-old apprentice trader, Chukwuemerie Nze, recently, lost his right eye to police brutality in Enugu-Nigeria. 23 year-old Nze was subjected to merciless torture by a team of four policemen in the course of which one of the cops smashed his right eye with a long knife he wielded.

Doctors confirmed that Chukwuemerie’s right retina, pupil and eye ball were completely damaged following intense beating and smashing of his right eye by his police assailants.

The travails of young Chukwuemerie, an indigene of Umuaku-Isuochi, Abia state, began last month, July 9, at his mentor’s Timber Shed, located in the Maryland area of Enugu metropolis. While Chukwuemerie was inside the shop, a team of four police men from Uwani Police Station pulled up, and ordered him to hop into their Peugeot 505 salon car, with Registration Number DA 778 PHC.

As the unsuspecting 23 year-old timber merchant wanted to know his offence, the officers descended on him, beating him to a pulp. Amidst the collective beating and kicking, one of the officers, identified as Sergeant Philip Ezekiel, repeatedly slapped Chukwuemerie with the long knife. In addition to the knife, the policemen were reportedly armed with guns, a baton and a handcuff.

Even the intervention of one of Chukwuemerie’s neighbors did not save him from being pummeled by the police officers. Some neighbors identified Chukwuemerie as an apprentice trader, affirming that he was not a criminal, yet the officers snubbed him and continued their brutal beating of their victim.

The policemen only backed out from Chukwuemerie when blood started streaming from his right eye, soaking his dress and pouring down on the ground at the scene. Chukwuemerie who, also, sustained varying degrees of injuries on other parts of his body, including his legs, arms, back, waist and chest, during the ferocious attack, confirmed that that it was Sergeant Ezekiel that, in particular, smashed his right eye with the long knife.

Perhaps, a bit remorseful at the sight of their victim’s blood-soaked face and body, the operatives drove him to a private hospital along Agbani Road, Enugu, but the hospital’s authority, observing the degree of the injuries, advised them to take him to Parklane Specialist Hospital. Rather than head to Parklane, the cops, inexplicably, took the bleeding and half-conscious Chukwuemerie to Uwani Police Station. At the station, Inspector Francis Akuboyah, the Station’s Officer (SO) ordered them to take him to Parklane as earlier advised by the hospital.

At the hospital, the cops took Chukwuemerie to the Casualty Ward where doctors attended to his affected right eye, and stitched it. Thereafter, the officers took the ill-fated young man back to their station after buying drugs and food for him. Two of the officers, subsequently, took him home on a motorbike and gave him N500.00 to return to the hospital the following morning for continuation of his treatment.

Chukwuemerie was eventually admitted at the Parklane Specialist Hospital in the morning of July 10 where doctors confirmed complete damage of his right eye during his attack by the policemen. And the doctors, in the ensued surgery, removed the affected eye.

Chukwumerie thus joins the growing number of disabled Nigerians, having lost his right eye to a section of policemen rampaging Enugu, intimidating and extra-judicially killing indigenes and residents of the state.

The most annoying aspect of this bloody attack on Chukwuemerie was that the cops (his assailants) and, indeed, police authorities, abandoned him throughout his ten days (July 10 to 20) of admission at the hospital. Police authorities, also, refused to pick the N162, 000.00 bill given to Chukwuemerie by the hospital. John Nze, Chukwumerie’s poor father, had to run from pillar to post to foot the bill alone.

The Nze family had, on July 17, while Chukwuemerie was still in the hospital, reported the matter to the Divisional Police Officer (DPO), Yemi John, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), who, in turn, directed an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) at the station, Raphael A.N, to investigate the incident. Alas, one month after, ASP Raphael is yet to come up with his findings on the incident, at least, to the knowledge of the victim’s family.

Although Chukwuemerie has lost his right eye courtesy of police brutality, his family, as well as his Isuochi kinsmen, insists on justice in the matter.

To this effect, Isuochi Development Union (IDU) has called on police authorities to speedily investigate the gruesome attack on its son (Chukwuemerie), with a view to bringing his police attackers to justice. Condemning the vicious attack and subsequent abandon of Chukwuemerie at the hospital by the officers, the Enugu Branch of the union called for justice in the matter.

“We want justice in this matter. We call on police authorities to immediately launch an inquiry into this bloody attack, in order to dispense justice in this matter”, the union urged the police high command.

However, police authorities in Enugu state said it is yet to be informed of the bloody attack on the young man, but promised to find out what, actually, transpired.

KlinReports dare say that this is exactly the prayer of the victim’s family, for the earlier the bloody attack on Chukwuemerie is deciphered, sooner the rising tempers will be soothed.

It has to be noted here that the cops did not accuse Chukwuemerie of misdemeanor of any type, yet they treated him less reverently then cattle. And even if Chukwuemerie was guilty of any offence, is he not, according to the Nigerian judicial system, presumed innocent until proven guilty?

So, nothing, in the opinion of KlinReports, justifies the bestial attack on Chukwuemerie by the policemen. Nothing! The onus is, therefore, on the police authorities to quickly resolve this rape on the fundamental human rights of Citizen Chukwuemerie.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Horror: 30,000 Nigerians Killed


The six days (26-07-09 to 01-08-09) of bloody sectarian violence in the Northern States of Bauchi, Borno, Yobe and Kano, which culminated in the death of over 1000 persons, is condemnable. The uprising started in Bauchi State on Sunday 26th day of July 2009 and spread to Borno, Yobe and Kano States. The Islamic Sect, known as “Boko Haram” or “Western Education Is A Taboo”, which is sometimes referred to as “the Taliban”, had taken to violence for the purpose of Islamizing Nigeria through the strict application or institutionalization of Sharia Legal Code and System. (Pictures show victims of sectarian and other forms of violence in Nigeria; Right is the corpse of Boko Haram, leader of the Muslim Sect that recently wrecked havoc in the northern part of the country)

The Sect, led by Ustaz Yusuf Mohammed, first emerged in Borno State in 2002, from where it set up a major camp at the Nigerian-Nigerien Border. The violence reportedly started when the Sect reportedly attacked a police station in Bauchi State, in search of arms and ammunition, which was reportedly repelled by security forces. Angered by this, the Sect reportedly took up arms against Nigerian Security Forces and other Moslems and non-Moslems. Some churches, private and public facilities were reportedly attacked and destroyed. The Sect is reportedly co-led by Alhaji Buji Fai, a former Commissioner in Borno State, who reportedly resigned in 2008.

Since then, the human and the material casualty figures have continued to rise. This Day Newspaper of Sunday, 2nd day of August 2009, reported that about 700 dead bodies had been recovered so far and buried in Borno State alone. The Newspaper quoted one Colonel Ben Ahanotu of the Bauchi State adhoc security outfit, code-named “Operation Flush” as confirming the casualty figures to the Associated Press. This Day also quoted an unnamed staff of the Umaru Shehu Hospital in Maiduguri, Borno State as saying that about 172 dead bodies had been brought to the Hospital since Tuesday, 28th day of July 2009. He was also reported as saying that at least, five persons were killed on Saturday, 1st day of August 2009.

On Wednesday, 29th day of July 2009, about 100 persons were reportedly killed by security forces alone. The Daily Independent Newspaper of Thursday, 30th day of July 2009, had also quoted the Yobe State Police Public Relations Officer as saying that about 43 Boko Haram Activists had been killed since Wednesday, 29th day of July 2009 in Yobe State. On Thursday, 30th day of July 2009, the leader of the said Islamic Sect, Ustaz Yusuf Mohammed died under controversial circumstances. The Daily Independent Newspaper also reported that over 800 persons might have been killed as at Tuesday, 28th day of July 2009.

Similarly, Colonel Ben Ahanotu of the “Operation Flush” confirmed to the media that at least 230 women and children, who were held hostage by the Islamic Sect in Kastina, Plateau, Bauchi States and other parts of the Northern Nigeria had been rescued. Thousands of other citizens have been displaced and made homeless. Quantification of material destructions runs into multi-hundred million naira. This Day Newspaper of Monday, 3rd day of August 2009, reported that about 800 persons were killed in Borno State alone.

In all, over 1000 persons might have been killed in the Sectarian Violence. And this might mean that in the six days or 144 hours of the uprising, over 1000 persons might have died, mostly in the hands of the Nigeria’s security forces. It further means that seven persons might have been killed in every one hour, between 26/07/09 and 01/08/09. The pictorial evidence obtained by the British Broadcasting Service, which was published by leading Nigerian media has authenticated the allegation that the late Ustaz Mohammed Yusuf and the late Alhaji Buji Fai, who led the Boko Haram Islamic Sect were captured alive and killed extra-judicially by the Nigeria Police Force. The late Ustaz Yusuf was reportedly captured alive by the Nigerian soldiers and handed over to the Borno State Police Command, which took him into its custody and allegedly killed him hours later.

The last Wednesday’s invasion of the Sect’s mosque and the massacre of about 100 of its followers by the Nigeria’s security forces are extra-judicial and genocidal in nature. The way and manner the Nigeria’s security forces, especially the Nigeria Police Force, handled the sectarian violence is totally condemned. Some Moslem leaders in the North had revealed how they alerted intelligence agencies on time about the imminence of the violence, but they were reportedly ignored. The intelligence and crime detection capacities of our security forces, especially the police have declined abysmally. Competent investigations by competent international bodies, if ordered, might further expose more atrocities committed by the security forces, while handling the said violent crisis.

It is our firm belief that the Nigeria’s security forces, acted irresponsibly, irrationally and despicably in the handling of the said violence. The amount of force so used could be likened to full blown war-like situations. The amount and sophistication of weapons said to have been used by the Sect’s elements, as alleged by the security forces, might have been stage-managed. It is common among the Nigeria’s security forces to empty their armories each time they parade suspects. The crime of extra-judicial killing and excessive use of force have, for a long time, been their stock-in-trade.

Unfortunately for Nigeria and Nigerians, these sad moments, broadened by our security forces, are taking place now that the Nigeria’s human rights records are billed for Periodic Review by the United Nations Human Council, with its Nigerian Presidency. The Attorney General of the Federation has just submitted his own version of the Nigeria’s human rights records for scrutiny by the body. The UN Reportuer on Extra-judicial Killings, who visited Nigeria in 2007, is also about reviewing the Nigeria’s compliance with the standards set by the UNO in accordance with the relevant principles of the same body.

Therefore, the three pillars of the International Law: International Jurisprudential Law, International Humanitarian Law or Geneva Convention and International Human Rights Law, as well as the Nigeria’s domestic laws, such as the Constitution of Nigeria 1999 and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights Domesticated Laws of the Federation 2004, might have been observed in gross breach. It is our firm request that the United Nations, the Commonwealth and the African Union should set up crack teams of investigators, similar to those set up in Gaza, Palestine/ Israel and Lebanon, with a view to unraveling the remote and immediate causes of the said violence, as well as the roles played by security forces and their compliance or otherwise with the laws so quoted. Those found involved, including the Boko Haram elements should be recommended for punitive sanctions among other recommendations.

Similarly, we have observed that over 30,000 Nigerians might have died since 1999 or in the past ten years, as a result of extra-judicial killings, assassinations and sectarian violence. While over 5,000 citizens lost their lives to the OTA and the Bakassi Boys killings in Anambra State, between 1999 and 2002, 3,500 persons were reportedly killed in Abia State under similar circumstances and periods. Over 1,500 others were believed to have been killed in Imo State, Ebonyi State and Lagos State by the Bakassi Boys and the O’odua People’s Congress Vigilante Group. Over 150 prominent Nigerians had been assassinated since 1999 by politicians and the Nigeria’s security forces.

The remaining 20,000 Nigerians were reported to have died in hands of religious extremists and over- zealous security forces, commanded by the Nigerian governing authorities. Those who died in the hands of the security forces included the victims of Odi, Zakibiam/Tiv massacres and the recent Niger Delta military invasions. In the Jos religious crisis of the late 2008 for instance, about 700 persons were reportedly killed, though the Nigerian authorities claimed that it was about 300 persons that were killed. Also, the highly disputed 2007 general elections in Nigeria reportedly claimed about 300 lives. See Human Rights Watch Reports for more details (www.hrw.org).

The grand summary of the foregoing is that till this date, the perpetrators of the killings so highlighted, are still on the prowl with impunity. These have resulted to the entrenchment of a “consociation democratic culture” in Nigeria, which refers to a democratic system with deep-rooted animosity, deepening ethnic or sectional divisions, economic backwardness, corruption and selective justice.

On the other hand, the unending violence targeted at non- Moslems by various Islamic extremists in Nigeria is totally condemnable. The leaders of the Boko Haram and other religious fundamentalist movements are deceiving their followers. The tagging of the so-called “Western Education” as sacrilegious, is totally false and a product of ignorance.

History has shown that apart from Egypt being the headquarters of Arabism/Islamism, it is also the origin of the world ancient university “the Egyptian System Mystery Schools”, where the philosophy which gave birth to today’s university disciplines originated. The modern world’s oldest university “the Al-Ahzar University of Cairo”, which was built in 970AD, is also located in Egypt. The division of days into seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, etc originated from the Egypt and the Babylon or Iraq, before their transformation into the Gregorian calendar.

During the Dark Ages, 450AD to 800AD and the Renaissance or Rebirth, 800AD to 1400AD, Islamic learning in ancient science flourished. Apart from criticizing and innovating, Islamic scholars developed the primitive Greek Alchemy (chemistry) into today’s chemistry. Many Greek writings were translated into their languages. The Islamic thinkers also borrowed the idea of zero from the Hindu mathematicians and invented the Arabic numerals. The Islamic thinkers also created the science of algebra and study of algebraic functions.

Today, many scientific terms such as alcohol, syrup, camphor, lute, guitar, azimuth, azure, cipher, zenith, algebra, zero, sine, etc are legacies of the Islamic thinkers and their contributions to the “Western Education”. Even almanac, mattress, take, tartan, astronomy etc also originated from Arabic terms. The most eminent Moslem physicist was Ibn-al Haitham (965AD to 1020AD). His chief work was done in optics and he showed a great advancement in experimental method. The great Razes (865AD to 925AD) was also the greatest of the Arabic Alchemists or chemists.

With the statistics foregoing, the arguments by Moslem fundamentalists that “Western Education” is sacrilegious are unfounded and lacking in substance. By this singular act, these extremists are inviting the wraths of their forefathers, especially those who contributed pricelessly to the world of science and technology, otherwise called “Western Education”.

It is about time these purveyors of cannibalism, bedecked in the toga of religious jihadists or crusaders steered clear of the shores of Nigeria and allowed Nigeria and Nigerians to pursue their collective destiny.

Nigerians must say no to those who are inviting them to come and live in the rubbles of Kabul and Mogadishu because they are the hells of no return.


This Press Statement, issued from the stable of Intersociety, a leading human rights group, was signed by:

Comrade Emeka Umeagbalasi
Chairman
Board of Trustees
+234(0)8033601078
botchairman@intersociety-ng.org
www.intersociety-ng.org

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Ohakim’s Corruption-Induced Defection

If Chief Ikedi Ohakim, the petit governor of Imo state, foresaw the present bouts of controversies and condemnations trailing his defection from the People’s Progressives Alliance (PPA) to People’s Democratic Party (PDP), he might have thought twice. (Photo shows controversial Governor Ohakim)

Governor Ohakim who was elected governor of Imo state on the platform of PPA in April of 2007, to the chagrin of many, ditched the party on Saturday July 25 for the PDP, the party in power at the centre. To underscore the relevance attached to Ohakim’s conversion by PDP, President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and, indeed, top command of the party, as well as top government functionaries, literally shut down the Abuja seat of power and streamed down to Owerri, Imo state capital, to celebrate the event.

Although Ohakim’s decamp had come and gone, the ripples it generated have hardly settled, as he continues to come under vitriolic attacks by those who see his action as a political disaster.

The former Imo state Commerce Commissioner, no doubt, received the first rounds of knocks from the Imo Democratic Congress (IDC), an Owerri-based pressure group. As a matter of fact, IDC’s lampoon of Ohakim over his dumping of PPA predated the actual date of the visit of President Yar’Adua and his subsequent decamp to PDP.

“Huge funds belonging to the impoverished people of Imo state are being expended on bogus preparations for the visit”, the group noted in a statement signed by Chief Austin Onwumere (President) and Maximus Uba (Secretary).

Scoring Governor Ohakim zero in his administration of Imo state so far, the organization observed that his volte face in dumping the PPA that gave him a position the PDP denied him, was borne out of despair and loss of political relevance in the scheme of things, both in the party (PPA) and in Imo state.

Reasons abound that even if he did not decamp, Ohakim’s rosy days in PPA were over, especially, with his antagonizing Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the party. Ohakim reportedly sent a 16 page petition to the police against Kalu, accusing him of, among other things, plotting to kill him (Ohakim). And Orji Kalu, it would be recalled, provided Ohakim with the platform on which he emerged the governor of Imo state after he had been denied same by the PDP.

Not a few believe that Ohakim’s petition against Kalu was a smokescreen for him to eventually dump PPA for PDP.

In the opinion of Ohakim’s antagonists, Kalu was not his first victim, as he is quoted to have similarly ditched the likes of Senator Araramue (who influenced his appointment as a commissioner in 1991); Prof. Maurice Iwu (who unilaterally wrote results in his favour in 2007), and Hope Uzodinma among others.

Ohakim was reportedly forced by an oath he took before being allowed into the Government House in Owerri to dump the PPA for PDP.
The magazine learnt that Chief Chris Uba, the former Anambra State political heavy weight and the same man who made former Anambra state governor Chris Ngige swear by the Okija shrine, also administered the same dreaded Alusi Okija on Ohakim. And this Okija administration and initiation was said to be on behalf of former President Olusegun Obasanjo who insisted on a guarantee that Ohakim would keep his promise to defect back to the PDP if allowed to emerge governor of Imo state in 2007?

Obasanjo himself practically confirmed this much when he said that Governor Ohakim was only fulfilling a promise he made to defect back to PDP after his emergence. Ohakim’s defection, in Obasanjo's own words, was ‘a pre-arranged agreement he entered with the PDP before the election’.

Despite the arguments in his favor by his apologists to the effect that the wrath Okija deity would descend on him and members of his family should he renege on the sworn agreement, many, including his former party (PPA) think that Ohakim, by the defection, has exhibited cowardice.

In particular, PPA, in a statement, said Governor Ohakim’s defection was a betrayal of trust and a cowardly approach to politics, regretting that it was, therefore, regrettable that he had to buckle under PDP pressure to display a palpable lack of courage and conviction.

“Rather than lead, Ikedi Ohakim has chosen to capitulate. Rather than inspire the growing legion of party members to stir the PPA to greater heights in the great state of Imo, he has decided to cut and run", PPA stated.
There is no gain-saying the fact that rather than accolades, what Governor Ohakim and his co-travelers in party defection, governors of Bauchi and Zamfara states, have been receiving from Nigerians, both at home and in the diaspora, are vicious attacks.

Midget Governor Ohakim received one of the knocks from the international arena. In the words of a news website, www.icheoku.com, “By Governor Ikedi Ohakim going back to PDP, a political party that scornfully tossed him out of their moving train to be crushed thereunder in 2007, shows that the man has no core and lacks a sense of self and decency. How dare he lick back his spittle? Does this man still have what it takes to be called governor of a state which the late Dee Sam Onunaka Mbakwe once governed?”

Icheoku, therefore, enjoined the Imo State House of Assembly to immediately commence impeachment proceedings against the defector-Governor Ohakim, with a view to protecting the integrity of the people of the state.

The news website added: “What PDP did by poaching Governor Ikedi Ohakim is pure greed as they concluded they must also consume a state out of the two held by an opposition political party. It does not bode well for democracy. Governor Ikedi Ohakim's defection is very unfortunate, it impacts adversely the sagacity of multiple political parties needed in a democracy, thereby stifling differing view-points and should be condemned by all true democrats, who wish Nigeria's democracy well”.

And to Imo Democratic Congress, Ohakim’s non-performance and corrupt administration of the state was part of the reason he chose jump ship of the party that gave him succor in time of utmost need. The Congress alleged that one of the deficiencies of Ohakim is that he has been incapable of fulfilling any of his electioneering promises.

Citing the case of the new Government House at Nekede (near Owerri) and the new secretariat blocks which President Yar’Adua, during his first visit to the state, laid their foundation stones, the organization noted that two years after, ‘not even a single block has been erected at the sites’. The same fate is said to have befallen the Oguta Wonder Lake Resort for which Ohakim’s government obtained a whooping loan of N40 billion.

“Oguta Wonder Lake project is a huge fraud and drain pipe for siphoning out the resources of Imo state”, the Imo Democratic Congress asserted.

In the statement entitled: ‘Imo: Facts Yar’Adua Must Know’, the Congress, also, pointed out that the Okigwe Water Scheme Project which the governor lured President Yar’Adua into commissioning during his visit to the state two years back turned out a ruse. The Water Scheme Project, executed by the government of late Chief Sam, was later taken over by the federal government.

The group stated: “Today, almost two years after the President commissioned the same project, there is no water anywhere in Okigwe. The Honorable Member representing Okigwe in Imo State House of Assembly, who raised his voice against this fraud, was threatened with a recall. He was intimidated by Governor Ohakim’s henchmen and he capitulated”.

Part of the contention of the organization was that Governor Ohakim has squandered over N60 billion on road constructions across Owerri metropolis alone! Ohakim’s government reportedly claimed that it dualized all the roads leading to the state capital, but the Congress countered this, maintaining that the roads were federal roads which were rather constructed by previous administrations. The group claimed that what Governor Ohakim had simply done was to put concrete dividers in the middle of the roads that have already been built, meaning that he had done road division and not dualisation. Most of the roads in Owerri capital city, IDC remarked, are no longer passable. And the roads were listed to include Imo Transport Company (ITC), Prefab Estate, Ikenegbu Extension, Mbaise Road and New Owerri.

Another project of Ohakim that allegedly constitutes a drain pipe in the treasury of the state is the Clean and Green Programme. “The programme which has gulped over N20 billion is concentrated on Okigwe road round-about, Assumpta Cathedral round-about, Fire Service round-about and Bank road by Douglas road round-about. Apart from the bus-shelter and side-walk ways built by the Governor, nothing more has been achieved under this programme”, the Congress maintained.

Insisting that Ohakim has been dishing out false pictures of the state to President Yar’Adua and the Nigerian public, the group regretted that huge investments on publicity by his government have prevented the public from appreciating the level of degeneration and economic retardation the state has continued to suffer since 2007.

Critics of Ohakim’s government say his has been a government of newspapers and bill-boards. This is to the extent that, apart from his two years of achievements in office still running in several newspapers and magazines, including in Hausa and Yoruba tabloids, bill boards of several sizes are mounted in far away places like Minna, Abeokuta, kuduna and Lagos. The electronic media are, also, not left out of Ohakim’s publicity blitz, as radio stations in far-away Sokoto and Ogun states are said to be singing his praises daily, not only as a performing Governor, but one who has more than the needed credentials to take over from an ailing President Musa Yar’adua at the fullness of time.

Ohakim is, also, accused of absenteeism in the running of Imo state. For instance, he has reportedly spent only 150 days in the state as against over 500 days he spent gallivanting in Lagos, London, and Abuja. It was as a result of this continual absence from office that a Lagos-based non-government organization, “Good Governance Initiative”, scored him zero in its recently conducted on-spot assessment of activities of governments in the southeast states. According to the report, there were no new roads constructed or Rehabilitated in the state by Ohakim’s government except badly built ones at Anara/Amaraku axis, the home town of the governor and his wife. The reports added that hospitals in the state which have, under Ohakim, remained consulting clinics and health centers have, for long, been deserted following poor personnel and funding.
Part of the report of the Good Governance Initiative is massive fraud in Imo state Government House, transfer of funds without due process, abuse of government’s directives as it concerns finance, non release of PVC for audit inspection, non return of Personnel cash advances as well as uncertified capital payments.

The report, also, indicted Ohakim’s government on the disappearance of excess crude money running into billions of naira, massive unauthorized withdrawal from local government allocation totaling over N60 billion, outright stealing of government property, disappearance of vehicles donated by international organizations, as well as disappearance of sensitive documents and files, especially, from the state’s Ministry of Finance and Local Government.

The Imo Democratic Congress, also, conducted its own assessment wherein it uncovered fraudulent practices such as over-invoicing running into billions of naira, lack of audit inspection of government establishments, huge payments for contract jobs not executed, double debiting, lack of receipts to cover payments, contract inflation, particularly, on road contracts, poor budget implementation. According to the group, the innumerable potholes on the roads across the state, epileptic power supply, lack of potable water, especially, in Owerri and Okigwe are more than enough to turn the masses of the state against the Ohakim-led administration.

In its conclusion, the Imo group stated that the foregoing deficiencies are made worsen by selfishness and total absence of patriotism on the part of both Governor Ohakim, his brother who is the state’s Chief of Staff, as well as his aides among others.

IDC expresses pessimism over Ohakim’s future performance, posing: “If Ohakim cannot give account of two years with surplus money coming from here and there, now with the bells already tolling for another election, where will the magic then come from? Also, how can one expect performance from Ohakim now that the economy is battered in terms of revenue whereas precious time was wasted on frivolous matters? What happened to the N40 billion bond with UBA Plc? And why is Imo state servicing primary loans to the tune of over 1 billion every month since 2007/”

Not a few groups in the state, as it were, submit that Imo state, under the administration of Ohakim, is ‘in chains’ courtesy of rulers without vision.

“Who will save Imo State from the Ohakims who have since 2007 commandeered our common wealth and left us in chains? When will sanity be restored in the Land of Hope and who will cut short this long and delayed take off of Imo to the path of sustainable growth and development? Who, indeed, will remove the chains inflicted on Imo by the Ohakims and their co travelers?” the groups continue to ask.

It has to be pointed out that Governor Ohakim is never new to roiling scandals in his administration of the state. The magazine recalls that one of the governor’s aides, sometime back, got enmeshed in grain scandal running into over N20 million to the state police command. The aide, with alleged connivance of the governor, reportedly sold the several tones of grain, allocated to the state from the Strategic Grains Reserve, sold at source. It was gathered that that the grains were sold to a farmer from Oyo state by Teddy Adams, the governor’s Special Assistance.
At the time the lid was blown open on the deal, the farmer had reportedly paid N3 million cash, and had issued Adams a cheque to cover the rest of the money. But Adams was, unfortunately, nabbed when he went to collect the money, and he was, subsequently, taken in by the police for further investigation. Feigning ignorance of the deal, Governor was said to have directed the police to thoroughly investigate the alleged scam, with a view to unraveling the truth.

Ironically, till date, nothing has come out of the police inquiry on the scam, as Ohakim reportedly hushed up the investigation.
Apart from the alleged N40 billion bond and massive diversion of local government funds, there had been scandals revolving round what individuals and groups have termed the “Spate of Financial Recklessness in the State”. Ohakim’s government has, also, been on the dot over alleged squandering of over N4 billion on travels and tours, in addition to over N300 million on Nigerian Musical Awards which he held in the state shortly after assuming office. All these reckless spending had, of course, been amidst the fact that several communities in the state neither enjoy pipe borne water, electricity, healthcare facilities nor motorable roads.
There is no gainsaying the fact that Governor Ohakim’s alleged excesses in the running of Imo state have attracted the attention of relevant anti-corruption agencies in the country, including Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) and Code of Conduct Bureau respectively. His defection to PDP notwithstanding, this magazine gathered that the crime agencies have continued to focus their searchlights towards Governor Ohakim, and will not hesitate to bring him face to face with the law at the appropriate time.
Meanwhile, countless scandals continue to run against Ohakim’s government like the Imo River. Will the Land of Hope Governor successfully wriggle out of the land mines on his entire path in the state? Or will he be submerged in the impending political Armagedon in Imo state in the forthcoming guber election? Will Ohakim’s recourse to the bosom of the Almighty PDP save him from the overwhelming rainbow coalition against his re-run? The answer to these questions and more, certainly, lie in the womb of time.