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INEC, a threat to democracy – PDP

The opposition Peoples Democratic Party has described the declaration by the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC), Professor Mahmood Yakubu, that there are no underage voters in Kano State as despicable and an act of cowardice that threatens Nigeria’s democracy.

In a statement signed by the National Publicity secretary of the party, Kola Ologbondiyan, the PDP said that INEC Chairman is allowing the All Progressive congress (APC)-led Federal Government to push him to make such false declaration, despite manifest documentary evidence in the public domain and even by INEC officials.

The party said that the actions of the INEC Chairman cast a huge doubt on the sincerity of the commission to conduct  free, fair and credible elections come 2019.

It said: “INEC has obliterated a huge part of its honour by denying what is obvious to all instead of taking urgent steps to clean up the register and correct all anomalies ahead of 2019 general elections.

“When Professor Yakubu set up his committee of handpicked officials, instead of deploying stakeholders comprising of political parties and credible NGOs, the PDP immediately alerted of a grand design to use the panel to arrive at a predetermined finding and cover the illegality for the APC. Today, we have been vindicated.

“We invite Nigerians and the international community to note the sequence of plots by INEC and the APC to hide the existence of underage voters in Kano and Katsina States.

“Nigeria will recall that when the issue first came to the fore, the APC mounted a staunch and unyielding defence for INEC, thus betraying their vested interests in the illegality”

The PDP maintained that the APC is only setting up INEC against Nigerians and cautioned the Chairman not to allow himself to be used to throw the nation into chaos.

Aid workers pull out of Rann

Humanitarian workers of the United Nation (UN) and Doctors Without Borders have been pulled out of Rann after an attack by Boko Haram militants killed at least three aid workers.

Three UN aid workers, four soldiers and four mobile police were among the dead while another UN aid worker is missing in the attack.

The UN Secretary General, António Guterres, announced the evacuation of all humanitarian personnel and the temporary suspension of all humanitarian deliveries in the area.

Condemning the incident, the UN chief recalled that attacks targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure violated international humanitarian law as he called on the federal government to apprehend and prosecute attackers.

“Those responsible for these and other atrocities in Nigeria must be apprehended and prosecuted,” the UN scribe said.

“At the time of the attack, over 40 humanitarian workers were in Rann. All humanitarian personnel have been evacuated from Rann, and all humanitarian deliveries in the area have been temporarily suspended.”

The Secretary-General expressed his deepest condolences to the affected aid workers, their families and to the Government and people of Nigeria and wished those injured a swift recovery.

In the same vein, Doctors Without Borders, in a statement, also announced medical activities in Rann were suspended and 22 Nigerian and international staff evacuation.

“We are deeply shocked by the loss of three humanitarian colleagues in Rann,” said Doctors Without Borders International President Dr. Joanne Liu in the release.

“These tragic deaths reflect the ruthless violence which the people trapped in Borno face daily.”

The statement also quoted Kerri Ann Kelly, Doctors Without Borders emergency coordinator in Nigeria.

“Leaving our patients, which include 60 children currently enrolled in our nutrition program, without medical assistance, is an extremely painful decision,” she said

“We will continue to evaluate how the situation evolves and we will return as soon as the conditions allow.”

The killer disease with no vaccine

Since the beginning of the year, Nigeria has been gripped by an outbreak of a deadly disease. Lassa fever is one of a number of illnesses which can cause dangerous epidemics, but for which no vaccine currently exists.

Lassa fever is not a new disease, but the current outbreak is unprecedented, spreading faster and further than ever before.

Health workers are overstretched, and a number have themselves become infected and died.

The potentially fatal disease is a so-called “viral haemorrhagic fever”, which can affect many organs, and damage the body’s blood vessels.

But it is difficult to treat.

Most people who catch Lassa will have only mild symptoms such as fever, headache and general weakness. They may have none at all.

However, in severe cases, it can mimic another deadly haemorrhagic fever, Ebola, causing bleeding through the nose, mouth and other parts of the body.

About 1% of cases are thought to be fatal, but women who contract the disease late in pregnancy face an 80% chance of losing their child, or dying themselves.

More than 1,000 suspected cases of Lassa have been reported across Nigeria since January, according to the country’s Centre for Disease Control.

About 90 people are thought to have died so far, but the true number may be much higher, because Lassa is so hard to diagnose.

In the early stages it’s almost impossible to distinguish from other common diseases like malaria and dengue.

With no readily available test, the only way to confirm a diagnosis is to analyse a blood or tissue sample in one of small number of specialised laboratories.

The disease was first identified in the Nigerian town of Lassa in 1969, after an outbreak in a mission hospital.

It has since been seen in many West African countries including Ghana, Mali and Sierra Leone.

However, this outbreak is causing particular concern because the number of cases is unusually high for the time of year.

Health officials are working to understand why.

Outbreaks can be influenced by seasonal weather conditions, which affect the numbers of the virus’s natural host – the multimammate rat.

These small mammals are common across West Africa, where they easily find their way into homes.

Another possibility is that the high number of cases reflects heightened public awareness.

Or it’s possible that something about the virus has changed.

Most people catch Lassa fever from anything contaminated with rat urine, faeces, blood or saliva – through eating, drinking or simply handling contaminated objects in the home.

It can also pass from person to person through bodily fluids, meaning healthcare workers and people taking care of sick relatives without protective equipment are particularly at risk.

The incubation period for Lassa is up to three weeks. Researchers are trying to work out whether – like Ebola – Lassa can stay in the body and be passed on through sexual contact even after illness subsides.

Nigeria has a strong public health system, and is used to dealing with epidemics like this.

The World Health Organization (WHO) is working with Nigerian authorities to help coordinate the response and the UK government has deployed a team of experts from its Public Health Rapid Support Team.

Those living in affected areas are being advised to take basic precautions: blocking holes that may allow rats to enter their homes, disposing of rubbish in covered dustbins, and storing food and water in sealed containers.

People are advised to wear protective gloves when caring for anyone who may have Lassa fever, and to carry out safe burial practices.

Despite these measures, the fight against Lassa – and other infectious diseases – is hampered by a lack of effective medical tools like diagnostic tests, treatments and vaccines.

It is likely that a vaccine could be found for Lassa – reducing the possibility of an outbreak becoming a global health emergency – but as with other epidemic diseases that mainly affect poorer countries, progress has stalled.

Vaccine development is a long, complex and costly process. This is especially true for emerging epidemic diseases, where a prototype vaccine can usually only be tested where there is an outbreak.

A new organisation called CEPI (Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations) – set up in 2017 with financial support from the Wellcome Trust, national governments and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation – hopes to accelerate vaccine production.

Lassa is one of the diseases on its hit list and it’s hoped one or more promising vaccines will be ready for large-scale testing in the next five years.

The WHO has drawn up a list of other serious, but often poorly understood diseases, with the potential for devastating outbreaks, including MERS, Nipah, Rift Valley Fever and, of course, Ebola.

It plans to highlight gaps in our knowledge of these diseases and to begin further research.

But research alone isn’t enough.

Stronger health systems are needed in the countries where epidemics are most likely to arise.

This could mean building better healthcare facilities and training staff to recognise and respond to outbreaks.

It will also mean working with communities to understand how to identify outbreaks at an early stage and prevent their spread.

Residence In Portharcourt Protest Power Blackout

The incessant protest and barricading of transmission stations by communities in Rivers State over power outage is becoming a social menace, the management of the Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution Company, PHEDC has said.

Recall that recently three transmission stations which serve as a source from the national grid to the company was forcefully shut down within the last two months by youths protesting over power outage in their communities.

The shutting down of these power transmission stations by youths in Afam, Ahoada and Ogbum-Nu-Abali communities all in Rivers State, according to the company, led to the serious blackout experienced at the time in parts of Rivers and Bayelsa state.

Speaking on the development, Manager, Corporate Communications of PHEDC, Mr. John Onyi, told our correspondent that business was becoming challenging due to the rampant protest and barricading of its offices and stations, maintaining that protest was never a solution.

Onyi said the responsibility of PHEDC for the umpteenth time was to distribute power to her customers as received from the grid and to ensure that the corresponding payment was made in order to sustain the system.

He explained that instead of carrying out a protest, there were channels through which the company can be contacted by the customers. He appealed to community leaders to prevail on their wards/children not to take laws into their hands whenever faults occur on their feeders.

According to him, “It is becoming one protest too many. Anytime a feeder is out, communities besiege our office, which is becoming a social menace.

“If there is a challenge that supply does not get to customers, there are channels through which we can be contacted, such as our customer call center, through which they can make their concerns known to us. And based on our records, we will trace the feeder to fix the fault.

“Communities should not take laws into their hands by besieging our offices at any slightest lost of supply, it is giving us a great concern and sending a wrong signal.

“Our appeal is that they should desist from such if there is a problem they don’t need to go and shut down our station such that it will affect the generality of the whole town.”

On the quit notice issued recently by Ogbum-Nu-Abali Community in Port Harcourt, for the company to remove its transmission station from the community, the Disco explained that the property belongs to the Transmission Company of Nigeria, TCN, and was a source through which they get supply from the grid.

Onyi who said Ogbum-Nu-Abali Community was owing to the company a total debt of N1.2billion as at January 2018, regretted that the community was more concerned with getting power supply than payment of bills, adding that it was a symbiotic relationship that as the company supplies power, customers must pay the corresponding bill.

“The property is a transmission station and it belongs to TCN. It is only a source through which PHEDC gets their supply to serve her customers in parts of Port Harcourt.

“We don’t know the genesis of how the property was acquired. TCN belongs to the Federal Government, the community should go and meet with the Federal Government.

“During our meeting with the community, we did not discuss about the property because they(community) know the property belongs to FG, what we discussed with them was on how to improve their supply and we also told them our challenges, that what we are getting from the grid cannot be given to everybody at the same time, so we are doing what we called load-shedding.

RE: Dakuku’s Comedy And The Lack Of Conscience

The recent outburst by Simeon Nwakaudu, media aide to Governor Nyesom Wike is nothing but a mere comic series just like he tagged his piece; a comedian and media dog, who is desperate just to please his pay master. In the clearly jaundiced rag-tag piece, Wike’s attack dog tried desperately, albeit hopelessly to tar the towering image of Dr. Dakuku Peteriside with inconsistencies.

Dr. Dakuku Peterside is a renowned transformer, who has always proven his mettle with his outstanding performances in public service from his days as Special Adviser to Governor Peter Odili to his appointment as Caretaker Chairman of Opobo/Nkoro LGA in 2004, in addition to his track record of massive infrastructural development that took place under his direct supervision as Commisssioner for Works during the Rt. Hon. Chibuike Amaechi-led administration in Rivers State.

How can Nwakaudu forget so soon that most of the roads his benefactor is claiming credit for was either started, designed or 60-70% done during Dr Dakuku Peterside’s three-year tenure as Commissioner for Works?

Can a man who supervised the completion of strategic roads such as the Rumoula Road, the completion of Eleme Junction Inter-change, NTA/Mgbouba road, the construction of Bori internal roads, the redesigning of Ogoni/Andoni/Opobo unity road and many others be tagged a failure?

Maybe, Nwakaudu isn’t aware that as at when Peterside was appointed Commissioner for Works, the design for the now Wike over-hyped Ogoni/Andoni/Opobo unity road was faulty and had to be redesigned to international best standard.

Secondly, he might have in the quest to bury truth also forgotten that as of when Rt Hon Chibuike Amaechi assumed office, as Governor of Rivers State, the work done then by his predecessor, was just 26 percent.

I shall on behalf of Rivers people help school Nwakaudu, who is obviously pretending to be deformed on the authenticated and incontestable facts about the Ogoni/Andoni/Opobo road, as he lacks the locus-standi to speak on the subject matter.

The Ogoni-Andoni-Opobo Unity road was initiated by the administration of Dr Peter Odili. Before he (Odili) left office, his administration completed 2 bridges and got the road to Asarama (Andoni). During Dakuku’s tenure as works commissioner, 6 bridges were completed and 2 bridges (No 9 & 10) were at 70%and 50% completion respectively at the end of the Amaechi’s administration in 2015.

Rivers people know Governor Wike, his antics and that of his partners in political iniquity like Simeon Nwakudu. They also know how Wike won the 2015 election. It is on record that majority of Rivers people never voted Wike as their Governor.

There is a saying that he who comes to equity must come with clean hands, thus Nwakaudu acknowledges the confirmation of Wike as governor in a very suspicious manner by Supreme Court but failed to also acknowledge the same Supreme Court that classified Rivers State as a theater of war during and after the 2015 general elections.

The outstanding performance of Dr. Peterside in NIMASA might be the reason why Nwakaudu and his goons are suffering from inferiority complex. His performance is mind-blowing and seen by all; no wonder major maritime stakeholders applaud Dakuku for his innovative achievements in less than two years as Director General of NIMASA. Within one year in office, he has promoted over 900 staff, something that is highly unprecedented in the history of the Maritime Agency.

Contrast this with Wike’s administration, who since he assumed office has not carried out any promotion but has been busy sacking workers including lecturers of Ken Saro-Wiwa Polytechnic, TIMARIV officials and non-payment of 30-month salaries of RSSDA Staff.

Dr. Peterside’s NIMASA was among the top agency that generated the highest revenue for the federation last year. What can Nwakaudu show to Rivers people as internally generated revenue of Rivers State under Wike’s watch? Rather companies are leaving the state to our neigbouring states and thus leaving our revenue depleted.

When people are talking about transparency and accountability, the likes of Nwakaudu ought not to remind Rivers people how fraudulent Wike’s government is. The first point of call for any responsible government is that it should be held accountable for its promises and deeds.

I have audio/video clips were Governor Wike himself had promised to make available to the public the state budget two weeks after its passage by the State Assembly. The same Wike had also promised to make public the financial statement of the government at the end of every year. At this point, it is imperative to remind Mr. Nwakaudu that Rivers people deserve to see what the so-called ‘Mr. Project’ has done within the ambit of accountability.

As the domestic spokesman to the fraudulent government, I challenge you to make public the 2015 supplementary, 2016, 2017 & 2018 budgets of Rivers State. A transparent government should not be scared to open its books for public scrutiny.

Henry Iyowuna Cookey (HIC) writes from Opobo town.

Arsene Wenger receives shock job offer to leave Arsenal for another Premier League club – report

Everton are prepared to offer Arsenal a solution to their Arsene Wenger problem by offering the 68-year-old another Premier League posting as the successor to Sam Allardyce at Goodison Park.

The Gunners faced calls from their own fans to do away with the Frenchman in their 2-1 loss to Brighton and Hove Albion following back-to-back defeats to Manchester City in the Carabao Cup and the Premier League.

Sam Allardyce is reportedly set to leave the Toffees at the end of the season after being appointed to keep the former English champions out of the relegation battle.

However, he has failed to impress supporters with his direct style of play and poor run of results following on from the sacking of Ronald Koeman who presided over the most high-spending summer transfer window in Everton history following Farhad Moshiri’s purchase of the controlling stake in the club.

Arsene Wenger is coming under increasing pressure to step down 

Wenger would tick all the boxes for the Monaco-based businessman who is seeking a head coach to take his investment into the race for Champions League football as an experienced manager with a strong track record for developing players, winning trophies and playing attractive football.

Last season, prior to signing a new two-year deal at the Emirates, the Frenchman threatened to leave Arsenal to manage another club if he was no longer wanted in North London.

According to the Daily Star, Everton now want to explore that idea with a job offer that would enable the Premier League veteran a way of leaving his current role in a dignified manner.

Arik Air, Presidential Air Fleet Sign MOU On Capacity Building

Photo caption (L-R): Director of Flight Operations Arik Air, Captain Adetokunbo Adekunbi; CEO Arik Air, Captain Roy Ilegbodu; Commander Presidential Air Fleet, Air Commodore Hasan Abubakar and Head of Operations Presidential Air Fleet, Squadron Leader Abubakar Adamu at the signing of MOU between Arik Air and Presidential Air Fleet.

Arik Air and the Presidential Air Fleet (PAF) of Nigeria have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on capacity building which empowers the airline to assist in imparting proficiency and line training for the PAF’s pilots.

According to the terms of the agreement, Arik Air shall provide pilots of the Presidential Air Fleet rated on the aircraft Line Training and hour building to maintain proficiency on the aircraft, including undertaking regular commercial flight under supervision, as per the standards approved for the airline.

According to a statement sent to THEWILL, the agreement was signed on Thursday, March 1, 2018 when the Commander of PAF, Air Commodore Hassan Bala Abubakar led senior officers of the Fleet to Arik Air Aviation Centre at Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos.

Arik Air Chief Executive Officer, Captain Roy Ilegbodu said the agreement would go a long way in bridging the gap in the Fleet Pilots’ training and proficiency, stating that both parties could always work together to achieve their goals.

Speaking at the ceremony, PAF Commander, Air Commodore Abubakar appreciated the support and cooperation PAF has been receiving from Arik Air over the years, stressing that this has helped in getting the Pilots to maintain a high level of training.

Arik Air which had in the past assisted PAF in the proficiency training of its pilots is a safety conscious airline and this must have informed the decision by the top hierarchy of the Fleet to enter into this agreement.

ONLY BLACK PANTHER CAN STOP BOKO HARAM

Boko Haram has brandished its fangs in the most daring way this week. Attack after attack, but with a new onslaught trouncing the old one in audacity, gruesomeness and fatality.

Between Thursday and Friday, Boko Haram launched coordinated attacks, like Hitler’s blitzkrieg, on Adamawa, Yobe and Borno. The insurgents hit two villages in Madagali local government area of Adamawa state reportedly abducting some locals and killing innocents.

In Borno, the insurgents attacked a military base in Rann, killing four soldiers. They went further to hit a camp of internally-displaced persons in the area, killing four UN workers.

In Yobe, a female suicide bomber strolled into a mosque; detonated her death merchandise, killing a worshipper. It is has been a week of bloodshed and horror.

On February 4, Rogers Nicholas, theatre commander, Operation Lafiya Dole, said Boko Haram had been “completely defeated”. He also said: “We have broken the heart and soul of Shekau’s group.” He few days later, Dapchi schoolgirls’ abduction happened.

How did a “completely defeated” Boko Haram rise like the phoenix from the ashes in weeks?

I must say, the military has become superlatively effective with propaganda. Terrorism, everyone knows, is asymmetrical; it is disingenuous and embarrassing for the military to make categorical statements on the war – soon after which the insurgents will scandalised it with another daring attack.

The war against Boko Haram is already in its eight year, and it may linger for more years, if not decades. Why? Boko Haram is powered by a deadly ideology. And that ideology cannot be extinguished by the fire of artillery. Also, the insurgency will linger because there are 10 million out-of-school children on the streets in the north, some of whom lessen the pain of their quotidian and famished existence with hard drugs.

At the risk of saying it ad nauseam, the possible antidote to this problem is education, but more importantly, de-emphasising religion in our national life. Religion should play little or no role in our public lives. But when governors spend millionaires of naira building vulgar churches and mosques instead of investing prodigiously in education, you wonder if they are really ready for a solution to the security problem.

In the movie, ‘Black Panther’, T’Challa, the Black Panther, rescued some abducted girls from insurgents in Sambisa Forest by the strokes of his claws. It was a telling scene for me. Perhaps, we need the Black Panther to rescue the Dapchi girls in captivity and to stop more abductions.

As it is, we are not ready to do the needful, besides military campaigns, to solve the Boko Haram problem. We need a superhero.

Written by Fredrick Nwabufo.

DO IGBO HAVE A KING?

It is a quotidian belief that ‘Igbo nwero eze’ – the Igbo have no king. But this belief may not be entirely accurate.

I often squirm in disagreement when people say, “the Igbo are not united; they have no king, everyone is a king in Igboland”. True, the Igbo are republican, but they have always had a leadership ensconced in “abridged or fettered” monarchy. Absolute monarchy has never had sufficient reign in Igboland. This is because of the presence of sacerdotal institutions of checks and balance.

I found ‘Anambra …Light of the Nation: A compendium (1991-2016)’, published by Okonkwo Emeka forthright in fossilising my belief that the Igbo have always had kings – they are not are a people without a lodestar.

The compendium explained kingship dynasties in some Igbo communities in Anambra state. Anambra is to the Igbo what Ife is to the Yoruba. The Igbo progenitor, Eri, settled in the area – from where other consanguinal communities and towns germinated.

The publication captures my thoughts in these lines: “The Eze Chima dynasty in Onitsha (founder of today’s Obi of Onitsha stool) dates back to over six centuries. So too is the kingship of several towns and communities in Anambra. Some of these dynasties may not be as old as the Eze Chima dynasty but records show that kingship in these communities including Aguleri and Nri date centuries back. History is replete with communities in Anambra state, particularly, in the Anambra north senatorial zone, which at some point practised rulership by kings, but which eventually resorted to some form of republicanism and gerontocracy: leadership by the eldest in the community. A good example is the Nsugbe community, in Anambra east local government Area, whose dynastic leadership ended over a hundred years, as the people embraced an amalgam of republicanism and gerontocracy.

Just as republicanism and gerontocracy once influenced communities with kingship, the tide has continued to change in the last few decades. Today, there is hardly any community in Anambra state without a traditional rulership stool. In some cases, though, the stool may be vacant as a result of disagreements in the community regarding candidates for the throne. The King usually referred to as the Igwe, Obi, or Eze, usually exercises his powers through a council-of-chiefs. Most communities have a one-tier council of chiefs. A few communities like Onitsha have multi-tier council of chiefs.”

I found other gems in the publication – basically of how the Christian religion penetrated Igboland, and orgasmed in the region. John Christopher Taylor, an Igbo son and a contemporary of Samuel Ajayi Crowther, did the duty of proselytising the Igbo, who are predominately Christians today.

However, I doubt if he is as memorable and celebrated as Crowther, who ultimately did the same thing in the south-west. This is why we must all enlist as marshals of our history and culture.

Here is a narration on Taylor.

“An Igbo son, John Christopher Taylor, played major roles in bringing Christianity to Anambra and the entire Igboland. John Christopher Taylor was a contemporary of Samuel Ajayi Crowther. He was born around the year 1815 in Sierra Leone of Igbo parents (an Isuama father and an Arochukwu mother), who had earlier been sold into slavery from the Igbo country of present Nigeria, but were later rescued and settled with other freed slaves in Sierra Leone. He studied at the Charlotte Primary School and Fourah Bay College, Freetown. Having grown up in Sierra Leone, Taylor was tremendously influenced by its Christian environment. This led him to a strong commitment to the Christian faith, which eventually culminated in the ordained ministry of the church. He served first as an Anglican Catechist in the Temne Mission, and then was pastor of Bathurst Church, Freetown. He was also a schoolmaster for sixteen years, and was subsequently ordained as a priest by the Bishop of London in 1859. The Igbo in Sierra Leone, just like their Yoruba counterparts, retained a strong interest in their homeland and especially in its Christianization. In the early 1850s, some of them petitioned the Bishop of Sierra Leone to establish missions in Igboland. Consequently, a party of three prominent Igbo citizens, led by the first black American college graduate, the Rev. E. Jones, visited Nigeria, but they were prevented by circumstances from entering Igboland. The Igbo community in Sierra Leone was not discouraged by this failure, since they believed that just as God has people in other parts of the world, He also has many people in Igbo country. The import of this is that even though their first attempt failed, they had a strong conviction that God would use other people in the Igbo community for the promotion of His work at the appointed time. Several years later, God honoured their faith and the project came to fruition, when the first Christian mission in Igboland was established at Onitsha in 1857, under the leadership of J. C. Taylor.”

As I read the book, which also puts in picturesque the immense tourism potential of Anambra state, I ask myself, “where have you been all these years?” I thought I knew the state – being my place of origin. But I was marvelled by the sights and scenes vicariously. First, there is Agbonabo, the confluence of Ezu and Omambala rivers, of which emulsion is evident in the divergent colours of the rivers; there is the Ogbunike Cave, there is Obu Gad; Agwuve Trinity Tree, Ikenga Virgin Forest, Okpu Ana Natural Spring, Ukpor and other places of wondrous splendour.

In general, this book affirms my belief that Anambra and the entire Igboland have a rich history, which must be protected from contortors and distortors.

Written by Fredrick Nwabufo, a media entrepreneur and until recently, Abuja Bureau Chief of THE CABLE, the Publisher/Editor-in-Chief of The Detail Online.

DAKUKU’S COMEDY AND THE LACK OF CONSCIENCE

The defeated 2015 Rivers State APC Governorship Candidate, Mr Dakuku Peterside is a political comedian, who is skilled in the art of political hide and seek.

This is a politician who had the privilege of being the Commissioner of Works during the glorious era of excellent excess crude, but achieved nothing with his political godfather, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi. He failed woefully.

Dakuku Peterside and his principal, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi squandered over N3trillion, with little or nothing to show for the wealth that accrued to Rivers State under their watch.

It was on the platform of their total failure, that Rivers people rejected Dakuku Peterside in 2015. His ugly antecedents were such that nobody would touch him with a pole.

After his rejection and the confirmation of Governor Wike’s mandate by the Supreme Court, Peterside went to the APC National Secretariat to cry for empowerment. He cited the quantum of Rivers State funds committed to Buhari’s election as his ticket to compulsory empowerment.

Blackmailed by Dakuku’s effrontery, he was appointed the Director General of NIMASA. His principal said this appointment is the centre of dollars. Aside from making dollars, Dakuku Peterside has been a liability to Nigeria.

He has spent his time at NIMASA siphoning national resources to have a second go at the Government House Port Harcourt. This obsession, premised on the inordinate quest for primitive accumulation of the people’s wealth, has led to Dakuku’s failure at NIMASA.

Instead of discharging his responsibilities at NIMASA, Dakuku Peterside spends all his time in the studios of Port Harcourt Radio Stations, concocting lies against Governor Wike.

Peterside judges others by his very low standard of “come chop”. He believes in his “APC-ed” mind that everyone will embezzle funds like himself and Amaechi, without leaving legacies behind.

If Dakuku Peterside and his godfather had expended Rivers resources providing road infrastructure, hospitals, schools, security infrastructure and jobs, Governor Wike wouldn’t have started from the scratch.

The defeated 2015 Rivers State APC Governorship Candidate was quoted by a Port Harcourt Radio Station as saying that Governor Wike is running a secret administration wherein details of developmental projects are unknown. He went ahead to claim that Governor Wike awards contracts to himself and his cronies amongst other funny allegations.

Dakuku Peterside is a man with several flaws. One of them is his inability to be truthful, he abhors truth.

The other day during the APC Factional rally at Bori, Dakuku Peterside lied that Governor Wike has not done any project for the the Ogoni people. The crowd shouted him down. It was his godfather, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi that grudgingly admitted that the dualization of the Sakpenwa-Bori Road is a major achievement.

What Amaechi didn’t tell the restive crowd was that Governor Wike has substantially touched all the 23 Local Government Areas of the state. He didn’t tell them that the Ogoni-Andoni-Opobo-Nkoro Unity Road will get to Dakuku’s hometown by May.

Dakuku Peterside will most definitely ride on that road to Opobo-Nkoro to go and lie to the people. If he did it at Bori, after riding on the Sakpenwa-Bori Road, he can lie again.

Contrary to the allegation by Dakuku, Governor Wike runs a transparent administration. The best practices are folllowed in the award of contracts, as the Rivers State Bureau of Public Procurement is functioning at its peak.

Key contractors in the State are internationally recognised. Some of them are: Julius Berger, CCECC, Setraco, Raffoul, MCC, Lubrik etc. Unless, Dakuku Peterside is saying that these construction companies are owned by Governor Wike.

The salaries and pensions that Amaechi could not pay, was cleared by Governor Wike. The governor has continued to pay salaries and pensions monthly, while the governance structure has been reformed and consolidared.

The rot inherited from the immediate past Amaechi administration is being tackled across the board. Rivers resources have been deployed to Rivers communities.

For the information of Dakuku Peterside, an infrastructural revolution is taking place in Rivers State. For every campaign his failed political party will convene, they will directly or indirectly use facilities developed by Governor Wike.

Let Dakuku Peterside point out one APC Governor that is close to Governor Wike in terms of projects delivery and transparency. Let Dakuku Peterside point out what his political party has planted in Rivers State in terms of projects and programmes.

Dakuku Peterside personifies the shameful failure of the APC Federal Government. This politician is a highlight of an APC Federal Government that thrives on lies and propaganda, but hates performance. All talk and no action.

Dakuku Peterside’s conscience has been lost to his lust for the resources of Rivers State. He is only interested in desperately working to grab the levers of resources, with no capacity to deliver. If he can deliver, he should use his position at NIMASA.

For now, he is battling to extricate himself from the bench warrant issued for his arrest over questionable deals by the National Assembly.

Opinion appeared originally on THEWILL

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