Latest Post



By Collins Opurozor, Owerri.


For two years, vandals, kidnappers, armed robbers, terrorists and bandits have found a blissful sanctuary in Imo state. This is chiefly owed to the failure, if not total absence, of governance in Imo. Their onslaughts against innocent citizens have only increased with time. 


Killings of genocidal proportion, massive car snatching, arson and abductions have become daily facts of life. From the valleys of Orsu to the plains of Orlu, and from the hills of Ideato to the rocky terrains of Okigwe, various bands of active armed criminals have encircled Imo state. For the helpless citizens, personal safety is now in hands of God. This reality has thrown naked the insincerity, cluelessness and ineptitude of the accidental and unelected ruler of the state, Chief Hope Uzodinma. 


Instead of taking steps to provide this irreducible expectation of political governance, which is the security of lives and property, Uzodinma, at the peak of the orgy of violence, suggested to the killers never to be lenient with his political opponents. At some other times, he had said he would name his opponents who would be crushed. For him, every opportunity must exploited to settle political scores, and even killings are necessary for regime protection.


This time, after leisurely wasting nearly three months in Abuja, Chief Uzodinma only stepped into Owerri two days ago. He returned with something shocking, a story that got the already distraught citizenry more distressed. He announced that he had unconditionally forgiven all the killers, bandits, kidnappers, hoodlums and arsonists who inhabit the forests of Imo and who have made the state a city of blood. He went ahead to describe this as amnesty. 


Curiously, some hours later, kidnappers, car snatchers and bandits went gaga. Imo had been officially declared a safe haven for their unbridled criminality. They could now operate unchecked. They could kill, rape, maim and set everywhere ablaze with the audacity and seal of state authority.


Yesterday, therefore, ravages were scaled up in Imo and demons let loose. The terrorists jumped out from their hiding places, intensified their campaigns of terror and death, and carried out series of criminal activities along Okigwe-Arondizuogu-Nnewi Expressway. It is now a terrible situation in the state!


But then, one misinformation by Uzodinma that must immediately be dispelled is that he has granted amnesty to the rampaging terrorists. No. There is no such thing as amnesty. Amnesty as a security strategy is a very comprehensive process which has components, phases and targets. Again, the groups for which amnesty is designed are always known and defined. Weapon demobilization or disarmament is just a phase in the process. A reintegration program is always central. But before all these, a robust engagement which addresses the basic questions that necessitated the insurgency is critical. The reality is that Uzodinma has no plans for any of these, if at all he understands what they mean.


Come to think of it, how can you grant amnesty to people who today are described as unknown? How can Uzodinma talk about amnesty when he constantly misleads Imo people by accusing his political foes of masterminding the inferno in the state? Where is Prof. Lai Olurode, the man whom Uzodinma declared wanted for saying that his legitimacy crisis is part of the reason the insecurity in Imo has become intractable? How can you solve a problem without proper diagnosis?


If the issue in Imo, for instance, hinges on separatist fundamentalism, how has Uzodinma addressed it? Or is the issue mere criminality without any underlying ideological drive? How too has the man dealt with it? Principally, how has Uzodinma tamed the unemployment wolf in Imo, which makes nearly eighty percent of the youths susceptible to crime?


It smacks of self-deceit for Uzodinma to talk about amnesty when he has not told Imo people the whole truth about whom the aggressors are! His shameful inability also to secure the lives and property of Ndimo is something that ought to have made him to resign by now. But shame obviously must have taken flight from a supposed governor who could describe himself as the disgraced and banished athlete, Ben Johnson.


There are now serious suspicions in Imo that a bigger calamity might just be ahead.  By forgiving those who engage in mass murders, abductions and banditry, Imo people are deeply troubled about the real intentions of Uzodinma. Many in Imo fear that, since elections are now around the corner, allowing criminals take over Imo must have been contrived so as to cause a total collapse of security. For them, this is aimed at scaring  the electorate away from voting in order to orchestrate massive electoral fraud. The intention, as many think, is to perpetuate the unpopular regime of Uzodinma in power.


It is common knowledge that the bad governance in Imo has made young people eager to to participate in the electoral process. The upsurge in voter registration in the state testifies to that. And they have one target: to weed out Uzodinma and all the he represents. Has Uzodinma, therefore, eventually surrendered Imo to terrorists because of his fear of a looming defeat? Is that his counter strategy? Should everyone in Imo be wiped away because one man wants to continue to be in power? These questions agitate the minds of so many people in Imo, and it is only Uzodinma that can address the fears.


The presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) Peter Obi says his visit to Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State was for the duo to discuss vital national issues. Obi visited the former presidential aspirant of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at his private residence in Port Harcourt on Wednesday.


While details of the meeting were sketchy, the former Anambra State Governor, hours later, took to his official Twitter handle to give a hint on why he visited Wike. “Earlier today, I visited Port Harcourt, to confer with H.E. @GovWike on vital issues of national interest,” Obi’s tweet, shared alongside photos of him and the Rivers leader, read. Obi was not the only person who visited Wike on that day. Governor Bala Mohammed of Bauchi State was also in Port Harcourt but details about the meeting were not disclosed.


Following the visits, observers have linked the meetings to the 2023 elections. Wike lost the PDP presidential ticket to Atiku Abubakar and in the aftermath of the election, accused southern governors of betrayal, claiming that he could have scuttled the exercise if not for his love for the PDP. “I have never seen how people can violate procedures and guidelines. Somebody has spoken, it is at that point he was speaking that he would have said I am withdrawing. You don’t call him back,” Wike said. “I just said, ‘Look, this our party must not be destroyed.”


While Wike was among three persons in consideration as Atiku’s running mate, weeks after the primary, the former vice president snubbed him. The Waziri Adama, instead, nominated Governor Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State.


The Senate has constituted an Ad-Hoc Committee to investigate Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) over non-compliance with the Petroleum Act and breach of the Joint Venture Agreement entered into with the Federal Government.


The Ad-Hoc committee has been mandated to probe the Oil Mining Lease granted to SPDC between 1959 to 1989, and 1989 to 2019 under the SPDC/NNPC Joint Venture agreement. Accordingly, the Upper chamber is demanding a refund of $200 million to the federal government of what was paid by SPDC, including penalties and interests under the said lease agreements.


The Upper Chamber agreed on these resolutions on Thursday after it considered a motion sponsored by Senator George Sekibo.


Senator Sekibo, in his motion says that the SPDC/NNPC Joint Venture (JV) agreement, in contravention of the provisions of the Petroleum Act 1969, by the defunct Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, granted to the SPDC/NNPC a 30-year Oil Mining Lease from 1959 to 1989.


President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday visited the Kigali Genocide Memorial in Rwanda. After visiting the site, he asked Nigerians to tolerate one another and embrace peace, his presidential spokesman, Femi Adesina, said via a statement.


The remains of over 250,000 victims of the Kigali genocide were buried in the East African country in 1994 with a yearly event held in honour of the slain Rwandans. Buhari used the opportunity of the visit to tour the permanent exhibitions at the Memorial, paying tribute to the memory of the victims while praying for healing for the survivors.


After the historic visit, the President told journalists that the lessons from his visit were the need for Nigerians to continue to be tolerant of one another, and for the nation to also preserve its own historical antecedents from the Nigeria Civil War (1967-1970).


“I went through all the experiences from 15 January 1966 to date. I was a Governor, Minister, and Head of State and went through detention. I returned to partisan politics and will finish my two terms as constitutionally allowed,” the Nigerian leader was quoted as saying.


There was a mild drama at the Supreme Court premises in Abuja on Thursday when a human rights activist Malcolm Omirhobo appeared in his lawyer robe complemented with other traditional apparel.  


The human rights lawyer, who said he is a traditionalist, argued that his decision was based on the Supreme Court judgement that ruled in favour of Muslim students wearing their hijab in Lagos schools. “I am a traditionalist. I have been missing all along until the Supreme Court gave the judgment on Friday that people can now appear in their religious attires of worship in their school and public school for that matter.


“So, in the circumstance, I just interpreted everything and said they have done the right thing by guaranteeing more of our rights under Section 38 of the Constitution that gives Nigerians the freedom of thought, conscience, and religion from that decision that female students can wear hijab because it is the mode of their worship and any attempt to stop them from wearing it amounts to a violation of their fundamental right. I said, ‘It is good!’ “So, I said I need to also be appearing in my religious attire of worship because it is good for man to be with God all the time. This is my mode henceforth.”


Omirhobo said he will encourage others to wear their religious attires to work, expressing gratitude to the Supreme Court for the ruling. “My children will go to school like this. I will encourage my relations, my friends; those in the army; those in the police; those in the Navy; doctors; lawyers; they will dress in their mode of worship,” the Delta-born added. “I am very grateful to the Supreme Court. I am very happy about this.”


President Muhammadu Buhari has ruled out the bail option for the leader of the proscribed Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) Nnamdi Kanu. Instead, the Buhari insisted that the IPOB leader should “justify all the uncomplimentary things he had been saying against Nigeria in Britain”.


“He felt very safe in Britain and said awful things against Nigeria. We eventually got him when he stepped out of the United Kingdom, and we sent him to court,” Buhari said during a bilateral meeting with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on the margins of the 26th Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Kigali, Rwanda. “Let him defend all that he has said there. His lawyers have access to him. Remember he jumped bail before, how are we sure he won’t do it again if he’s admitted to bail?”


According to a statement by presidential spokesman, Femi Adesina, Buhari also ruled out seeking a third term in office, claiming the person who attempted it did not end well in what many believe is a subtle reference to former President Olusegun Obasanjo. “Another term for me? No!” he maintained. “The first person who tried it didn’t end very well.”


Aside from this, Johnson and Buhari also discussed security issues in Nigeria with the Nigerian leader linked the renewed wave of crimes in Nigeria to the crisis in Libya.

Author Name

Wilson

Wilson Amaefule is a Computer Scientist, Blogger, Content creator and Developer, Social Media Consultant and Online Marketer. Won't you rather do Business with me?

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

WILSON TECHNOLOGIES. Powered by Blogger.