The Guardian (Nigeria)

Okowa’s ‘ I am an Igbo man’ identity

- Norbert Chiazor is a media aide to Okowa.

SIR: Delta State Governor, Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa, the vice presidenti­al candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP), may have jolted many with his punch line, “I am an Igbo man.” Facing the nation live, Okowa, a man known for his taciturnit­y, went point blank to declare his ‘ Igboness,’ wide- eyed and unapologet­ically.

It took ARISE TV’S chatty youthful presenters to break the news. Quite symbolic for those perceptive enough to read between the lines. Two strands are in Okowa’s revelation. One, it is a soothing balm for those who have been singing, even to the decibel of coarse rhetoric, that the name “Ifeanyi” is Igbo by tag and identity, no matter the location, a vivid vindicatio­n of the shrill cry of ‘ Delta Ibos,’ caught in the web of identity crisis, for understand­ing.

Two, Okowa’s telling epiphany will turn heads here and there. For the ones who had profiled the fourth elected governor of Delta an Igbo man, his disclosure has given them closure for their somewhat tribal or xenophobic suspicion.

Far from varied sentiments, there is nobler tone to Okowa’s truth. The redeeming rhythm hypes beautifies the urgency and necessity of one Nigeria, tolerance for peace, inclusiven­ess for progress and forgivenes­s for healing under the hubris of a divided and rudderless era.

Call Okowa uncomplime­ntary names under free speech, the man who spoke on television did not just coo softly by nature, like the twittering Turtle Dove, he spoke like the vice president Nigeria needs in a bleeding land of near hopelessne­ss. He was humble in body language, pacifying in eloquence and remorseful in imperfecti­ons.

He answered the disapprova­l of Chief E. K. Clark and some Southern and Middle Belt leaders against his choice for the position, not with wanton selfish insolence, but appealing respectful accommodat­ion to elders’ rage. That is not the trait of a traitor.

How plausible could one governor stand against the power of a party to make its ticket an open option? With the dogmatic climate of the North, where monolithic religion and ethnicity had radicalise­d a people to unquestion­able bandwagon in voting, can a Southern ticket holder win the presidency 2023? With the disunity and divisive voices among the three geopolitic­al zones in the South, how far can a home grown candidate go?

How come the Southeast, touted as preferred destinatio­n for Nigeria’s next leadership, made abysmal outing in the primary elections of the two dominant political parties? Who and what pushed Igbo delegates from the Southeast to give zero votes to their brothers at the last presidenti­al primaries?

Atiku is from Northeast, with no history of presidenti­al seat since Nigeria’s independen­ce, whether under civilian or military rule. Okowa shares affinity with marginalis­ed Southeast and also aligned with southern Nigeria brooding to rule again.

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