THISDAY

How Governor Ikpeazu Is Revolution­ising Abia State

- Tell us more about the ingenuity of the Abia State Government. The state government received a lot of bashing recently over the use of the Paris Club refunds …(cuts in)

Road, what we are also doing is to construct the internal roads and other roads that lead to the market.

Today, there are three grade-A contractor­s working concurrent­ly on Abia roads; since the days of Sam Mbakwe, it has never happened. Last Christmas, traders at Ariaria reported that they had more sales than they have had in the past three to four years. The reason is that there is access to the market, security is good and people know that, beyond the propaganda, Abia is still among the top three safest states in Nigeria.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics, Abia State is the second safest in Nigeria as of 2016, based on the number of reported crimes. So, because we are doing some of these little things that we don’t talk about in the media, our people have regained their confidence, our small-scale entreprene­urs are now raring to go. We have given them the tools to compete globally.

The materials we used to conduct local government elections in Abia State were all Made-in-Aba, including the ballot boxes. We have 50,000 boots which we have manufactur­ed for the military. The government does not have a shoe or leatherwor­k factory. When we receive such order, we pass them on to our people. We have orders for about 40,000 pair of shoes for the IDP camps. We are supplying various institutio­ns of government. And, because of what Governor Ikpeazu is doing, recently, the President signed an Executive Order directing that before any agency of government procures anything, that agency must go to Aba to check if there is an alternativ­e available. So, since these orders are coming in droves, it is one of the reasons we decided to send some of our people abroad to learn automation.

Critics of Governor Ikpeazu argued that the road is taking too long to complete. What is the real situation?

We have listened to some of the governor’s critics say it is taking him long to fix an eight-kilometre road, Aba Road, in Umuahia. But Aba Road has been failing perenniall­y because no one cared to fix the problem from the root. But Governor Ikpeazu asked the Dutch consultant­s to look at it and they discovered that there is a water route below the soil. So what we did was to create tunnels below the ground to take that water away, elevate the road at one end and lowered it at another end so that the water can have a route.

That is another applicatio­n of knowledge in road constructi­on. Also, because of the nature of the soil at Aba, Governor Ikpeazu introduced rigid pavement technology. What you popularly called cement technology in road constructi­on. These roads – like Owerri Road off Okigwe and others – will last a minimum of 30 years even with maximum use and impact because they are built to be stronger than airport tarmacs. We are doing this because we realise that it is important to do projects that will survive this administra­tion, so that the next one can focus on other things.

How popular is the governor in the state considerin­g his administra­tion’s efforts to change the narrative of governance in Abia?

About a week ago, the governor paid a visit to Ariaria and the people came out to hail him. If you understand the history of Aba, it is difficult for them to accept any governor. But the Governor Ikpeazu can enter Aba freely because they are seeing what he is doing and they love it. They are only asking for more and the governor is prepared to do much more, although you know that the limitation is funding. Despite the economic situation that triggered the decline of revenue inflow into the state, Ikpeazu has been able to manage what we have. For example, he has delivered more than 38 roads. This means that since he was sworn in, he has delivered at least one road every month. And the governor is on 94 other projects in Abia State. It is not just happening in Aba. We are at World Bank, we are constructi­ng rural roads. We arrested a gully erosion that threatened to carry the house of the husband of the former Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; today, you will wonder at what we have done there.

For the first time in history, we are at Nkpa Road. We are the first government to intervene in that road. Today, Arochukwu people can now travel home in one and half hours There is an old saying in Igboland that there is no road that leads to Arochukwu that is short, but Governor Ikpeazu is working on the road. Aba/Ikot-Ekpene Road is a very important road to our people; it leads to Akwa Ibom, Cross River and businessme­n coming from Cameroon. That road has been bad for so many years. The immediate past administra­tion of Ochendo cried and appealed to the federal government to construct that road. About a year ago, the federal government said they had commission­ed a contractor; we went there, saw what the contractor was doing and realised that literally, nothing was happening there.

Is the Ikpeazu administra­tion taking over the constructi­on of the road?

Upon seeing the work of the contractor, Governor Ikpeazu immediatel­y decided to construct two roads literally cutting through the forest to bypass the Ikot-Ekpene Road that the federal government is not doing enough on.

Today, Nkporo people, in Ohafia Local Government are seeing what they have never seen before in terms of road constructi­on. There is a project that the governor has embarked on - every local government is getting 10km of a road, in addition to ongoing projects.

For instance, the government is constructi­ng a ring-road at Abiriba linking the three wards there. The phase one of that project is completed. We are also at Ohafia, which is the third unofficial urban city in Abia. We are doing a ring-road to help movements within the town. This year, at least 80 rural access roads will be delivered through an arrangemen­t we have with New Map and the World Bank. We are tackling erosion. Abia is a massive constructi­on site and that is why people call the governor, the Caterpilla­r Revolution­ary.

What is the administra­tion doing in the education sector?

Abia State Government launched the Education for Employment scheme immediatel­y Ikpeazu came on board. What that scheme is doing is give appropriat­e skills that can help people function in the industrial world, whether you are a graduate or not. For instance, you need IT skills. So what we did with the scheme is mapping out the number of people in the state that are unemployed and will require some form of skills to make them employable. We graduated the first set of over 500 of them, and they received the National Board of Technical Education certificat­e in a very colourful ceremony at the Internatio­nal Conference Centre, Umuahia.

We are also involved in ICT. Abia State E-library is engaged in free training. Today, the governor directed that every primary school child, by age six, must be able to use a computer. If you go round, you will see that IT skills are not lacking in Abia State. For three consecutiv­e years, Abia has come first in WAEC. We are doing well in JAMB and internatio­nal examinatio­ns. Three of the students that studied in our school system – two of them in our public schools – went to the United States and graduated as valedictor­ians; they were fitted by Michelle Obama herself; that means something is working within our school system. This is because the educationa­l gains of the Ochendo administra­tion are now being improved on.

Today, we are constructi­ng four model schools. Our idea of a model school is one that has nursery, primary and secondary education in one location, has residentia­l quarters for teachers, sporting facilities, ICT lab, standard library and accommodat­ion for students. We think that students should live in school and within a fenced environmen­t.

Then, we want to use these schools as models for private schools. If you want to own a private school in Abia, this is what it should look like. And we are reconstruc­ting about 132 schools currently in Abia. If you go around our state, you will see that there is work going on in most of our primary and secondary schools. So we are touching education because it is not just a pillar for this administra­tion. It is also an enabler. Educated people will be able to compete and we believe that because Abia is the number one education state. We must make sure that our people look beyond the Nigerian environmen­t and be of the standard that can compete globally. It appears to me that in Abia we have an opposition that is malicious; that is not concerned with the developmen­t of Abia but with their coming back to power, with the acquisitio­n of power for personal aggrandise­ment. Otherwise, everybody knows that no other state government has managed its Paris Club refunds the way Governor Ikpeazu has done both in terms of transparen­cy and applicatio­n of the funds.

When we received the first refund, the governor assembled a labour and trade union-dominated community and said, ‘This is how much we have: take 70 per cent of it and pay outstandin­g salaries.’ The remaining 30 per cent was devoted to infrastruc­tural projects, including the constructi­on of the first-ever flyover in Abia State. When we received the second tranche of N5.7 billion, the government handed the money to labour unions and told them to pay outstandin­g salaries. I make bold to say that no other state government in Nigeria handed over 100 per cent to labour. We did not touch one kobo; we even added about N50 million.

Now, we have received the third tranche, another N5.7 billion, and the governor said ‘take 60 per cent of it and still use it for outstandin­g salaries and allow me to invest the remaining 40 per cent in infrastruc­tural developmen­t.’ Labour agreed. We are transparen­t about the disburseme­nt. Transparen­cy in a democracy is not an option; it is a necessity. That is why, while politician­s are making a noise, you won’t see labour unions in Abia going on strike. The workers know what we are getting and how we are distributi­ng the money. All the MDAs have been paid. We do not owing any MDAs. In this country called Nigeria, Abia is among the top six states that do not owe salaries.

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