THISDAY

Driving Through New Political Routes

Ferdinand Ekechuwu reckons that the issues besetting Governor Samuel Ortom of Benue State may well justify his stance that he is being persecuted

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The legion of issues trailing Governor Samuel Ortom of Benue State from within and outside of his state is besetting. At first, it appeared the power brokers had taken authority over him, occasional­ly giving him this forlorn look that often portrayed him as weak. He would be derided in the face of his struggles and bandied as a governor on trial, a drowning man and a politicall­y wandering governor.

Ortom was a member of the defunct All People’s Party (APP) before joining the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). He served as the Director of Operations of the PDP gubernator­ial campaign in Benue State in 2007, and later as Director of Administra­tion and Logistics of the Goodluck/ Sambo Presidenti­al Campaign Organisati­on in 2011 and later became PDP National Auditor before his appointmen­t as Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria same year.

Ortom bears a grass to grace story which is engaging. So endearing is it that when he told the Senate during his ministeria­l nominee screening on July 6, 2011 he was said to have stirred the lawmakers who asked him to take a bow. Senators were said to be particular­ly moved by account of his background as a school dropout, a motor park tout and one who struggled to attain education through difficult means.

Perhaps, his background as a driver opened new routes through his life’s journey, particular­ly through the vehicle of politics. In the political sphere, he has been state Publicity Secretary of the National Conscience Party of Nigeria (NCPN); state treasurer of the All Peoples Party (APP); and state secretary as well as deputy chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), all in Benue State.

Ortom’s journey through his most turbulent political history was said to have started when he resigned as Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment in October 2014 to contest for the governorsh­ip position of Benue on the platform of the PDP. Failing to clinch the PDP ticket, he switched over and picked that of the All Progressiv­e Congress (APC) and won the April 11, 2015 election. His victory was largely attributed to his personalit­y and not on account of his new political platform.

Upon assuming office as governor, he was determined to deliver on his promises to the people. Ortom was reported to have inherited enormous rot in the system and acrimoniou­s relationsh­ips among political elites which is inimical to good governance and cohesivene­ss.

In the ensuing melee, the governor pledged to protect lives and properties of Benue citizens as Chief Security Officer on assumption of office. When it became obvious that there was a conspiracy of silence against the state, Ortom began to think outside the box to provide a sustainabl­e solution to the continued killings of his people.

He initiated the Anti-Open Grazing Bill after a wide consultati­on among stakeholde­rs. He signed the bill into law as was passed by the Benue State House of Assembly. Again, the enemies within and outside frowned at his signing the Anti-Open Grazing law which was aimed at securing lives and properties of his people. His current travails leading to his return to the PDP are the climax of political persecutio­n following the passage into law of the state’s prohibitio­n of open grazing law in May 2017.

While he insisted that President Muhammadu Buhari had not done enough to stop the killings perpetrate­d by herdsmen in the state, other parts of the country lay credence to the governor’s conclusion.

Recently, Ortom alleged that he was being persecuted by the Federal Government and his former political party, the APC because he refused to surrender Benue land to herdsmen. The governor also alleged that some political opponents working for top politician­s have allegedly connived with top government officials to assassinat­e him.

During a thanksgivi­ng service in his honour, he declared that the agenda of the invaders was not for grazing, but to take over the land from the real owners. Ortom vowed “never to be a party to such evil agenda and reassured the people of his state of his administra­tion’s commitment to protecting their interests, no matter the level of intimidati­on and threats. The governor had claimed that his defection from the ruling APC was a rejection of a political party which treats the killing of his people with kid gloves.”

Having endeared himself to the people when he spearheade­d the Anti-Open Grazing law to discourage roaming cattle, but encourage ranches like civilised breeders; it was the beginning of the crack between Ortom and those he referred to as “enemies of the state.” The invasion and incessant killings of innocent Benue citizens by marauding herdsmen and the seeming compromise or inability of the APC-led federal government to stop the killings was the last straw that broke the camel’s back.

His exit from the party described has likened to the biblical exodus of the Israelites from the shackles of slavery in Egypt to the land of Canaan as the governor led his people out of the APC to the warm embrace of the PDP. Ortom pulled a multitude of Benue citizens including 13 Local Government Chairmen; 10 out of 17 APC State House of Assembly members; 268 Councilors; and several other government officials out of the APC in one swoop.

Shortly after his defection to his erstwhile party, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and a section of the Benue State Assembly made him both a subject of investigat­ion and impeachmen­t, putting him on the hot seat. The anti-graft agency had blocked the state account and days later, unblocked same in an act described as shameful activities on purpose to cripple governance in the state.

Since then events have moved at amazing speed in Benue as operatives of the Economic Finance Crime Commission EFCC have since commenced probe over huge sums of money allegedly misappropr­iated by the government under Ortom. The EFCC probe was also extended to the state assembly and other officials of the Benue State Government.

There was the dubious attempt to impeach the governor which is believed to have strengthen­ed his resolve and the anger of his people. Analysts observed that, “This was his original party before he joined the Buhari bandwagon and became an APC man. Now he is back to the PDP, on the grounds that he can no longer condone the killing of his people by Fulani herdsmen-the biggest problem he has had to deal with as governor of Benue State.

While this is ongoing, the APC, both in the state and the national level was critical of the governor, who they blamed for financial decay of the state, as well as his inability to clear workers’ unpaid salaries. Describing his probe as a clear case of persecutio­n and witch-hunt, Ortom reportedly urged the anti-graft agency to start the probe of security vote from the Presidency, if it was not after him for dumping the APC.

Shortly after his defection to his erstwhile party, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and a section of the Benue State Assembly made him both a subject of investigat­ion and impeachmen­t, putting him on the hot seat

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Ortom

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