THISDAY

‘Cross River State is Too Delicate for Political Strife’

Nseobong Okon-Ekong encounters former Minister of Culture, Tourism and National Orientatio­n, Chief Edem Duke who believes in his capacity to deliver the dividends of good governance to meet the yearnings of the people of Cross River State

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You already have a good reputation as a philanthro­pist whose charity touches a lot of individual­s and the community at large, do you need to become a governor to dispense goodwill to the people? We must try to differenti­ate personal generosity occasioned by God’s blessings and the ability to allow what accrues to you to trickle down. It is not the same thing as building the people in consonance with the assets and liabilitie­s that form the socio-political asset base of the state. When you do personal philanthro­py, it has no timetable. It has no strategy. It does not answer to any critical and urgent need of the macro society. It is only seasonal, at best, propelled by what you have and what you can spare at any given time. Of course, it is fuelled by the spirit of sacrifice. If you have enough to satisfy yourself and family and you cannot share, then you are a poor man. In sharing, you take a bit of yourself, you sacrifice a bit of yourself. In giving, you grow a bit of somebody else. You diminish yourself in order to enhance your fellow man.

When you seek public office, you seek it to a certain level, having evaluated the totality of the needs of your people and weighed it against the assets that are available to it and the skill and ability to build the team of the handful of people that are willing and able to sacrifice to entrench prosperity in the midst of wants and challenges. Often times, some people seek political office even at the level of governor in order to enhance their curriculum vitae. Some seek it as a way of settling old scores. Some seek it as puerile adventuris­m. That is, they see the governorsh­ip as a tool to promote their own ecstasy. There is some ecstasy about being a governor. They desire to get there before they know what to do in the office. That is why you find in many instances in Nigeria, people say that they use the first four years to learn the ropes and curves and then struggle to win the heart and mind of the people in order to now work for them for four years. Eight years of the people can disappear like a flicker of light. I, High Chief Edem Duke without being immodest, know where I am in life. The knowledge and experience­s I have acquired, the vision that I have. I am more prepared to assume the role of a servant-governor.

Cross River State once held a lot of promise as a model for good governance. What went wrong in your reckoning? Whilst we speak specifical­ly about Cross River State, it is also applicable to many states across the country. People come to this aspiration to being governor ill-prepared and ill-equipped in every ramificati­on. After the euphoria of political endorsemen­t and winning, they spend a reasonable period of time fighting in the court and by the time they settle into office, you will only discover that these guys were not actually prepared for the enormous responsibi­lity. Unfortunat­ely, many also see the position of a governor as a passport to the dispensati­on of prosperity. That is, ‘if I’m able to be governor, I can make Mr. A rich and I can descend with vengeance on Mr. B and bring him down.’ There are people who are propelled by such drive. I know that the Cross River State started on a very promising note and the unique selling point for Cross River State which enabled it to continue to attract interest by the generality of the public and outsiders was the fact that we set our target within the limit of promises available to us. We identified what the low-hanging fruits were and we focused on those. These initiative­s transpired from the Donald Duke government to the Liyel Imoke government. There were a few distortion­s in the sense that we always find a situation whereby people want to build their own legacies. But between Donald and Liyel, whatever else I may not be aware of, you still saw the sustenance of a stream of activities that maintained that positionin­g of the Cross River State. However, rather than build on those initial successes, you now find a government that takes off at a completely different tangent, articulati­ng policies, the framework of which you could not see in the immediate contraptio­n of those policies. Then, you know that the state will commence a dangerous nosedive.

When you noticed this plunge, why didn’t stakeholde­rs like you immediatel­y speak up? You need to understand the challenges of interfacin­g with people who do not understand how to manage power. I want to be a bit cautious in my statement. You need to have a structured government and administra­tion that has an agenda properly articulate­d and interrogat­ed. Every stakeholde­r, no matter how big or small must see the roadmap clearly and know at which milestones and junction they can interplay. More importantl­y, leadership is a team game. In whatever kind of game you can imagine in your head, there is no how you will respond to the start out whistle without having a strategy in place. As time goes, pending on the vicissitud­es of your circumstan­ces, you can always adjust and have a team with different competenci­es and capacities, that can bring the wherewitha­l that is necessary, either to consolidat­e the original vision or to re-orchestrat­e or recalibrat­e it and still help in ultimate delivery of your set goal.

Is there such as a wide departure from where you perceive two other administra­tions were heading from the present one? I think that it will be a futile exercise trying to speak to that issue because words are insufficie­nt to illustrate the departure from what we had begun to see as a trend in Cross River State and the ultimate point at which we found ourselves today.

You were a minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Was that not sufficient­ly high office for you to impact on Cross River State? You must understand the difference between your assignment as a minister and your relationsh­ip or influence or lack of it in the state. As a minister, the entire country is your constituen­cy.

Therefore, it is expected that if you are able to do one thing in your state, you must have replicated that one thing in as many states as possible if not in all of your states. Therefore, you have to be judicious in utilising that position and responsibi­lity.

As a governor, you have powers limited only by the legislatur­e in your state. There must be some checks and balances. Where governors are uncomforta­ble with the constituti­onal responsibi­lity of the legislatur­e in their state, it is a recipe for disaster because conflict will emanate very early.

As a minister, I had the privilege to see every state of Nigeria, of relating with your sector on the continent and globally. You are a very rounded citizen and administra­tor, a very seasoned administra­tor. You could see the good, the bad and the ugly. That is one of the things that prepared me adequately for the aspiration of governor. I have looked within Nigeria and I am satisfied that Cross River State has something unique than many other states. I have looked at some countries in Africa and around the world and I have seen that Cross River State is more blessed than many countries that are reveling in prosperity. I know what is fuelling and propelling this prosperity. I know that I can harvest these ideas, opportunit­ies and network them in order to develop and grow a Cross River State that will resonate again with our people and as a country to what it used to be, in fact, far beyond what it used to be.

Do you foresee any challenge to this aspiration, whether regional, communal or political? The challenge that I anticipate would be two-folds. One fold is whether your electorate­s will be able to see the vision that you enunciate and buy into it and translate that to confidence in you at the polls. On the other hand, you see a challenge with other aspirants and power brokers who would rather want to diminish or deprive the people from that prospect in order for you not to look better than them. Not for any other reason.

Zoning has become acceptable in Nigeria even if it is not quite spelt out in our constituti­on. Will that hinder your quest to become governor of Cross River State? Cross River State is too delicate for political strife and bitterness. The point at which Cross River State is today demands that those who see themselves as possessing the requisite competenci­es to lead should be free to express their aspiration.

It is important to plead fairness across the board, in terms, of who is representi­ng the state in various capacities in order to give a sense of belonging to all parts. I believe that this question should be moderated by a sense of political morality.

We are like a family and in a polygamous family, so to speak, which is not an aberration in the Nigerian cultural context; we must be able to look at the political landscape of Cross River State and see how equitably positions have been circulated.

 ??  ?? Duke
Duke

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