THISDAY

Otti: S'East Governors Won't Let Politics Undermine Region's Collective Devt

- Emmanuel Ugwu-Nwogo

The five governors of the Southeast geopolitic­al zone have subsumed their different political leanings to work for the collective economic interest of the zone, Governor Alex Otti of Abia State, has said.

He stated this at the weekend, when he received a delegation of the Joint Body of South East Council of Traditiona­l Rulers and Representa­tives of Igbo Archbishop­s and Bishops that paid him courtesy visit.

Otti told the delegation led by the Obi of Onitsha, His Royal Highness, Igwe Alfred Nnaemeka Achebe, that the South East governors were already working together to tackle the developmen­tal challenges facing the zone.

The five states in the zone are controlled by four different political parties with the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) in charge of Imo and Ebonyi States. The Peoples

Democratic Party (PDP) holds sway in Enugu State, while Labour Party controls Abia and the All Progressiv­es Grand Alliance (APGA) governs Anambra.

But Otti said the governors understood that it was important for them to set aside their political affiliatio­ns, prioritise governance and address pressing issues affecting the region, especially insecurity.

"Anyhow you look at it, we must deal with security as a region if not as a country. What feeds insecurity, to a large extent, is unemployme­nt and poverty. It also feeds banditry and insurrecti­on and we need to do everything possible to ensure that our people have something to do," he said.

The Abia governor noted that no meaningful developmen­t could take place without adequate security, adding that the

regional security challenges required a unified approach by the brother governors to find sustainabl­e solution.

To this end, Otti pointed out that the five South East governors do hold their meetings on regular basis

to address the issues affecting the region, including youth restivenes­s and regional economic growth.

He said he and his colleagues had initiated plans on how to meaningful­ly engage the young people through the creation of employment opportunit­ies and other empowermen­t programmes.

The Abia Chief Executive harped on the need to create a conducive environmen­t to attract investment­s and businesses into the region so that employment opportunit­ies would spring up for the young persons.

"We know that investors are rational. If you don't make your environmen­t conducive to attract investment­s, they will not come. I know at the minimum 20 to 25 businesses in Abia, before now, that just relocated at some point and closed shop,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria