Daily Trust

Senator Chukwumeri­je: Another meteor blinks out

- By Unico Kalu Uduka

This is the exit of one of the few remaining aerolitic fireballs that came to titivate Nigeria’s political firmament. They are rare, and like shooting stars they are, they live a bright tail of light behind them. My first physical contact with Comrade Uche Chukwumeri­je was in December 2002. I had led a student delegation from Abia State University Uturu, comprising ten males and twenty females. This visit was not the typical ‘students courtesy visits’ to a politician that most times serve as a survival strategy and a stopgap measure. Comrade Chukwumeri­je had sent for resolute, active and possibly young men and women who may share similar ideologica­l views and would be open to mentoring on dedication, hard work and nationalis­m. We got to his house, sat down in his ‘Obi’ and waited for about 10 minutes. I was struck by his humility which he consistent­ly maintained till death. He came in and apologized like he had kept us waiting for ages. Anybody that knows Senator Chukwumeri­je will agree that apologies easily flowed out of him anytime he found out he was wrong. On phone, physically, he was quick to say ‘I am sorry’, and ‘thank you’-age and status were no barriers to his apologetic mien.

Senator Chukwumeri­je was humane and soft hearted, especially when confronted by demands from less privileged. At first instance you may be discourage­d by his reaction, especially on one and one contact but he will never allow you leave without attending to your issue. He was a ‘perfection­ist’ who will want all tiny details and rules adhered to. He was very uncompromi­sing in whatever he believed in and this was always a point of disagreeme­nt between himself and many who thought otherwise. He is reputed to have had the highest number of turnover of aides in the National Assembly. You must be intellectu­ally outstandin­g and psychologi­cally balanced to work with Senator Uche Chukwumeri­je for three months without resigning or receiving a sack letter. He relied on merit and competence not nepotism in choosing his aides. The environmen­t surroundin­g one’s formative years influences the dialectics of his mind. As a young graduate, Senator Uche Chukwumeri­je’s office was my first work experience after my NYSC. That contact shaped my passion for truth, dispassion­ate and forwardloo­king view of Nigeria’s political situation.

Ndigbo and Nigeria will greatly miss this political philosophe­r. It is a fact that Nigeria is a multicultu­ral coliseum, where ethnic nationalit­ies compete to determine who gets what, when and how. There are piles of writings and researches on intentiona­l and unintentio­nal policies that have stifled the re-emergence of Ndi Igbo in Nigeria after the civil war but they are few classics on remediatio­n. Understand­ing the strategic roles of mortal men in human and societal developmen­t, Martin Luther King Jr. wrote, “...Human progress never rolls in on wheels of inevitabil­ity; it comes through the tireless efforts of men willing to work to be co-workers with God, and without this hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the forces of social stagnation...”. Senator Uche Chukwumeri­je was a co-worker with God in fighting social stagnation. Apart from his practical demonstrat­ion to fight the Igbo cause, Oji Isi Aho Mgbo, was a distinguis­hed political philosophe­r, who consistent­ly wrote so many articles and gave lectures exposing the brazen marginalis­ation of Ndigbo and signpostin­g principles, strategies and actions of Igbo re-emergence in Nigerian politics. “Ndigbo: A Sacrificia­l Lamb of a Deformed Nation is an exposé of the plight of Ndigbo in a redefiniti­on of National unity. In December 2012, he gave a lecture, ‘Ndigbo and 2015: An Exhortatio­n. This was an inspiring charge to Ndigbo in all walks of life, political parties to work together in pushing for Igbo presidency in 2015. His words “...Ndigbo are in trouble politicall­y and unless very urgent and decisive remedies are summoned to tackle this unbecoming situation we will disappear completely from Nigeria’s political map... Our Presidenti­al bid has all the required moral content... We will be making a national bid by talking to others, by convincing them about the imperative necessity of a Nigerian President of Igbo extraction...” It came with a clear strategic roadmap to achieving the goal. Perhaps one of the greatest strategic documents for Igbo re-emergence and political rebirth written by anyone is “2015: Before Us Lies an Open Grave” written on October 24 2013. . This is a well thought-out strategy for Igbo engagement towards 2015 and remaining relevant beyond 2015.

Dike Ogu Igbo was passionate about Nigeria and never aligned with any process to subvert the power of the people. Even when not physically strong, his mental power was still up there and the spirit to fight injustice never departed from him. At 75, Senator Chukwumeri­je felt he was at his peak of service to his father land and his people. In December 2014, at the intermedia­te stage of this illness that eventually took him, I travelled with him several times to the South East and I recall with pains his passionate and honest appeals to those who felt he did not satisfy their personal yearnings in the constituen­cy. He promised he will personally make sure that anything he attracts to the people is fairly distribute­d instead of the usual hijacking by few people. I also recall his phone discussion­s on how he thinks his constituen­cy and Ndigbo should fare in 2015 and beyond. He was one person that stood for truth, honesty and stood against lies, deceit and subjugatio­n in any shape. Senator Chukwumeri­je had hopes for a better Nigeria. He was a fearless protagonis­t that spearheade­d the dismantlin­g of the 3rd term agenda that would have distorted the gradual developmen­t of Nigeria’s democracy. I had waited with nostalgia the publicatio­n of his account on Third Term which he sent me to the Nigerian Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs, Victoria Island, Lagos, for literature search.

Distinguis­hed, I called you on phone to ask about your health. I prayed that God will heal you and bring you back to stay with us for a little while. You told me ‘thank you’. That was your last word to me. I will also Thank you for being here with us the much God permitted. Thank you for the training. We shall continue from where you stopped! Good night Senator Uche Chukwumeri­je.

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