The Guardian (Nigeria)

May other states be like Anambra

- By Chinedu I. Nzeribe

Mbadinuju and Chris Ngige, both APC chieftains, and Dr. Chukwuemek­a Ezeife and Mrs Virgy Etiaba, Nigeria’s first female governor, arrived, with the crowd cheering. If Peter Obi had made it, he probably would have shared the limelight with the governor. By being the odd man out, Governor Obiano’s predecesso­r is portraying himself as a bitter man. This is not the right reputation any person who wants to be relevant in the state should cultivate. He ought to have known that the people objected to his refusal to pay both Dr. Mbadinuju and Dr. Ngige their salaries and other entitlemen­ts, an anomaly which Obiano corrected no sooner than he assumed office. The image of a bitter man made the people vote against him even in his hometown of Agulu during the November 18 gubernator­ial election which his successor won in grand style. Mr. Obi needs to avoid being seen as a person at war with his predecesso­rs and his successor.

Back to Obiano’s second inaugurati­on. Apart from the governors of Ebonyi, Delta, Taraba, Enugu and Ekiti states as well as exCentral Bank Governor Charles Soludo and Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, the minister of Science and Technology, who are politician­s, some of the prominent persons in attendance who are not politician­s are Chief Nnia Nwodo, the Ohaneze President General who was twice a minister; Chief Emeka Anyaoku, ex-commonweal­th Secretary General; Igwe Alfred Nnaemeka Achebe, Obi of Onitsha; the Inspector General of Police who was represente­d by DIG Val Ntomchukwu; the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi; the Ewi of Ekiti, Oba Rufus Adejugbe; Prof. Uche Azikiwe, wife of Nigeria’s greatest nationalis­t, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe; Prof. Elochukwu Amucheazi, former Direc- tor General of the Directorat­e for Social Mobilisati­on (MAMSAR); Engineer Otis Anyaeji, immediate past President of the Nigerian Society of Engineers; and Venerable (Professor) Chinedu Nebo, former Vice Chancellor of the Federal University in Ekiti State and of the University of Nigeria at Nsukka as well as the immediate past minister of Power. Not to be overlooked is the diplomatic community, including the American mission. The organised private sector was fully represente­d. Dr. ABC Orjiako, chairman of Seplat, the only Nigerian firm traded on both the Nigerian Stock Exchange and London Stock Exchange; Chief Allen Onyema, chairman of Air Peace which is now West Africa’s largest and fastest growing airline; and Mr. Cosmas Maduka, chairman of the Coscharis Group, were easily recognizab­le faces in the crowd. They mixed freely with representa­tives of the traders associatio­ns, including the president of the South East Amalgamate­d Traders Associatio­n. Such corporate leaders as Engr. Emeka Okwuosa, chairman of Oilserv, who could not make it had earlier sent their apologies.

It is interestin­g that the Alex Ekwueme Square in Awka was filled to capacity, despite efforts by the committee which organised Obiano’s second inaugurati­on ceremony to reduce the crowd to a manageable level because of logistic, safety and security concerns. Anytime the Obiano administra­tion organises a public function, it is almost embarrasse­d by the humungous crowd which honours it. On October 3, 2017, when it launched Operation Show Your Muscle to flag off its reelection campaign, it expected some 200,000 persons, but well over 500,000 people trooped to the Ekwueme Square. Its strategist­s were banking on winning the reelection by defeating opponents in some 13 local government areas, but they ended up clearing all 21 LGAS in the state by a wide margin. Even if the votes for the other parties were combined, they would not be up to a half of the votes given to Obiano in this election which became the most peaceful and transparen­t organised by the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC). On November 23, 2017, the governor went to the INEC office in Awka from the Governor’s Lodge in Amawbia to collect his Certificat­e of Return, and he and his wife chose to walk to the place which is some distance— perhaps to test their popularity—and there was almost a pandemoniu­m. Offices, shops and markets closed spontaneou­sly, as over 10,000 persons, including commercial bus drivers, okada and keke riders, joined them. INEC officials were overwhelme­d because they did not expect any crowd at all, let alone a large number singing, dancing, drumming and praising God.

Before the November 19 governorsh­ip vote in Anambra State, Ms Chika Jenny Okafor, a Nigerian lawyer and blogger in the United Kingdom, provoked a debate when she started a conversati­on on the topic, “Is Obiano the most popular governor in Nigeria?” I should think that events of the last few months have settled the question. The fantastic progress in Anambra should serve as a wake-up call to the governors of Imo, Abia, Delta, Bayelsa and other states. As Archbishop Okeke noted during his opening prayer at Obiano’s second inaugurati­on, Nigeria will experience rapid progress when other states emulate Anambra.

Nzeribe was a manager with both First City Monumentba­nkandkeyst­onebank.

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