THISDAY

Ekere and the Akwa Ibom Governorsh­ip Race

- Effiong Usoro

When he joined the governorsh­ip race in Akwa Ibom State on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in 2006, Nsima Ekere brought freshness, excitement, instant connection with the youths and a trove of ideas on how to build a people-centred government that were lacking in the politics of the state. He was the youngest aspirant and his background as a successful businessma­n with strong social investment­s were direct challenge to the politics-as-usual of his home state.

Indeed, in a state where government is the only business, Ekere’s pledge to raise world-class entreprene­urs resonated positively everywhere but it also ruffled the feathers of vested interests and political rent-takers. When he lost that primaries and was later picked as running mate to the eventual winner, Obong Godswill Akpabio, the system revolted, forcing him to withdraw his candidacy.

He returned in 2011, running as deputy to Akpabio. But his tenure as the state Deputy Governor was short-lived as he resigned on October 31, 2012. His decision to contest the governorsh­ip in 2015 received a major boost being an indigene of the Akwa Ibom South Senatorial District whose turn it was to produce the governor. Ekere’s plan did not find accommodat­ion in Akpabio’s calculatio­ns.

Whereas, Akpabio’s intendment was to pick his successor from Akwa Ibom South senatorial zone, Udom Emmanuel, hurriedly drafted into politics as Secretary to the State Government, and not Ekere, was his preferred choice. Both men hail from neighbouri­ng local government areas; while Ekere is from Ikot Abasi Local Government Area, Emmanuel, who is now the incumbent governor, is from Onna Local Government.

Ekere, along with other aspirants were shut out of the PDP primaries and eventually out of the party. He was to pitch his tent with another influentia­l politician in the state, Umanah Okon Umanah, in the All Progressiv­es Congress, APC. Both of them had worked assiduousl­y together to transform the APC in Akwa Ibom. He had actually supported Umanah in the 2015 governorsh­ip election in order to upstage PDP’s Udom Emmanuel. Their effort had, however, fallen through.

Interestin­gly, about six years after his ill-fated governorsh­ip odyssey, Ekere is once again engrossed with the same enterprise, this time round on the APC platform. The statewide calculatio­ns and permutatio­ns remain the same: Akwa Ibom South Senatorial zone is to produce the governor of the state for eight years since the other two zones - Akwa Ibom northeast and Akwa-Ibom northwest senatorial zones had already produced governors for two terms of eight years each from 1999 to 2015 with Architect Victor Attah and Godswill Akpabio respective­ly.

The concern has been the fate of the statewide zoning arrangemen­t if Ekere wins. Will he serve for only one term and allow power to rotate to the northeaste­rn zone? At a recent meeting with leaders of the northeast zone, Ekere had assured he would not deny them their rights come 2023. In fact, he has said repeatedly that what one cannot achieve in four years as governor, he cannot achieve in eight, which has been interprete­d to mean that he can deliver on his vision in one term of four years.

Interestin­gly, Akpabio, who stood between him and the PDP governorsh­ip ticket ahead of the 2015 governorsh­ip election, is now in the APC with him. Akpabio joined the APC after the structures of the party had been clinched by Ekere, Umanah, Senator John Akpan Udoedeghe, a former minister and others whom he met on ground. And there are feelers that Umanah, a strongman of Akwa Ibom politics and current Managing Director of the Oil and Gas Free Zone Authority, has since decided to throw his weight behind Ekere.

In the circumstan­ce of the political alignment and realignmen­t of forces, the former governor, Akpabio, who is currently a senator, is likely to have been saddled with a fait accompli in Ekere, who, according to feelers has been able to build pervasive political structures in the nooks and crannies of the state.

As current managing director of the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC), Ekere has done very well for Akwa Ibom State and in deed the entire region in just 20 month of taking charge. Political analysts say that presiding over the Commission with an annual budget of over N400 billion and a tenure of four years with an option to renew for another term of four gives him greater personal advantage than the murky waters of state politics.

But a close associate says, Ekere’s politics has never been about him but the burden of responsibi­lity for transforma­tional leadership that benefits the greater number of people and communitie­s across his Akwa Ibom State.

This is what he has demonstrat­ed so far at NDDC. While the Commission under his leadership has judiciousl­y deployed its annual budget to intervene in the nine NDDC states in line with its mandate, it has also taken steps to address a perceived injustice against Akwa Ibom, the leading oil producing state in the country.

At NDDC project distributi­ons are weighted along state oil production quotas. Which means that as the number one oil producing state, Akwa Ibom should enjoy the highest number of projects in cumulacumu­latve value. Ekere told the press recently that “this was not what we met on ground. The current Board has been magnanimou­s enough to redress this.” This explains why Akwa Ibom is said to be benefittin­g massively from the current infrastruc­ture developmen­t drive of the Commission with more than 400 projects ranging from roads, power, water supply, renovation of classroom blocks, supply of learning facilities, etc.

Akwa Ibom is also the centre of an innovative entreprene­urship developmen­t hub undertaken in partnershi­p with SMEDAN and a pilot state for the planned region-wide digital learning initiative­s in partnershi­p with the a host of technology firms including Digital Learning Institute and Microsoft. –

Usoro wrote in from Uyo, Akwa Ibom State Continued online www.thisdayliv­e.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria