With one governor, two House of Assembly speakers and three maces all
contending for supremacy, the political crisis which erupted in Rivers
State chapter of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) few months back, is
degenerating and fast turning the once serene Garden city into a theatre
of absurdities.
The intra -party power struggle has claimed some casualties and more
are still being expected. Recall that the former state chairman of the
party, Chief G.U. Ake, was sacked by Abuja based Court, presided over by
Justice Ishaq Bello, on Monday, April 15, 2013.
The Judge, in the case, instituted by Chief Felix Obuah, had affirmed
that he (Obuah) and his state exco, were the authentic and duly elected
executives of PDP in Rivers state. The crisis also saw the Chairman of
the most viable local government area in the state, Obio/Akpor, Chief
Timothy Nsirim, and his councillors,
suspended by the State Assembly
over alleged financial impropriety.
A Caretaker Committee was constituted, under the chairmanship of
Chikaodi Dike. But on Friday, May 3, 2013, the state police
commissioner, Mr. Mbu Joseph Mbu, acting on the orders of the Inspector
General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, also gave order to policemen,
who stormed Obio/Akpor LGA Secretariat at Rumuodomaya, sacked the
Caretaker Committee chairman and his team.
After the sack of the Caretaker Committee, Nigeria police became the
landlord and occupied the Secretariat till date. The crisis etched
further with the suspension of five anti-Amaechi lawmakers: Hon Evans
Bapakaye Bipi, Ogu/Bolo Constituency; Hon Victor Ihunwo, Phalga III; Hon
Martins Amaewhule, Obio/Akpor I; Hon Michael Chinda, Obio/Akpor II;
and Hon. Kelechi Nwogu, Omuma Constituency, by the 27 pro- Amaechi
lawmakers. This was closely followed with the suspension of the 27
pro-Amaechi lawmakers, and later, Governor Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, by
the Felix Obuah-led state exco.
The political crisis wrongly or rightly, is being caused by
Amaechi’s rumoured vice presidential ambition in 2015. The state is,
literally, at a stand still putting major achievements of the state
government under threat. It is not in dispute that one of Governor
Amaechi’s successes is the restoration of security in the state which
was once under the siege of armed militants and cultists. His government
has spent so much on security and the results have been rewarding. But
the crisis has threatened the peace enjoyed by the citizens of the
state, especially, after the militants surrendered their arms and
accepted the amnesty, granted them by the federal government.
As things are today, the ‘ bad boys’ are emerging from the blues,
waiting for whoever would hire them to do odd jobs, even for a peanut.
The crisis in the state has, no doubt, provided the platform for the
‘boys’ to come out boldly, to foment trouble. Some of them were even
hired to stage the recent anti-Amaechi protest in Port Harcourt.
The involvement of the ex-militants became glaring on Tuesday, July
9, 2013, when the five anti-Amaechi lawmakers forced themselves into the
chambers of the State Assembly, with the aim of impeaching the Speaker,
Rt Hon. Otelemaba D. Amachree. Amnesty identity card was even found on
one of them arrested by the police. Not a few Rivers indigenes are now
lamenting that politicians are taking them back to the dark days of the
militancy. On Tuesday also, when the anti-Amaechi legislators gained
access into the Assembly chambers, they ‘appointed’ Evans Bipi,
instead of election by the majority votes, as the new Speaker of the
House.
Among others, Bipi quickly announced the suspension of 15 out of the
27 pro-Amaechi lawmakers. What played out in Rivers House of Assembly,
where five suspended members of the House could “impeach” a Speaker,
calls to question, the place of the Nigerian constitution in the
impeachment of elected political office holders. At least, the
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria stipulates how those
occupying elected positions in the country could be removed from
office. Beside the oddity of five lawmakers trying to remove the
Assembly speaker backed by 27 members, the Rivers State crisis has also
produced three maces in the state Assembly. There is confusion now, too,
as to who is in possession of the original, authentic or the real
mace, which is the symbol of authority in the House.
Some people have argued that the mace, used by Bipi group is fake.
Others are of the view that the one used by Chidi Lloyd, to smash the
head of the Honourable Michael Chinda, representing Obio/Akpor
Constituency, II, is fake. Still, some people are claiming that the
original Mace was retrieved and secured by Governor Chibuike Amaechi,
when he stormed the Assembly Complex with his security details, at the
heat of the brouhaha.
In the claim of Hon Evans Bipi and the leadership of Rivers PDP, it
also means that the Rivers House of Assembly now has two Speakers, a
fake and original one. Efforts are said to be ongoing to determine who
is actually in possession of the original mace as three maces are now in
circulation in the state.
What has also become worrisome is the role of the police in the whole
saga. The police that are supposed to be neutral, apolitical and fair
to all, seem to be taking sides. The role of the Commissioner of Police,
Mr. Mbu Joseph Mbu remains glaringly suspect.
Though, he had come out to deny that he was taking directives from
Abuja, to destabilize Amaechi’s government, what he and his officers
are doing however point to the contrary. It is on record that the Police
Commissioner organized or allowed politicians to organize a rally in
his support in Port Harcourt, after Amaechi’s supporters staged a rally
against his partisanship in the crisis.
Another anomie in the crisis is the open involvement policemen who
take part in the fight among politicians. They joined the politicians
they are attached to, to engage in fisticuffs with their opponents. At
the State House of Assembly, on Tuesday, one policeman threatened to
shoot his colleague, if he continued to challenge the politician he is
attached to. The Police Commissioner shocked many, when he claimed that
the 27 lawmakers reconvened on Tuesday for the purpose of passing
resolution for his redeployment. This is no less a political statement.
Is Mbu really a political police officer, as he is being accused of?
One also wonders, why the Minister of State for Education, Chief
Nyesom Wike, a central figure in the crisis threatened to embark on
peaceful protest, if the IG goes ahead to redeploy the Rivers state CP.
As things are, the macabre dance continues and only time will tell how
it will end.
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