Saturday, 22 November 2014

Delta 2015: Gov. Uduaghan, Guber Aspirants in Total Showdown


For both Governor Emmanuel Eweta Uduaghan as well as Delta State, this is not only a fight of epic proportions; it equally signifies a tragedy of epic proportions.
While the energetic build up to the emergence of gubernatorial candidates in other states of the Federation is tapering to cohesive end, the opposite is the case in Delta State. Last week the little-heard rumblings that had been going on underground erupted fully into the public glare when the major gubernatorial aspirants from the state signed a communiqué after a meeting, throwing away their normal differences and inter-personal competition (as would be expected), to agree on one very salient point; that Gov. Uduaghan should not, single-handedly, IMPOSE a governor on the state come 2015.
That Uduaghan should not have seen such a development coming would surprise most political pundits. Yet, beyond that, what remains most surprising is that the Governor could have ever given his worst political enemy the grounds to make such an allegation. Unfortunately for Uduaghan and Delta State, most of those who deliberated at a meeting before making the allegations in that Communique of Tuesday 11th November, 2014, could under normal circumstances be said to belong to the “Uduaghan Camp”. That the likes of Senator Arthur Ifeanyi Okowa, David Edebvie, Clement Ofuani, Ovie Omo-Agege, etc, could have appended their signatures to that public statement, shows that they believed that only something as drastic as what they did – taking a public stance so that other stakeholders would also get involved and thereby call Gov. Uduaghan to order before his actions could set the volatile state afire – would suffice.
Leaving no one in doubt about their pedigrees, public personas, public and private authority and interests and stakes on the matter, the communiqué began: “we the undersigned governorship aspirants, having bought the Governorship Nomination and the Expression of Interest Forms of our great party, the PDP, and having followed the unfolding political developments in Delta State over the last two months, met at the home of our national leader, Chief E. K. Clark, CON, on Tuesday, 11th November, 2014, to review the state of affairs in our party in Delta State”.
 
In that very first paragraph, the group showed clearly that issue before them was decidedly beyond the crass politics of who would emerge Delta state’s PDP gubernatorial candidate and reaches on the salient point of the soul of democracy; the sanctity of primaries, the role of intra-party voters as well as stakeholders in the emergence of a state’s chief executive. Beyond that, that the group met in the home of a none aspirant, the highly respected and remarkably authoritative Chief E. K. Clark, showed that the group meant serious business. To add to the bad news for Uduaghan,  E. K Clark is not only a dogged fighter whose interest and role in public affairs not only stretch from the 1970s, once he joins a fight, he remains in it till the very end.
 
The communiqué continued: After extensive deliberations, we resolved as follows:
·        That the unfolding events in our great party, (the PDP) in Delta State, in the run-up to the 2015 elections are not satisfactory.
·        That we reject in its entirety, moves by the Governor of Delta State to single handedly pick his successor by manipulating the processes.
·        We further reject attempts by the Governor to use State machinery and resources to intimidate and harass public officials and political leaders who have refused to support his preferred candidate.
·        That we also reject moves by an out-going Governor to single handedly pick candidates for State and National Assemblies in Delta State.
·        That an out-going Governor who won his re-election with less than 10,000 votes cannot alone, deliver Delta State for Mr. President’s re-election bid without the support of all stakeholders in the party. In fact, PDP will loose Delta State because of the Governor’s conduct and behaviour, unless the National Working Committee intervenes urgently to arrest the drift in the party.
 
That last three paragraphs really rubbed it in; it reminded Uduaghan and the PDP national leaders that
·        That the raging battle between Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan and his cousin, Chief James Ibori for the control of the soul of our great party (PDP) in Delta State, is weakening our electoral chances.
·        That the affairs of our party, the PDP, in Delta State, must not be reduced to a family patrimony. Delta State is too big and critical a State for this to happen.
 
·        We therefore, call on the National Working Committee of our party to act decisively in order to avert serious electoral crisis.
 
Significantly, the signatories included Barr. Ovie Omo-Agege, Olorogun Kenneth Gbagi, Hon. Victor Ochei,Hon, Ndudi Elumelu, Prof. Sylvester Monye,Chief David Edevbie, Sen. Ifeany Okowa, Hon Prince Sam Obi, Dame Dr. Esther Uduehi, Chief Clement Ofuani, Chief Samson Opone, Amb. Chief Gabriel Chukwuma Oyibodo, Chief Godswill Obielum, Chief  Emma Okocha.
The signatories not only come from various parts of the state, they include those any reasonable person would expect to belong firmly in the Uduaghan camp. For starters, Okowa, Edebvie, Omo-Agege, Ofuani, not only make up what was the core Ibori group, which should have naturally morphed into an Uduaghan group, but they were Uduaghan’s  colleagues as top players in the 1991 – 2007 James Onanefe Ibori administration.  Uduaghan was a Health Commissioner when that administration incepted, and later became Secretary to the State Government (SSG). When he resigned to contest the 2007 election, Okowa succeeded him. Okowa also served as Director of  the Uduaghan Campaign Organisation, after he had and Uduaghan had tied at the PDP primary held at Ogwashi-Uku. The moment Okowa sacrificed his personal interest for the interest of the Ibori group, stepped down and asked his supporters to back Uduaghan to the hilt, Obielum’s effort to upstage Uduaghan on the march to Asaba Government House disappeared like a puff of smoke.  Okowa has yet to recover from the angst of his Anioma people that he sacrificed their interest to favour Uduaghan.
Ochei was until recently Speaker of Delta House of Assembly. When Udughan’s reelection was shot down at the electoral tribunal and a new election was scheduled, forcing Uduaghan to leave office for a while, the then Speaker of the House of Assembly, Obi, was not only the Acting Governor, but worked mightily as a PDP man, to ensure that Uduaghan returned to Asaba Government House. That all of them, once colleagues and close associates of Uduaghan would willingly sign such a public statement, would baffle any analyst and hint at Uduaghan’s ability to act the team player, carry others along, etc. That such a meeting should have been facilitated by Chief Clark, a man Uduaghan had always called “my father” and he has variously called Uduaghan “my son”, would raise the question: “if Clark, whose home has remained constant in the itinerary of this 2014/15 class of Delta state PDP aspirants,  was not consulted on the choice of the candidate to succeed Uduaghan, then who was?”
Even those who have never been involved in the old fights in the state and so could be said to have inherited no enemies and neither have they made enemies on their own, were among the signatories. Among this group stands out Professor Sylvester Monye, who has lived his life as an internationally acclaimed academic before returning to Nigeria. Once back home, he served in the commanding heights of the Abuja establishment. He also signed the public statement. That should convince anyone that the communiqué could not be ascribed to crass politics.  
Unfortunately, the opposition Uduaghan has reaped for himself even included the non-politicians too. Ex-militants, especially Tom Polo, have also taken their stance and stand against him. Tom Polo and others have been complaining about some unsettled matters before President Goodluck Jonathan could come for the ground-breaking ceremony of  multi-million dollar  Ogidigen Oil and Gas Industrial . Last week Uduaghan had cause to state that nobody could stop the President from coming to Ogidigben to kick- start the park, the poster project in Uduaghan’s much touted “Delta Beyond Oil” dream. Well, the date came and went and President Jonathan proved Uduaghan wrong by avoiding Ogidebgen and Delta State. That was a victory for Tom Polo’s side.
Uduaghan has gifted Nigerian politics with a memorable term:  “Finishing Strong”. But not re-open the wounds of the past would the state to finish strong. Uduaghan’s Medical Doctor’s brain should have reminded him that Delta is the only state that his its former governor in jail in the United Kingdom. That rancorous fight that invariably contributed to Ibori’s imprisonment, threw up Uduaghan as Governor. Now, that that fight has not been resolved, but Uduaghan has apparently added core members of the Ibori group in his enemy list, on this 2015 election issue at least.
That is sad. A state in which a do or die fight is enacted every four years, is a shaky one indeed. The PDP, in whose ranks this fight is taking place cannot also be said to be united and strong enough to fight off the expected challenge of other parties come 2015 elections. And if the foundations of the PDP in Delta state is weak, then its chances of winning comfortably in all strata of elections must be weak indeed.
It is Uduahan’s stated wish that his administration should finish strongly. But it would take the collective effort of all to do that. A divided Delta should be a weak Delta. That the Governor has been embarked on a divisive journey, in his attempt to solely decide who takes over from him, by his alleged desire impose Tony Obuh as state governor in 2015, beats the imagination. Last week, Chief E.K. Clark said publicly that it is unthinkable that Governor Uduaghan should not have an interest in who succeeds him, but that he alone should not choose a governor for the entire state. That Uduaghan did not take that message to heart is part of this tragedy that is now unfolding. Now the fight is giving some publications, such as Sahara Reporters the chance to make scathing allegations of mismanagement against the Uduaghan administration. That only compounds this unfolding tragedy and chips away at Uduaghan’s stature as leader and statesman.
 
     

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