Uproar as four northern governors visit Amaechi
Posted: 17/07/2013
L-R: Governors Rabi’u Kwankwaso (Kano State);
Sule Lamido (Jigawa) Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers); Babangida Aliyu (Niger); and
Murtala Nyako (Adamawa), during the governors visit to Amaechi in Port
Harcourt... on Tuesday.
| credits: NAN
| credits: NAN
There was commotion again in Rivers State as
thousands of youths believed to be loyal to the Minister of State for
Education, Mr. Nyesom Wike, on Tuesday, reportedly threw stones and other
objects at the convoy of the Rivers State Governor, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, at the
Port Harcourt International Airport, Omagwa.
Vehicles in the convoy were conveying four
northern governors – Sule Lamido (Jigawa); Murtala Nyako (Adamawa); Babangida
Aliyu (Niger); and Rabiu Kwankwaso (Kano) – who were on a solidarity visit to
Amaechi.
A bus in which some commissioners in the state
were seated in was said to have had its windscreen smashed by the
protesters.
But the State Police Public Relations Officer,
Mrs. Angela Agabe, told The PUNCH that “there was no time the governors’
convoy was attacked.
“Nothing like that (attack) happened,” she said,
adding that adequate security was provided at the airport to forestall any
unpleasant development.
Commissioner for Information and Communications,
Mrs. Ibim Semenitari, who confirmed that a Government House bus was damaged by
some youths, described the incident as a ploy by anti-democratic forces to
cause confusion in the state.
Semenitari said the development had the capacity
of derailing the nation’s democracy.
The youths, who are mostly members of the
Grassroots Development Initiative, had expressed dissatisfaction over the visit
of the governors, maintaining that they had no business being in the
state.
Though some pro-Amaechi youths, who are members
of Ikwerre Youth Movement, were also on the ground to forestall any untoward
development at the airport, their presence did not stop the anti-Amaechi
protesters.
The anti-Amaechi protesters, who got wind of the
planned visit of the northern governors, had stormed the Port Harcourt Airport
at about 7am and waited until about 11.40am when the governors and their host
arrived. Amaechi came in from Abuja.
Aliyu, who is also the chairman of the Northern
States Governors’ Forum, arrived at about an hour later to join others who had
been waiting for him.
Trouble,however, began when the governors were
about leaving the VIP lounge for a journey to the Government House in Port
Harcourt. The anti-Amaechi protesters moved en masse to block the governors
from moving further but were dispersed by an Armoured Personnel Carrier, which
was part of Amaechi’s convoy.
At that point, the governors were able to enter
a vehicle that immediately left the vicinity but some vehicles in the convoy
were said to have been hit by stones and other objects thrown by the
protesters.
One of Amaechi’s drivers, according to a source,
was said to have received two punches on his face.
Reacting to the incident, the GDI
Secretary-General, Mr. Samuel Nwanosike, described the protest as peaceful and
successful.
He pointed out that the people of the state were
not comfortable with the coming of the northern governors to the state.
Nwanosike said, “There was a peaceful protest at
the airport today. Rivers people are not happy with the visit of the northern
governors to our state. They should stay in their states because Rivers people
can solve their political problems by themselves.
“We were about 7,000 protesting. We don’t want
them (northern governors) to import Boko Haram to Rivers State.”
The youths’ position on the visit was backed by
the Peoples Democratic Party in the state, which said it was “meant to
aggravate the political crisis in the state.”
The Media Adviser to the state Chairman of the
PDP, Mr. Jerry Needam, said in a statement that it was wrong for the
governors to abandon their states in order to pay Amaechi a solidarity
visit.
He said, “It is the likes of these visitors
that are encouraging Amaechi not to have regard for the Rivers people, elders
and constituted authorities in the state.”
On the inauguration of an eight-member Judicial
Commission to look into the crisis in the House of Assembly, Needam described
Amaechi as a principal actor, who should not be a judge in his own case.
He said, “Amaechi can’t be a judge in his own
case. Amaechi is a principal suspect in the matter. Above all, the matter is
before the Senate. The Senate will give its report on Wednesday (today).
“His action is pre-empting the decision of the
Senate Committee on States and Local governments. It is a shame that Amaechi
will go to this length in his desperate quest for power.”
Meanwhile, the four governors , who visited the
state have threatened to stop funding the police if the Rivers State Police
Commissioner, Mr. Joseph Mbu, was not redeployed.
In a statement shortly after their meeting with
Amaechi, they warned that with officers like Joseph Mbu, still in the force,
they were not going to fund an antagonistic police.
They also pointed out that the call for a state
police as a constitutional provision had become necessary following the actions
of the police and Mbu in the State House of Assembly fracas.
Calling on the Inspector-General of Police, Mr.
Mohammed Abubakar, to redeploy and discipline Mbu, the northern governors
described the police action as unprofessional and partisan.
They said, “We wish to call on the IG to hearken
to the voice of reason and immediately redeploy and discipline Mbu. His
actions smack of unprofessional conduct and partisanship unbecoming of his
office.
“With the way the police are being used and
abused and with officers like Mbu , we do not see the need for state
governments to fund an antagonistic police and we may be forced to reconsider
our financial contributions towards the Nigeria Police.”
They noted that recent developments in Rivers
State had brought to the fore, the question of true federalism and the need for
institutions to be allowed to perform without undue interference.
“As federating units, we must be allowed the
space to guarantee our people’s sustainable development as provided by the
constitution,” the governors said.
They justified their visit, saying it was to
ascertain the information made available to them through the media. The
governors described the events in the state as threats to peace, security and
democracy.
The governors added, “Having interacted with our
colleague and other persons, we are shocked at the role of the police in Rivers
State and condemn their clear partisanship in the show of shame that took
place in the House of Assembly.
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