The next governor of Rivers State will not be
determined by First Lady Patience Jonathan, according to leader of outlawed
Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Force Alhaji Mujahedeen Asari Dokubo.
An attempt to make supervising minister of
education Mr Nyesom Wike the next governor of the state, Dokubo warned, would
not only affect the political fortune of President Goodluck Jonathan but also
the chances of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state.
He said the plan by the first lady to impose
Wike on the people was morally wrong in the light of the dominance of the
political landscape of the state by the Ikwerre group, to which Wike belongs,
in the past 16 years.
“To make Wike a governor in Rivers State in
2015 is not morally right. All the fellows endorsing him for whatever reason
should know that it will injure PDP, it will injure Goodluck Jonathan. If
Goodluck’s name is brought into it, that he is in support of the perpetuation
of an Ikwerre hegemony in Rivers State, which is not right by population, which
is not right under any calculation, it will injure him and PDP,” Dokubo
stated in an exclusive interview with LEADERSHIP friday yesterday.
Mrs Jonathan had ignited a controversy over
the governorship ticket of the PDP in the next election in Rivers State on
Tuesday when she said Wike enjoyed her backing in his gubernatorial ambition.
The first lady, in a statement issued in a
reaction to a report that she had dumped Wike for a candidate from the
riverside area of the state, preferably one from her Okirika stock, in the
countdown to 2015, said she was solidly behind the minister in his bid to
occupy the Brick House, Port Harcourt.
She said, in a statement issued by her media
aide, Mr Ayo Adewuyi: “In the case of Rivers State, the First Lady wishes to
state categorically that the Supervising Minister of Education, Chief Nyesom
Wike, is the leader of PDP in Rivers State and he enjoys the followership of
the people of the State. The First Lady is solidly behind Chief Wike.
“The people of Rivers State are also solidly
behind Chief Wike and are prepared to follow him. It is therefore mischievous
to insinuate that Mrs Jonathan is working to ensure that the governorship
candidate comes from one of the riverine areas of Rivers State which may not be
where the people are going.
“It is also imperative to state that the
First Lady is always with the people and will continue to go with the wish and
expectations of the people. Mrs Jonathan has not withdrawn her support for
Chief Wike at any time and will always work for the interest and the good of
Rivers people. As far as the First Lady is concerned, there is NO SHAKING in
Rivers State.”
In yesterday’s interview, Dokubo insisted
that Wike could not become the next governor of the state in view of the
interests of the three ethnic clusters in the state.
He said an Ikwerre man had no business in
Rivers Government House in 2015, adding that it would amount to political
suicide for PDP to field Wike in the next election.
Dokubo said the Ogoni should be supported to
produce the next governor in the interest of justice and fair play, adding that
it is only the Ogoni cluster that has not produced the governor of the state.
“As far as we all know, there are three
ethnic clusters in Rivers State: the Ijaws, the Igbos (Ikwerre is part of the
Igbo cluster) and the Ogonis. After Bayelsa was excised from Rivers State, the
Igbos have ruled for many years. Odili was an Idoni Igbo; he ruled for eight
years. Omehia/Amaechi, who are also Ikwerres, by 2015 would have ruled for more
than eight years, making over 16 years,” he explained.
Insisting that it is impossible for an
Ikwerre man to emerge as successor of the incumbent governor Rotimi Amaechi, he
said: “It is morally wrong for any anybody to say that Igbo cluster should
produce the next governor in 2015. I am an Igbo man also, by virtue of my
origin, and so I am not against the Ikwerre people or against the Igbo. I
repeat, I am an Igbo man; I can narrow it down: I have Ikwerre blood flowing in
my veins.
“Having said that, the next cluster are the
Ijaws, made up of the Kalabaris, the Obolo and Ibani people, the Wakrike;
Okirika is just one town in Wakrike, Ukoro and others. These people have
produced a governor. In terms of local government spread, they are in 11 local
government areas out of the 23 local government areas; the Igbos are spread in
eight and the Ogonis in four local government areas.
“In terms of population, when you remove the
cosmopolitan population of Port Harcourt and Obiakpor, which is about 80 per
cent of the population, is non-indigenous of those local governments. That is
old non-Rivers indigenes and Rivers indigenes, who are not indigenes of Port
Harcourt and Obiakpor local governments. If you remove those populations, the
Ijaws are the majority as a single block.
“When you look at that, for somebody to say
another Ikwerre man should become governor is wrong. Yes, constitutionally, he
has a right to aspire, everybody is free to aspire, but it is not moral, it is
not right. Something can be legally right but it might not be morally right.”
Making a case for the Ogoni, Dokubo said the
age-long domination and oppression of the Ogoni people must end in 2015.
According to him, it would be unjust and
unfair to continue to exclude the Ogoni in the scheming for the highest
political office in the state. The Ogonis are the only people who have never
produced governor because the whole Bayelsa that left were Ijaw people, he
stated.
“So if we are saying there should be justice
in Rivers State… if we are crying against domination by others, we should not
also oppress other people. The people that morally should be allowed to produce
the next governor of Rivers State is the Ogoni cluster made up of the Ogonis
proper and the Eleme people.”
Dokubo expressed surprise that Patience
Jonathan feigned ignorance of the homogenous nature and political reality in
the state by openly identifying with the minister to clinch the top job in the
state in 2015.
“The first lady need not to be told that it
is morally and politically wrong for her to support another Ikwerre man by
2015, after the Igbo bloc would have spent over 16 years. She has every right
to support who she wants but that must be done in a morally and politically
correct direction and manner.”
Debunking the claim of his Ijaw kinsmen to
the coveted seat in 2015, he said: “The arguments of the Ijaws are weaker. That
an Ijaw governor should come in 2015 is weaker because Ada George and Melford
Okilo have been elected governor; they can say it was old Rivers State — even
in old Rivers State, the Ogonis should be in the right position to contest for
the governorship. Yes, I will prefer an Ijaw man to become governor any day,
anytime but when you are fighting oppression, you should fight it anywhere you
see it. When you fight discrimination, you should fight it anywhere you see it.
“And in Rivers State, I believe the people
who have the moral authority to produce the next governor of Rivers State are
the Ogonis.”
Dokubo, however, expressed optimism that the
contentious issue would be amicably resolved by the relevant stakeholders at
the appropriate time and “wiser counsel will prevail”.
Some elders of the PDP in Rivers State had,
last week, warned against ethnicising the party’s governorship ticket.
In a release, signed by Chief Ferdinand
Alabraba and Chief Maxwell Tasie Amadi on behalf of the group, the elders
frowned at a situation where people were fanning the embers of ethnicity in
their jostling for the gubernatorial slot in the state, adding that it could
become divisive and detrimental to the unity of the party in the state.
Jonathan's camp will soon explode all over Nigeria because of the desperation among his supporters due to huge amount of money you can make without restriction and harassment from EFCC if you are with Jonathan , my God will put Jonathan and his accomplice in crime to shame very soon.
ReplyDeleteGood morning Niger Delta people!
ReplyDeleteNa waitin Ameachi dey shout b dis ooo. Where woman won help am rule his state. Dis is jus d begining. Dis is wat u get wen u marry who big pass u.
ReplyDeleteAsari my brother thank u and God bless u. I must commend u for saying this truth loud and clear. I am an Ikwerre man but shares this ur view intoto. Truth is bitter but u hav said. Pls someone help me with Asari's no. Rivers pple let do the right thing.
ReplyDelete