The
Rivers State Governor, Chief Nyesom Wike, said on Sunday that the insecurity in
the state was inherited from the previous administration.
Wike
stated that the killings and kidnappings in Rivers started during the
administration of former governor Rotimi Amaechi.
The
governor made the comments during the thanksgiving service at Saint Andrew’s
Anglican Church in Okrika to commemorate the rescue of Patience Tam-George, the
octogenarian mother of the Commissioner of Information, Dr. Austin Tam-George,
who was held hostage for six days by kidnappers.
But
the All Progressives Congress in the state disagreed with the position of the
governor, insisting that Rivers was safe under Amaechi’s watch as governor.
Represented
by the Secretary to the state government, Mr. Kenneth Kobani, the governor
said, “We are happy that our mother, Ma Patience Tam-George, did not die in the
hand of the kidnappers. The issue of security challenges we are facing was
inherited, it is not from us. That is why the governor has encouraged the
security agencies to fight crime.
“The
governor has zero tolerance for crime. The Amnesty programme, which is also one
of the approaches, is to give the cults a second chance.”
Wike
called on clerics to tell the youths to shun violence, even as he enjoined the
people of the state to support the efforts of the state government in the fight
against crime.
Reacting,
the state Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress, Mr. Chris
Finebone, described as preposterous the statement credited to the state
government that kidnapping and killings were inherited from the immediate past
administration.
Finebone
said contrary to the position of the state government, Amaechi fought crime to
a standstill during as a governor.
He
said, “That is the most preposterous story to tell. Anybody who lived in Rivers
State when Amaechi was governor agreed that Amaechi gave his all to fight
insecurity in the state.
“It
is possible that Kenneth Kobani (representative of the governor), who had gone
on self-exile, did not come down to Rivers to experience the quiet and safe
Rivers State then.
“He
(Kobani) never lived in Rivers during the time Amaechi was governor. So, he
spoke from the angle of lack of experience.”
Source:The
Punch
Tags
Politics