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Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi. |
From every indication it looks like the relationship between the powers that be in Enugu State as led by Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, and the Nigerian military, as represented by the 82 Division of the Nigerian Army, has once again gone south, thanks to a hard-to-fathom tendency to expect different results from doing the same thing.
The
current face-off, like the previous one, appears to be emanating from a Motion
recently moved by the Enugu State House of Assembly, which seeks to blame the
army for the dismal showing of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) during the
recent governorship and Houses of Assembly elections in the state.
But
it has not always been this way. In fact, I noticed what appeared to be a
strong working relationship between the Enugu State Government and the Nigerian
Army, represented by the 82 Division Headquarters of the force, sometime in
2018, when I had been convinced to join the Ugwuanyi administration in what
eventually turned out to be a sentence to career oblivion.
I
joined the Ugwuanyi government precisely on July 24, 2018, and took time to
settle, that is if I ever did. Upon arrival, I was given an office and told to
just relax and take things easy, until my assignment was fully prepared. Being
someone who does not understand sitting on one’s hands, the wait was quite
unsettling.
On
Monday, August 6, 2018, I was jolted into some sort of activity following an
announcement that a delegation, led by the General Officer Commanding the 82
Division of the Nigerian Army was visiting. Not wanting to continue to be
invisible, I joined the reception party for the visitors and quickly understood
that some Toyota Hilux vehicles were going to be donated to the soldiers t help
in managing the increasingly intractable security situation in the state.
I
cannot forget this day in a hurry. The vehicles were parked close to the
entrance to the governor’s office, and as I stepped out to join the party, I
noticed an altercation between one of the governor’s media assistants, Louis
Amoke, and a man I later understood was the Commander of the Brigade of Guards
of the 82 Division. The issue at stake was where to tie the ribbon the governor
and the GOC would cut to formally unveil the vehicles that were just six in
number.
Not
one to keep quiet where such a thing was happening, I moved forward and had a
brief altercation with Louis Amoke, especially because, for one, I felt the
officer was correct on the appropriate place to place the ribbon, and secondly,
because I reasoned that being our visitor, Louis should not be talking to him
so brashly.
As
expected, the GOC, Major Gen. Adamu Abubakar, who was just about ending his
tenure at the 82 Division, said very nice things about the governor’s
disposition to peace and security in the state and ended by assuring officers
and men of the Division would always ensure that Enugu sustains her enviable
status as one of the safest, most secure and most peaceful states in the
country.
I do not know who thinks strategy for Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, but for
a leader who has barely two full months to leave office, allowing such an
unsavoury relationship to brew between him and the country’s major security
forces is hard to understand.
Again,
in October 2019, just 14 months after the initial donation, Ugwuanyi took this
relationship several notches higher by rolling out 100 pick-up vehicles acquired
from the local car manufacturer, Innoson Motors to the security operatives in
the state. Twenty-nine of these purpose-built pick-up trucks were given to the
Army, while the Enugu State Police Command got 65. The rest were distributed
among the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps, the Nigerian Immigration
Service, Nigerian Drug Law Enforcement Agency, (NDLEA), Federal Road Safety
Corps (FRSC), and National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons
(NAPTIP).
Although
the spate of violent crimes like assassinations, kidnapping, and robbery was
far from abating, the Army was all over the major roads, mounting roadblocks
and cooperating with the government to stem the disturbing wave of unbridled
criminality ravaging the state.
Everything
appeared to be going well until August 2021, when it was rumoured that a
certain kidnap kingpin, allegedly responsible for some of the serious cases of
abductions in the state had been arrested by the army. It first started as
rumour, but matters got out of hand when news emerged that the alleged
kidnapper was actually a close aide of the governor. His name soon filtered
into the public space as Tochukwu Okeke, Special Assistant to the Governor on
Security.
The
rumour mill peddled that after the arrest, forces from Enugu Government House
made attempts to release Messrs. Okeke, and when this failed, the news was
leaked to the media purporting that the Nigerian Army was unlawfully detaining
the man. According to a news item published by Sahara Reporters,
an online news channel, Okeke, who was arrested in July of that year, was
allegedly picked up by the army, purportedly for being a member of the
Indigenous People of Biafra.
Rather
than cause the release of the person allegedly in detention, that piece of PR backfired.
The next thing that happened was a wave of media buzz as stories sneaked out
that the Nigerian Army has arrested an aide to Governor Ugwuanyi for alleged
kidnapping.
The
link between the alleged kidnap suspect and the governor was extremely unsavoury.
Even those who leaked the news knew that Enugu Government House was going to be
uncomfortable with such a connection between it and a suspected kidnapper. It
was something that had to be quickly cleaned up.
First,
a flurry of press releases that claimed that Tochukwu Okeke was never an aide
to the governor quickly got to the newsrooms. But as soon as these denials hit
the media, pictures where the suspect was standing behind Governor Ugwuanyi
also found their way into the social media space, forcing the government to
backtrack. You cannot expect to win such PR wars.
Realising
the futility of fighting the Army on this front, Enugu State Government quickly
made fresh arrangements for an appeasement donation, and on August 17, 2021, a
few days after the PR started, invited the Garrison Commander of the 82
Division for another round of security vehicle donations. This time,
perhaps because it was hurriedly put together, only two vehicles were on offer.
Interestingly,
unlike previous donations which had the Governor personally performing the
handing over ceremony, this one was delegated to the Secretary to the State
Government, Prof Simon Ortuanya, while the GOC, 82 Division was represented by
the Garrison Commander, Brigadier General Christopher A. Ataki.
It
was not clear why the GOC stayed away from the donation, but one can conclude
that Governor Ugwuanyi apparently did not want to be seen to lower the stature
of his office by appearing at the handover ceremony when the GOC had chosen to
stay away.
Things
went quiet after this. There has neither been any mention of the name of
Tochukwu Okeke anywhere again either by the Army or by those who were fighting
for the fundamental human rights of a man said to be under unlawful detention.
But those who watch closely may not have missed the possible undercurrents.
Then
the 2023 general elections arrived with all their debilitating ramifications.
Determined to wrestle power from the PDP that had been feeding fat on the
resources of Enugu State unchallenged since 1999, the Labour Party approached
the contest with unconventional tools that made things tough for the ruling
party.
First,
their people-mobilisation engagements ensured that Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi
failed his bid to move from the Enugu Government House to the Senate. The
dismal showing of the PDP during the Presidential and National Assembly
elections cycle called for a retooling of strategy, with party goons concluding
that the only way to have any decent showing was to ensure through the infusion
of threats and fear, that citizens were discouraged from voting.
In
my earlier intervention on this matter, I discussed to stabilising role that
the Nigerian Army and other security agencies, particularly the Department of
State Services played in containing the effectiveness of the ravaging non-state
actors mobilised to attack the voting public.
As
I pointed out in that article, but for the presence of the Army on the streets
of many communities and towns in Enugu State, the March 18, 2023, Governorship
and Houses of Assembly elections would have been a bloody struggle between the
citizens and the thousands of thugs freely deployed in every part of the state.
At
the end of the exercise, the PDP, like in the voting cycle before it, went home
with yet another bloodied nose. Out of the 24 House of Assembly seats, the
Labour Party won 14, leaving 10 for the ruling party. Although the governorship
election was called for the PDP, the controversial result is still gathering a
lot of heat, with many believing that PDP will surrender it eventually at the
courts. Even the run-off election for the senatorial seat that was postponed
following the assassination of the Labour Party’s candidate, Barr Oyibo Chukwu
was also won by the candidate that replaced the late Chukwu.
Apparently
not sure where to place the blame, the PDP most naively decided to blame the
army.
Chinedu
Nwamba, a ranking member of the House, in a Motion on the floor of the House,
accused the Nigerian Army of complicity in what he termed the alleged
manipulation of the outcome of the election, suggesting that the military took
sides with the Labour Party to the detriment of the PDP.
Although
Hon Nwamba was the face behind the now controversial Motion, those who know the
workings of the organs of the Enugu State Government, strongly suspect he would
never have moved that Motion without the urging of the Governor.
But
whether Nwamba acted of his own volition or there were unseen hands pushing
him, it appears this Motion is making quite some unpalatable motions that look
to finishing what remains of the PDP in Enugu State. A few days ago, reports
that suggest the Army is fighting back, the same way it did during the Tochukwu
Okeke saga, infiltrated the media space.
According
to this story, which has gone viral on social media, the Nigerian Military has
released a report, which has indicted four local government Chairmen in the
state for alleged gunrunning and politically motivated crimes.
It
reads in part: “Four local government chairmen in Enugu State now face ominous
consequences as the military authorities have asked for their handover for
further investigations over their roles in the spate of insecurity witnessed in
the state in particular and the South East zone during and few months preceding
the last general elections.”
Mentioned
in the report, which cited sources at the Office of the Chief of Defence Staff,
Abuja is the Chairmen of Udenu, Igbo-Eze South, Isi- Uzo, and Igbo-Eze North
Local Government Areas. Although no major news outlet has been known to have
published the story, the speed with which the news has traveled the social
media points to a major challenge for the State Government, and suggests that,
yet again, the Ugwuanyi administration has disingenuously found itself in an
avoidable, unpleasant situation with the army.
I
do not know who thinks strategy for Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, but for a leader
who has barely two full months to leave office, allowing such an unsavoury
relationship to brew between him and the country’s major security forces is
hard to understand.
To
think that the governor had been in a similar situation just a few years ago,
makes one wonder why the lessons were not learned. If this story turns out to
be true, what would the governor do to calm nerves this time? Buy more pick-up
vans and donate to the Army. Throw everyone under the bus and see off his
remaining days in office in contrived peace and then retire to his village?
I
am looking for the name they call that person who does the same thing over and
again, expecting a different result…
Culled from ikemsjournal.com.ng.
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