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MY TAKE: Is Peter Obi a hypocrite ?

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Governor Peter Obi of Anambra is in serious danger of becoming a tragic political figure.

According to widely circulated reports, police officers two weeks ago caught men close to the governor with a large cache of cash. As I write, there's some uncertainty about the sum, but most accounts say ₦250 million.

Apparently, the cash couriers were stopped as they drove to Obi's business headquarters in Apapa.

Since then, Obi's office has tried to explain away the scandal. The governor's aides have, to put it bluntly, done a poor job of it.

They suggested that the cash belonged to a contractor who's done business with the state government. They have also contended that the cash was far less than newspapers reported. Then, in a needless and unconvincing attempt to muster moral bravado, Obi telegraphed a public letter to the Inspector General of Police demanding a thorough investigation.

Even at the most charitable, one must state that Obi's explanations, so far, about the source, ownership and purpose of the cash have been nothing short of inconsistent and unimpressive. If anything, the tenor of the Government House's statements suggests the scrambling incoherence of a man caught doing something indefensible.

In the ten years since Nigeria embarked on this strange phase many pundits call "nascent democracy," no politician has garnered as much goodwill as Mr. Obi.

Many of us applauded the tenacity with which the man mounted a legal effort to retrieve the mandate the voters of Anambra gave him in 2003, but which was hijacked by the ruling People's Democratic Party and its candidate, Chris Ngige, a medical doctor. As an unwavering believer in the principle of credible elections, I took pride in Obi's decision not to abandon pursuit of an office he'd won.

Once he claimed the office, Obi faced twin nemeses: a state legislature dominated by PDP members, and former President Olusegun Obasanjo, a man whose middle name should be mischief. The former president made no secret of his desire to hand the governorship of Anambra to his ward, Emmanuel Nnamdi (Andy) Uba. Encouraged by Aso Rock, the state legislators impeached Obi in a process that was transparently fraudulent. Again, many Nigerians rooted for him and celebrated when the judiciary restored him to office.

Obi's come-back achieved dramatic culmination when he persuaded the Supreme Court to find that he had yet to serve out his four-year term as governor, and to oust the impostor, Mr. Uba. His victory triggered a paroxysm of jubilation not only in Anambra but also throughout Nigeria and abroad.

In fact, Obi's triumph came to symbolise a promising dawn for the judiciary as well as the potential for democratic flowering in a country that continually hovers on the edge of despair.

A man with Obi's political biography should have governed with a sense of history. He might have surrounded himself with the best talent in every area to enable him to succeed.

Instead, Obi appeared to have misread his political fortune as evidence of his genius. By many accounts, he became impervious to advice, however sound. He began to relish the company of court jesters who fed his ego. He began to court a man with the unsavoury antecedents of Chuma Nzeribe, a member of the House of Representatives who's hardly associated with admirable causes. Instead of delegating duties, he began to function as if he and he alone enjoyed a monopoly of wisdom in the state.

Even before this cash scandal, Obi had disappointed many who expected him to help transform his political party into an institution possessed of gravitas, instead of the ragtag it's become. Under his watch, doctors went on strike for several months because the governor waved them off instead of engaging them in respectful negotiation. His verbal run-ins with his deputy, Mrs. Virgy Etiaba, as well as Ngige left the impression of a man whose personal limitations have confounded his public office.

It'd be hard to forgive Obi if it turns out that he's been fiddling with public funds. Anambra needs all the money it can get for the great challenge of development. Awka, the state capital, is in a shameful state, an eyesore. The state's infrastructure is dismal and requires a lot of cash to fix.

Obi liked to say he was a man of means long before he sought the office of governor. I heard him tell a gathering that if he stole one kobo of Anambra funds, he'd invite God to unleash wrath on him as well as his children.

I hope - for the sake of the long-suffering people of Anambra - that it was not a hypocrite who uttered that sentiment.

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Reader Comments (6)


Posted by Ndubuisi Onwasigwe on Jun 12 2009

Mr Ndibe, why do you think it makes sense to pass guilty verdict on Obi when police investigations have as yet not been concluded on the matter. It does seem you nurse some malicious sentiments against this man who has served our state meritoriously. Does it elude your intelligence that that there exists some political design by the enemies of Anambra(of which I'm not sure if you are one) to tarnish this man in order to set the stage for some hawks to hijack the state again. Please do not be hasty in calling him names and exercise restraint in your comments. If you're not grateful for his transformation of our state, then no messiah can satisfy you. Please keep quiet if you've got nothing meaningful to tell the public

Posted by on Jun 14 2009

I must say that the writer has made several points besides jumping to uncertain conclusions. Mr Peter Obi has had certain sucesses but as Mr Ndibe has correctly stated The awful state of Awka the Capital City and the poor state of infrastructure in the state,in addition to the shocking lack of security prompts one to wonder if political enemies are the only ones to blame for the slowness of progress in the state. Apart from this cash scandal, the deaths of kidnapped citizens and those caught in the croos-fires of criminal activities is of grave concern to everyone especially to Mr Obi's political career.

Posted by Yinka on Jun 14 2009

Comments like that of Ndubuisi Onwasigwe are the texture for which bootlicker and official jobbers of governments in this parts of the world are made. His comments simply shows he knew not Okey Ndibe, otherwise he would not be suggesting that Okey's posers are instigated by Obi's opponents. Okey is a pundit that has used his incisive comments for the cause of the Igbos and indeed the entire nation. His observations on Obi are what should bother any well meaning Nigerian who is sincere about achieving meaningful human capital and infrastructural development. The alternative to a meaningful dialogue about our state of affairs as a nation might be a mattter better left in the realm of imagination. Contrary to Onwasigwe's views, Nigerians like Ndibe said would be shocked if Obi ends up being another face of the kleptomanic leaders that has straddled our nation in the last one decade. His were only observation and Nigerians would be watching with keen interest how Obi wrestles out from this present tangles.

Posted by Chidi Ugwuibe on Jun 15 2009

Yinka, point of correction. Peter Obi is already part if the kleptomaniac leaders that we have in Nigeria. All you need do is take a drive from Amawbia to Nri to know this fact.

Posted by Peter Okaro on Jun 15 2009

Okey Ndibe is famous for shooting straight no matter whose ox is gored. I was wondering why it took so long to comment on what Governor Peter Obi is doing to our state. More ink to Prof's pen!

Posted by Abiodun Giwa on Jun 19 2009

It is not my intention call a dog a bad name. I am a Nigerian like you. I know Nigeria as much as you do. One problem with Nigeria today is that some of us still think that there are 'Angels' in Nigeria and that Nigeria's corrupt state has only affected a percemtage of people and that there is a percentage that can be vouched for.There is an Hause proverb that says we are all thieves and it is only those that are caught in the act that are baraos. It fits the current state of Nigeria. Like Wole Soyinka wrote, we are all 'casualties' of the Augean Stable that is the level of corruption in the country. The EFCC in my view is only a smokescreen to safe face by those in power. It is a case of the kettle calling the pot black. My suggestion is that the EFCC be scrapped and let the scramble for petro money become free for all. It may be a way to quickly pave the way for a Nigerian Revolution like it is currently being acted in the Delta Region.



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