29

Jul

2009

As Ohakim Finally Jumps Ship PDF Print E-mail
By Peter Claver Oparah

 

 

At long last, Ikedi Ohakim, the tragic character that was imposed on Imo State through the most dubious electoral heist in May 2007 has cross-carpeted to the PDP. For a very long time that dates to the time he surprisingly found himself imposed with the stolen mandate of Imo people, he had been surreptitiously persuading himself to join the PDP. In his usual character, he had made it look like the PDP was persuading him. While one is not in doubt that the PDP, with its lack of character and deficit of shame ogle for him, like any other person in power, with the vain hope that it would conscript Nigeria into a one party state, Ikedi Ohakim has done much of the persuasion. Because he has his eyes on the next electoral robbery, he had not been comfortable with his membership of the PDP. He would rather see himself in the dubious light of ‘a founding member’ of the PDP than a chieftain of the PPA. He dissociated himself from the PPA and gave that party a very short shrift while he wielded its mandate. To his government, members of the PPA were outcasts and he stretched himself to warm himself to the PDP to whom he gave all portfolios in his government even while pretending to be a PPA governor.

Ohakim prides himself as the new face of Imo State but with such face, Imo needs no further blackening. He is the face of all that is vile and detestable with politics today. He is the face of deception, desperation and opportunism rolled into one. He is a political flirt and a cheap political prostitute that is impervious to shame, honour and integrity. He is showing a dangerous trait of being seduced by the transient promises of the degrading politics of the present and has shown that he cannot be trusted with issues that require steadfastness.

But the PPA did not help matters. It acted as a satellite post for the PDP leadership and in many cases, elected to become the body shield for the many malfeasances of the rougish PDP. It jumped into bed with the PDP even while the preliminary angst against the massive rigging of the 2007 sham election was simmering and became a part of what obnoxiously came to become a government of national unity. On national issues, its leaders and men struggled to please the cabal in the PDP, even when this involves taking immoral stands against issues that stand out. It is on record that its governor in Abia, Theodore Orji remains the only governor outside the PDP that came out openly to support the visceral larceny that took place in Ekiti State in April 2009. It has been the loudest in defending the messy works of the sleight hands of Maurice Iwu and one is led into believing that the PPA, as a party lacks focus, character and direction.

But Ohakim is a case study on crass opportunism in this dispensation. A man that never dreamed of becoming governor, who got a paltry 3 votes at the PDP congress in 2007, suddenly found himself governor, not through the votes of the people of Imo but through the debauchery and abracadabra of Maurice Iwu, in full consort with the then vice-ridden presidency of Olusegun Obasanjo and the local support of a mediocre governor, called Achike Udenwa. Since his accidental coming, Ohakim has shown that there is still no depth known of opportunism. Because he was honed and bred in self-serving politics, he formed his government on that shifty ground. His entry into the PDP proved that for him, morality and principle remain abstract issues that should not bother him and his ilk. What should bother him and the gangsters that have found a safe haven in the PDP is how to steal another electoral mandate. Like their idling president, who has become a grand receptor of absconders and political harlots, the Nigerian system must be kept deeply rooted in the mud for their damned ilk to profiteer. All talks about electoral reforms should be made to become an abstract discussion that can go on for God-knows-when.

But then, can we avoid the moral question in holding fast the mandate of one party while taking an opportunistic shade in another? Can we continue to fool ourselves that all is well in a situation where a person engages in shameful battering with the mandate that belongs to a another party? Can we feel comfortable in a clear and concise situation where somebody engages in an amoral venture with the mandate given to a party?

To answer these questions, I want to defer to a pamphlet, issued by Ohakim’s government house. Titled, ‘Ohakim Returns to the PDP’, it sought stridently to defend the moral questions that would be raked up by this illicit gamble by Mr. Ohakim. The 16-page literature, concocted to swerve the impending moral crisis engendered by this move sought to dignify carpet-crossing, as it gave instances of carpet crossing in other lands, notably the United States and Britain and why the rotten decision to jump ship to the PDP, which rejected him with a loud thump the other day, poses no moral question for Ohakim. Like any other hatchet job, the pamphlet suffers from its decision to indicate which of the people mentioned took with him the mandate of a state to his new nest. It was silent on the reasons that informed the shifting of loyalty and the actions that followed thereafter. Either from unintended blight or deliberate mischief, all the cases the literature cited for deifying the amoral acts of Ohakim were those of legislators. It never mentioned any case of a governor or president that decamped to another party or who took with him the mandate of his party to the other party. Talk of the limitations of paid hagiographies! But why waste the pen and several millions of tax-payers money which went into the production of this trash if indeed Ohakim acted rightly by devouring his vomit and trading with the mandate of another party?

But to be sure of what Nigerians are saying about this evil virus that is fast eating away the life of this fraudulent democracy. Ohakim or any person else is at liberty to join any party or group of their choice. Most importantly, he should resign from the mandate he wields on behalf of his former party and join whoever he wants. That is the kernel of the public questioning of the self-serving political gambling of Ohakim, Shinkafi, Yuguda and others. Most importantly, it is pertinent to say that even as they indulge in that selfish venture, Ohakim and his men were trying to pre-empt the moral burden they also feel trading with the mandate of the PPA, which shows the truism in Uthman Dan Fodio’s ageless statement that ‘conscience is an open wound, only truth can heal it’. As they strive to cello tape their conscience for the transient political reward that indecent move will guarantee them, Ohakim and company cannot run away from the indictment of what remains of their conscience.

But we should not leave such important case to the mercenary consciences of Ohakim, his lackeys and his new friends in PDP. This is why the Supreme Court must quickly weigh in to save what remains of the democratic mockery the PDP has imposed on this country. Luckily, the Supreme Court had ruled in the Amaechi versus Omehia case that a mandate belongs to the party and not the person. What is needed now is for it to enforce this through a landmark judicial pronouncement so as to stem this illicit trading by politicians of easy virtue and restore the sanctity of the mandates of the people. Good enough, the PPA has vowed to go to court to reclaim its mandate from a wayfarer like Ohakim. I understand the ANPP is in court to reclaim its mandates from both Shinkafi and Yuguda and so long as the Supreme Court has made that declaration about the ownership of mandates, these political rentiers must be made to give up the mandate to their former parties. This is the moral burden that must be discharged by Ohakim and company and I urge the parties to prosecute their cases diligently as that is the only way this political doom would be rescued from the desperate hands of the PDP.

Noberth Ekendu.

Ikenegbu Layout,

Owerri, Imo State.



Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 29.07.2009 17:54

Ohakim prides himself as the new face of Imo State but with such face, Imo needs no further blackening. He is the face of all that is vile and detestable with politics today. He is the face of deception, desperation and opportunism rolled into one. He is a political flirt and a cheap political prostitute that is impervious to shame, honour and integrity. ...Read the full article.

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AntoAnto is offline

 # 2 | 29.07.2009 20:47

I think that Imo governor lacks the moral backbone to be the governor of a state.
However, I believe the true PDP people in that state will never give him a chance to continue with his mediocrity.
Persons like that governor must be blown away by the current wind of change and season of anger in Nigeria.

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Ala DinmaAla Dinma is offline

 # 3 | 30.07.2009 05:05

Who actually wrote the article, Peter Claver Opara or Nobert Ekendu? Please I need some clarification.

Ala Dinma

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peterclaver2006peterclaver2006 is offline

 # 4 | 30.07.2009 06:14

I would not have made this clarification if it was not sought. I am just reading this article on nigeriavillagesquare. I didn’t write it and I believe someone must have hacked into my villagesquare box to impersonate me. luckily, I had read this in saharareporters and some other websites earlier and it was from Noberth Ekendu, whom I don’t even know. I had equally faced the embarrassment of having my name associated to some noxious articles in both the Nigerian press and the Internet media in recent times. The most recent of these was the case of the squabble on who gets the Lagos ministerial position among the PDP members in Lagos, which was published with my name in The Sun. Please regard it as such. My views about Ohakim’s government are well known and have been well expressed. My opinion about his defection is personal to me till I am clear about certain issues. Thanks.

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Kay Soyemi (Esq.)Kay Soyemi (Esq.) is offline

 # 5 | 30.07.2009 07:42


Ohakim prides himself as the new face of Imo State but with such face, Imo needs no further blackening. He is the face of all that is vile and detestable with politics today. He is the face of deception, desperation and opportunism rolled into one. He is a political flirt and a cheap political prostitute that is impervious to shame, honour and integrity. He is showing a dangerous trait of being seduced by the transient promises of the degrading politics of the present and has shown that he cannot be trusted with issues that require steadfastness.



You can easily replace the name Ohakim in the article with just about any other Nigerian politician's name and not miss a beat!

That is the long and short summary of politics as practiced in Naija. Any wonder we remain where we are?:rant:

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nobekendunobekendu is offline

 # 6 | 30.07.2009 08:23

I want to make some clarifications. I am the writer of the article and very new to nigeriavillagesquare.com. I am a new writer from Owerri, Imo State and feels proud to attach my name to whatever I write. I registered last week in the nigerianvillagesquare and wanted to post my article but I wasn’t allowed. I did not know what the problem was and this is my second time of trying to post an article. I even sent my first article through the regular villagesquare mailbox but it was not published. Not knowing what to do, I used Peter Claver Oparah’s post on the square to post my article but as a guest writer. He is a writer I admire and a positive role model, whose style impresses me. I thought it would be reflected that a Guest Writer posted the article and accredited to me but I was surprised to see it credited to Peter Claver Oparah, even when my name, address and email address were on the article. The other sites to whom I emailed the article to reflected the correct accreditation, which bails me out of any charge of trying to impersonate Peter Claver Oparah. The embarrassment is regretted and not intended to impersonate you, as you wanted to assume. It was rather because of the cumbersome way of posting articles on Nigeriavillagesquare. I hope they will assist newer writers who are not too sophisticated on the Internet to post articles so as to prevent incidences like this and I hope they will reflect the change and accredit my article to me. I will like the managers of the square to send me the full details on how to post articles direct on the square so as to prevent such ugly situations in the future.

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i-go-betteri-go-better is offline

 # 7 | 30.07.2009 15:56

I am personally ashamed because I had on several occasions vigorously defended and praised the efforts of this very Ohakim to the chagrin of some of my close friends who evidently hate Ohakim. By all means of communication, they have each been saying to me "I told you ...".

Peter Obi withstood very vicious Federal and State PDP might and still standing. Ohakin only had the largely fragmented, disorganised and unfocused Imo State PDP to face, he readily buckled! What a foolish coward.

Why are Nigerians silent on the most disgraceful, democracy decimating statement the chimp-look-alike former President obasanjo made on this inglorious day in Imo State. He made it abundantly clear that Ohakim's electoral "victory" had nothing to do with VOTES of the good people of Imo State, the very template of democracy, rather it was consequent upon a fetish induced "victory" from an unholy arrangement/agreement between him (Obj), Ohakim and other masked cabals (Iwuruwuru obviously one of them, he doesn't even need a mask)! I bet no Igbo man other than the beneficiary (Ohakim) was at the meeting where the destiny of a whole Igbo State was determined!

This man, a two time President of this unfortunate Nigeria, at present, a UN SPECIAL ENVOY, without even a fringe of shame and with the crudest audacity made this type of revelation which in any other country other than Nigeria, would have elicited unanimous outrage that would consign him to the trash can of history permanently. Obviously this Obj is a disastrous reality.

For Ohakim, the sign of his downfall is made even more evident by the open support/endorsement from Obasanjo! Nwagbara, Okadigbo, Kalu, Audu Ogbe, Ararume, Ige, Danjuma, etc, etc are living/dead witnesses.

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Careman001Careman001 is offline

 # 8 | 30.07.2009 19:57

I salute your honesty and forthrightness in owning up to your article, even by appending your name and address at the end. You sure give me hope about Nigeria, which I have since written off. You are the face of what can become of Nigeria when the stench of the current rot is swept away by the wind of mishap the Nigerian policitians are blowing. Thank you again.

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akuluounoakuluouno is offline

 # 9 | 31.07.2009 05:41

Dear NVS Admin,

Please make the necessary corrections and graciously give Mr Ekendu the right of way to publish in the NVS. I have read the article on another popular Nigerian blogosphere.
On other matters, I wish to invite PCO, a very worthy villager, Ekendu, and the NVS Admin to a beer summit:D at Eden gardens in Abuja to resolve this stupid:eek: face-off. My brand is the popular Ama Greenfield, 9th Mile made Ubo:p or harp. I used to drink kpakpando:D or star, also from the same stable but after my New Year resolution in 2009 I learnt that Ubo twings fine with me.
Recall that I have always recommended a pilgrimage to Beer just as the Israelites did in the biblical Book of Numbers, where they drank and sang to the Lord, as a panacea to the legion of legendary ills challenging that nation. Good wise Obama seems to have presaged me.:D
If you guys are not in Abuja, I can send you e-versions of your brand of lager:D
As for Ohakim, it is his individual idiosyncrasy to jump ship, board ship, fly ship, sail ship or even walk the plank. I recall that in the US, one Libermann, a senator is the face of a politician that similarly does Ohakim wrt ships. If Ohakim will deliver the critical dividends of democracy to the good people of Imo, his party flag may not matter so much. The beauty of democracy is that power lies with the people, by the grace of almighty iwu,amen. If iwu could prayerfully vouchsafe us our democratic petition, then Ohakim fate and popularity will have been freely and fairly tested. Who knows he might be an Agbani Darego or Bianco Onoh-Ojukwu at best:D or Aku Luo Uno at worst:2love:

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Chief KaluChief Kalu is offline

 # 10 | 31.07.2009 10:25

If e possible to catch Ohakim flog am well well, na dat one for sweet this writer belle.
Truth be told, at present, we have only PDP as a political party in this country. All others are mere appendages. It is only in Lagos that AC is making commendable impact and they are not finding the tussle very funny. Ask Fashola and the past governor. PPA, Orji Uzor Kalu's party is only in Abia because of the strangle hold of the party on the people of Abia. Not necessarily because of stregth but because opposition politics has never favoured anybody when it comes to enjoying democracy dividends.

But then, can we avoid the moral question in holding fast the mandate of one party while taking an opportunistic shade in another? Can we continue to fool ourselves that all is well in a situation where a person engages in shameful battering with the mandate that belongs to a another party? Can we feel comfortable in a clear and concise situation where somebody engages in an amoral venture with the mandate given to a party?

The question you asked above is pertinent, but, by whose vote and/mandate did he becomee governor? I am sure that the people's vote does not mean much in the scheme of things as it stands. So, trying to put his action to morality test is uncalled for.
I thought that the writer being a resident of Owerri will educate us on the performance of Ohakim in Imo state, he has used the whole space to talk about him decamping, as if PPA can not metermophose into PDP by Nigerian political calculation.
I am not surprised. We are waiting for people oriented leadership, whatever name or platform is inconsequential now. It will be extremely difficult for anybody to win an election in this country from a party ouside the PDP. It is not yet democracy that we have. Power resides with the political elite, not the people. Anything goes!!
 

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