03

Nov

2009

Uba And Soludo: Different Symptoms Of The Same Disease? PDF Print E-mail
By Okey Ndibe
03 November 2009

Uba and Soludo: different symptoms of the same disease?

By Okey Ndibe

altAnambra State is once again on the verge of a tragic political explosion. The state’s political temperature is boiling – dangerously boiling over – all because different factions of the Peoples Democratic Party are determined to seize the state, decidedly by crook, and turn its hijacked resources and assets into playthings for the depraved pleasure of a tiny coterie.

Anambra is primed to become the latest theatre for the ruling party’s wacky notion that elections are a do-or-die affair. That idea was put on display only a few months ago in Ekiti where a re-run governorship contest was turned into a bloody battle royale. The PDP’s cast in Ekiti starred Umaru Yar’Adua, a man who slumbers while Nigeria totters, but who always finds time, somehow, to lead off his party’s political campaigns, often a prelude and cover for mindless rigging. The party’s who’s who contingent in Ekiti also featured Speaker Dimeji Bankole who put apprehensive party faithful at ease by reminding them of their party’s ability to commandeer the military to the purpose of victory. Then, from his gubernatorial perch in Osun State, Olagunsoye Oyinlola telegraphed a message – caught on tape, no less – that he had the wherewithal to supply arms, ammunition and military uniform to enable the party to bludgeon the opposition into submission.

With officials of a credibility-deficient “Independent” National Electoral Commission umpiring the farce of an election, the PDP re-conquered Ekiti. The party’s triumphant officials cynically challenged the shocked and awed opposition to “go back to court.” The Ekiti people were put through the crucibles of the doctrine of do-or-die.

Anambra appears fated for a worse experiment. Here, a party that seems determined to smother the nation’s fledging promise of democracy, has refined its hideous battle-cry into a cruder, bloodier variant best described as do-and-die. The PDP is in the throes of an all-consuming internal war that is a sneak preview of what awaits the people of Anambra who – in keeping with the party’s policy – must be cowed and savaged, their will crushed by all means.

As proof and foretaste of this fierce fight, witness the recent abduction of the eighty-year old father of Charles Chukwuma Soludo, immediate past governor of the Central Bank. Soludo, a PhD in economics and a former professor, betrayed fundamental democratic principles when he offered himself to be smuggled through the backdoor as the party’s governorship candidate.

Anambra is caught in the middle of (at least) a four-pronged assault. There is Soludo, a candidate who opted to cut corners rather than test out his popularity within his own party. There is Chris Uba, a thoroughly uneducated political operative whose mode of operation suggests a younger version of Lamidi Adedibu, the late rustic exponent of amala politics. There is Emmanuel Nnamdi Uba (most often called Andy Uba), Chris’s equally ill-educated elder brother whose political history objectifies the tragedy of Nigerian politics. Then there are the scores of governorship aspirants who shelled out more than N5 million for a shot at the gambling table – to decide who will have the most direct access to the Anambra treasury.

Let’s begin from the last group. That forty-seven men and women paid N5 million merely for the opportunity to seek the party’s governorship ticket says a lot about the parasitic designs of the would-be candidates. In a country where more than seventy percent of the populace lives on little more than a dollar a day, no sane person who made his money legitimately would spend so much on buying what was, in effect, an entry fee into a gambling session. Perhaps, then, a good number of these candidates, if not most, had their eyes set on the price: the billions to be stolen once in office. What stood out, above all, was the preponderance of mediocrities, even outright failures, on the roll of candidates – as if the governance of a state were an all-comer’s affair. 

How about Andy Uba, who has fashioned a comical show out of running from one court to another, desperate to secure judicial validation of his fancy that he is a “governor-in-waiting”? Quite simply, any court that humors Uba’s ambition would be complicit in the enthronement of a culture of falsehood, even fraud.

Much of the Nigerian press still addresses Andy Uba with the prefix of Dr, a sad commentary on the loose standards in journalistic practice. Thanks to the investigative enterprise of saharareporters.com, it is now beyond question that Mr. Andy Uba does not hold an earned bachelor’s degree, much less a doctorate. It’s also doubtful that he has an honorary doctorate from an accredited university.

Uba appears to be legendarily wealthy, another curiosity. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, whom Uba served for eight years as a domestic aide, once suggested that Uba acquired his wealth as a businessman in the US. That’s a lie. In 2004, Uba got into trouble with US authorities for bringing in $170,000 in cash on a presidential jet while traveling with Obasanjo. Asked to account for the source of the cash, which he had failed to declare to US Customs, Uba said it had come from family sources. Had he been a millionaire before leaving the US in 1999, Uba would easily have recalled that fact to US investigators. In the end, he paid a fine in excess of $26,000 to settle the case.

The prospect of a man like Uba becoming a governor may well be music to Maurice Iwu’s ears, but that’s Mr. Iwu’s kind of fantasy and he’s entitled to it. For the people of Anambra – indeed, for Nigerians as a whole – the contemplation of an Andy Uba governorship is a moral affront. It would amount to telling young people that it’s sound policy to bestow a doctorate on oneself, and to make a spectacle of wealth accumulated through means that are less than transparent.

The most charitable thing to say about Chris Uba is that he and the PDP are a perfect match. For only a party that revels in mischief would elevate Chris Uba to a seat among its board of trustees (but, alas, that body is a collection of people cast in the same mold), or hand him its instruments in Anambra. It’s no wonder that a man who relishes the title of political godfather would wish, yet again, to impose his choice as governorship candidate – and selected governor.

It would be easy to ascribe Chris Uba’s deportment to his lack of education. It would be easy to view Andy Uba as afflicted with the same malady as his younger brother, one he essays to mask by wearing the self-arrogated toga of “Doctor.” But how does one account for the terrible political instincts so far exhibited by Soludo, a verifiably educated man? At this rather inauspicious time, with his tenure at the Central Bank under unflattering review, why did Soludo choose to make a swaggering entry into the political ring? And why has he failed to recognize that his chief sponsor, Tony Anenih, is – politically speaking – toxic?

Soludo’s willingness to receive a ticket that was snatched from other contenders – rather than transparently won – raises disturbing questions. In the end, even though the difference between Soludo and Andy Uba is, in some sense, one between an earned doctorate and a counterfeit one, the former number one banker has hardly exhibited greater enlightenment in politics.



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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 02.11.2009 23:46

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datuouwadaberechidatuouwadaberechi is offline

 # 2 | 03.11.2009 03:25

short, forceful and to-d-point. thanks to the author.

just a few lines lifted from a related article.....

t.......time has come for us to ask the real questions in Nigeria about this man called Chris Ubah. What does he do for a living? Where is he getting all this money from? What is his training? How much tax does he pay every year? Is he a government contractor? How much contract has he done? How were the contracts executed? This clown has done a colossal damage to our hard-earned democracy. In 2003 this *****, this nonentity, this illiterate told us that he single handedly put the Governor, and the State Assembly members in office and we laughed over the matter...." and more of the same;

but its really truly not only about chris or andy..... it really is all of them!!!!
these ppl are putting us to unbearable and unspeakable shame....!!!!!!!!!
imagine a SAN agreeing to take on a case already settled at the supreme court!!!!???

imagine 47 people paying N5million each for a shot at the governor's seat....really a table at the electoral casino.

na wah for naija oh.

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Big-KBig-K is offline

 # 3 | 03.11.2009 11:27

Prof: Welcome back!!

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TEchiTEchi is offline

 # 4 | 03.11.2009 12:19


=Robot;401676>It would be easy to ascribe Chris Uba’s deportment to his lack of education. It would be easy to view Andy Uba as afflicted with the same malady as his younger brother, one he essays to mask by wearing the self-arrogated toga of “Doctor.” But how does one account for the terrible political instincts so far exhibited by Soludo, a verifiably educated man? At this rather inauspicious time, with his tenure at the Central Bank under unflattering review, why did Soludo choose to make a swaggering entry into the political ring? And why has he failed to recognize that his chief sponsor, Tony Anenih, is – politically speaking – toxic?

Soludo’s willingness to receive a ticket that was snatched from other contenders – rather than transparently won – raises disturbing questions. In the end, even though the difference between Soludo and Andy Uba is, in some sense, one between an earned doctorate and a counterfeit one, the former number one banker has hardly exhibited greater enlightenment in politics.




According to the interview below by Daniel Alabrah,
they are all birds of the same feathers. The only difference is that Soludo is educated with legitimate college degrees but the political process of doing things right to alleviate the sufferings of common Anambran people has not occured to any of them yet.


Why Soludo is after me • Soludo is not a member of the PDP –Chris Uba
By Daniel Alabrah


Monday, November 2, 2009


The acclaimed godfather of Anambra State politics, Chief Chris Uba, has said the former governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Professor Chukwuma Soludo is witch-hunting him because he refused to anoint his candidacy for the governorship seat of the state.

Professor Soludo


He told journalists that it was unfortunate if his refusal to impose Soludo as the candidate for the Peoples Democratic Party was the basis for alleging him to have masterminded the kidnap of his father.


Chris Uba also shed light on sundry issues bordering on his relationship with Dr. Andy Uba, his elder brother.
Excerpts:


You were alleged to have kidnapped Professor Soludo’s father. Did you really do it?


I believe that allegation is diversionary. I am a Board of Trustees (BOT) member of the PDP. I’m for the truth. Our President, Alhaji Umar Musa Yar’Adua, a fine man; a very good man, is doing well and mean well for this country, through his due process policy and humility, and what I believe the national headquarters of PDP should do is to assist the president to succeed and not distract him.


It is unfortunate that the issue of the alleged kidnap of Soludo’s father is happening now. I cannot know anything about it and have nothing to do with it. If that is politics, then it’s an unfortunate trend.


But are you aware of a newspaper report published last Tuesday that quoted the Commissioner of Police of Anambra State as having said that Soludo associated you with the kidnap?


When I spoke with the police commissioner last Wednesday night, he said I was only being invited because of the rally we in the state exco organised against Soludo’s selection. But it’s unfortunate that someone whom everybody knows as one of my closest friends, could because of political disagreement, link me with a crime of this heinous nature.


You were friends, but … (cuts in)


We became friends before he was made Chief Economic Adviser to President Obasanjo. We continued as friends when he was CBN governor. It was when he now said he wanted to be governor of Anambra State that I said ‘no’.
I asked him why he wanted to be governor, he said Anambra State’s budget is nothing, but that he needed the governorship badly because of ‘immunity’.


I told him that Anambra State has gone through many political problems; that people are no longer comfortable with imposition, but Soludo believes that once few people meet and give him the mandate, it is over and I told him such thing is no longer possible and not in the interest of our state. if this is why he is accusing me of kidnapping his father, then it is unfortunate. People who know me know I’m not a criminal. At the rally, the state exco of our party in Anambra said ‘no’ to the illegality of Soludo imposition. No amount of blackmail or intimidation, can stop the opposition until the party corrects this Soludo mistake.


By the way, Soludo is not a member of the PDP. What is his contribution to the well-being of our great party? Nothing.


He left the banks with a big hole. He afflicted some Nigerian banks with financial cancer. Instead of him to face his problems, he now wants to come and hide under immunity.


He himself has once said he had problem in his village. He is involved in a serious conflict in his hometown Isuofia and in his village which he has split into two warring sides. The details of the crisis is well known to the state police command who have intervened on several occasions.


He said some people were fighting him. He moved his wife and children abroad. Why did he leave his father behind?


But we read in earlier media reports that you were the one who went to invite Soludo to contest for the governorship of your state.


That is what Soludo wanted the people to believe. So I invited Soludo, which means he was an outsider? He was only dropping my name. He has never been a member of PDP. He has never fostered any good relationship with either his community or politicians in Anambra State.


In fact, the idea of Soludo’s governorship ambition became known when he lost the bid to be returned as CBN governor which he had assured many people was a sealed deal. It will be interesting to know at what point I may have approached him when, in fact, we never related on the basis of politics.


Generally speaking, Soludo is not a political asset. He is a political liability to the party. His candidacy is dead on arrival.


Don’t you think your party at the national level, may wield the big stick against you for organising a rally opposing its candidate for the state governorship?


My party will not wield any big stick. The rally was organised by the state executive to protest the irregular selection of Soludo as the party candidate. I merely attended because there was no directive from the party not to hold the rally.


Also, the signature on the advert was forged. Our party’s constitution does not state that state exco has no right to organise rallies in the state. Somebody just wrote something and put a fake signature on it.


But why was it you being suspected by the Soludo camp?


Soludo knows that I’m one of the major opposition fighting his candidacy. I’m sure the police will soon come out with the findings of their investigations of the kidnap saga. Nigerians will then know who is telling the truth.

Nobody is above the law, if I’m needed by the police, I’ll present myself. You must also know that people have been kidnapped in the state previously. I bet you, Soludo knows where he kept his father.


Don’t you think your antecedents may have made you a suspect by those who are making the allegation against you? You remember you were alleged to have also kidnapped the then governor, Dr. Chris Ngige?

I never kidnapped Ngige. I never left Enugu to Awka. Ngige himself said it was the police that told him to vacate. Now, some people politicised it by brining my name into it.


Let’s talk about your relationship with your brother, Dr. Andy Uba. I remember you were also opposed to him in the 2007 election. Who would you really prefer as governor of Anambra State?

I was never opposed to my brother in 2007. People who wanted to cause mischief came between us. You need to know that we were born by the same father and mother. But this is politics. And you know members of the same family may belong to different political groups or have different political inclinations. Andy is my senior brother, I have no problems with him.

Also, I need to add this. Talking about our great party (PDP) and Soludo, all I want is for the due process to be followed. Let’s conduct fresh, transparent primaries. Anybody that wins, should be governor.

As a BOT member in the South East, I spent close to N800 million to buy brand new 406 cars and shared to all the party executives in the state. I bought 5, 000 wrappers and shared N500, 000.00 to each local government area, just for the purpose of mobilising for the party.

I want Soludo to tell Nigerians what he has done for our party to be angling to fly the party’s flag. All our party members and the NWC of our party fully knew about these donations I have just mentioned, which I made to further the interest of our party in the state.

As a well enlightened professor, should Soludo not have resigned when there was an outcry against his selection? He knew he came in through the back door and yet, he refused to resign. He is not a gentleman at all.

I want to say that I know a lot of things about this man called Chukwuma Soludo. And I will soon begin to talk, if he does not mellow down against me. He has a lot of skeletons in his cupboard. Soludo is not coming to help Anambra people. He is coming to hide from prosecution from the havoc he has caused in the banks. I know what he has discussed with me on this.

From all that have happened since the PDP aborted primaries in Anambra and the selection of Soludo as the PDP’s candidate, why is the opposition against Soludo still strong?

Well, it is obvious that Soludo’s entry into the governorship race was not well thought out and he may have been deceived by those who knew he had a large sum to disburse. For instance, Soludo never made any contact with any of the structures in Anambra State throughout the crisis within the party. Rather, after losing the bid for a second tenure as CBN governor, he started approaching people to buy them off. In my case, he offered me $10 million which I rejected.

He offered me the money for me to endorse him and ensure he becomes the governor in 2010. I rejected the money in my house here in Abuja and felt insulted. By the way where did he get 10 million U.S. dollars from?

Also, the greatest affront of his emergence was that when he was losing out in the primaries, he sponsored proxies who obtained an order to stop the process, only to come and benefit from what he initially sabotaged through a worse selection process. Yet, these issues are not being addressed.

No matter what anyone says of the Nigerian political struggle, the truth is that we must have a base. In Soludo’s case, not even his community will stand by him after throwing them into serious and avoidable crises which they are yet to resolve. In fact, the Anambra State police command is aware of this crises in Soludo’s Isuofia community which have remained intractable.


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EaceEace is offline

 # 5 | 03.11.2009 12:21

Let’s begin from the last group. That forty-seven men and women paid N5 million merely for the opportunity to seek the party’s governorship ticket says a lot about the parasitic designs of the would-be candidates...Perhaps, then, a good number of these candidates, if not most, had their eyes set on the price: the billions to be stolen once in office.

How about Andy Uba, who has fashioned a comical show out of running from one court to another, desperate to secure judicial validation of his fancy that he is a “governor-in-waiting”? Quite simply, any court that humors Uba’s ambition would be complicit in the enthronement of a culture of falsehood, even fraud.

...Thanks to the investigative enterprise of saharareporters.com, it is now beyond question that Mr. Andy Uba does not hold an earned bachelor’s degree, much less a doctorate. It’s also doubtful that he has an honorary doctorate from an accredited university.

Uba appears to be legendarily wealthy, another curiosity...



'Nuff said'.

Between 47 mercenaries, 1 backdoor entrant, 1 troubled incumbent, and 1 previous dubiously acquired governorship office holder...this is worse than the case of being between the devil and the deep blue sea. The Bible Psalmist puts it better..."I am troubled on all corners..."

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emjemj is offline

 # 6 | 03.11.2009 19:32


It would be easy to ascribe Chris Uba’s deportment to his lack of education. It would be easy to view Andy Uba as afflicted with the same malady as his younger brother, one he essays to mask by wearing the self-arrogated toga of “Doctor.” But how does one account for the terrible political instincts so far exhibited by Soludo, a verifiably educated man? At this rather inauspicious time, with his tenure at the Central Bank under unflattering review, why did Soludo choose to make a swaggering entry into the political ring? And why has he failed to recognize that his chief sponsor, Tony Anenih, is – politically speaking – toxic?



Eherm ON, more like a case of toxic waste....a terrible case worse than what was dumped in Koko..but now anambra:cool:



Soludo’s willingness to receive a ticket that was snatched from other contenders – rather than transparently won – raises disturbing questions. In the end, even though the difference between Soludo and Andy Uba is, in some sense, one between an earned doctorate and a counterfeit one, the former number one banker has hardly exhibited greater enlightenment in politics.



More like madness....soludo feels that he has arrived and the next best thing will be to add power to that....it's like doing reverse gear..a former number person of the Apex Bank now muscling his way into a race he's ill prepared for...DOA:eek:

Anambra has now turned to Vegas:p



PS>>>....how about adding some marabous to the mix? The next Governor of Anambra State is a very easy going woman.....i see her coming in through an independent party...i see...hmmm:)

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Anioma777Anioma777 is offline

 # 7 | 04.11.2009 11:22

Well written article prof.


What stood out, above all, was the preponderance of mediocrities, even outright failures, on the roll of candidates – as if the governance of a state were an all-comer’s affair.



The above statement hurt my sides so much I needed 10 minutes to recover. Its not a funny situation in Anambra, but many predicted another round of madness in Anamabra after the debacle in Ekiti state.

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Ofunwa VillagerOfunwa Villager is offline

 # 8 | 04.11.2009 11:29

As for me, (for now i won't say my household) i will pitch my tent with Soludo anyday. The only fat issue i have with his candidacy is just that he sprouted from a leprous political party and a cancerous political godfather in the person of Tony 'Anene'. And for decency sake it is a sin to mention Soludos' name in the same breath with those of the reprehensible characters rearing their ugly heads from the Ubah clan. Meanwhile welcome back Okey, was just beginning to wonder if the sickly devourer called Yar'adua has thrown you into jail without anyone's notice.:D:D

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EzioyiEzioyi is offline

 # 9 | 05.11.2009 06:07

Well done ON--You've captured a critical chunk of the ongoing madness manifesting in Anambara at the moment.

However, We should not forget that the choices we make are as good as the options we have. Soludo, Ngige, Uba? who is the lesser evil?

I know it is smearing on Soludo's reputation to have a godfather who is as rabid as Anenih but then we can never tell what Soludo might turn out to make Anambara become tomorrow. Boris Yeltsin foisted Vladimir Putin (a KGB head) on the people of Russia albeit so many oppositional voices, yet Putin came to be the man to resusciate the Russian fainted image, its economy and restoring its Pride on the global dimension. A beautiful letter could be delivered in an ugly parcel-- but then this is just looking at the other side of things.

This would for sure produce a dangerous political precedent, yet--my argument is that your choices are as good as the options placed before you. Right now I think the people of Anambara are caught between a rock and a wall.
 

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