05

Nov

2006

A Trip From Abuja By Air and On Virginia Etiaba PDF Print E-mail
By Reuben Abati
05 November 2006

A Trip From Abuja By Air
By Reuben Abati

I had cause to travel to Abuja a few days ago. I was accosted at the airport by a television crew who wanted to know how I felt traveling by air so soon after the ADC plane crash of October 29. "What can we do? Life must continue", I declared, matter of factly. And indeed life must go on, although I noticed that there were not too many passengers at the usually busy local wing of the Murtala Muhammad airport in Lagos.

But the drama that I experienced on the return leg of my trip was so memorable I cannot the resist the temptation to report it. I arrived at the Abuja airport very early on Friday morning, to beat the rush and see if I could get a seat on either an Aero Contractors flight or Virgin Nigeria. For now, these are the only two airlines which Nigerians prefer to patronise. But at the Aero contractor ticket counter, I was told that all the airline's early morning flights to Lagos had been fully booked. I ended up buying a Chachangi ticket. The plane was already boarding so I rushed off to the tarmac. Sitting next to me in the aircraft was a young lady who pestered me endlessly with her anxiety. First, she lamented not being able to get an Aero ticket. Then, she declared that her mother would nearly faint were she to be told that she travelled with another airline.

"Do you think this plane will get to Lagos safely?", she asked me.

"I don't see any reason why it shouldn't", I tried to reassure her.

"Ah", she sighed. "And I didn't tell anybody I was travelling o. I want my mum to see me in Lagos and be surprised."

I kept mute. I had nothing to say to this. Meanwhile, the door of the aircraft was being shut, preparatory to departure.

"They are locking the door", she told me. "Someone cannot go down again. Ah, what have I done to myself? I think I should have gone back home and travel later."

"Don't worry. We are in it already. Everything will be fine"

"But see" she said, sweeping the aircraft with her left hand. "There are not too many people on this flight. It's like other people are afraid too. This is an early morning flight on Friday, ordinarily it should be full of passengers. I just hope I have not made a mistake."

"Don't worry, take it easy. Everything will be fine."

"Anytime I can't get either Aero or Virgin, I will just go back home."

The plane was now moving onto the runway, and just as it lifted itself off the ground, it shook at the wings a bit.

"The plane is shaking. It is shaking", the lady said, her voice quivering.

"That is normal when an aircraft is taking off, It will soon stabilise once it gains altitude," I told her.

"See, other people are praying."

She placed her head on the seat in front of her and mumbled some words to the Almighty. I looked out of the window, and behold, just below us, on a burnt out patch of ground, almost at the end of the runway field, to the right of the aircraft was the tail of the ADC plane that crashed on October 29. I could see it very clearly. I drew the young lady's attention to it. She looked out too noting that the crash was really close to the airport, and judging from the position of the aircraft in which we were traveling, we were able to confirm that in fact the crashed ADC plane had not even gained altitude before it plunged into the earth below and exploded. If such an accident had occurred in a city like Lagos where houses surround the perimeter fence of the airport, the tragedy would have been worse. More people would have died. The plane was now airborne. The young lady was still fretting.

"Don't give yourself hypertension", I advised her.

"At least we have survived the take-off, it remains landing. I understand that these planes only crash when they are taking off or when they are landing," she observed.

"Well, well". I restrained myself from giving her examples of air crashes in which the aircraft developed a fault while airborne. She kept talking.

"And the planes tend to crash either on Saturdays or Sundays. Thank God today is Friday," she noted. I could see that the lady was trying so hard to reassure herself that she was safe. Just then, the cabin attendant said certain things and mentioned the name of the pilot. This proved to be a useful piece of information for her.

"The pilot is a white man", she said, sounding as if she had just resolved a puzzle. I couldn't immediately figure out what she was driving at.

"That is a white man's name" she added.

I had wanted to tell her that the pilot could well be a Nigerian bearing one of those foreign sounding names, and that she should not judge a man's colour by the sound of his name alone. But I left her alone with her illusions. She won't give up.

"At least a white pilot will be reasonable," she told me.

"How?", I asked

"He will not take the kind of risk that our people will take."

"May be." By now, this lady was beginning to get on my nerves with her panic. So, I pretended as if I was feeling sleepy. I actually rested my head on the seat in front of me. But she would not leave me alone.

"You want to sleep?"

"Yes"

"How can you sleep in this kind of situation? Me, I can't sleep o. I am going to stay awake and monitor everything that this plane does till we get down safely in Lagos."

I mumbled something about not getting enough sleep the previous day, because I don't always feel comfortable sleeping in a strange bed in a hotel. She was not interested in my sleeping habits.

"Do you think the weather is good today?", she inquired. Not being a meteorologist, I was not in a position to offer her an expert opinion on the weather, other than to describe what she herself could see. It was bright outside, and the sun was already out.

"I think the weather is good today, the pilot shouldn't have any problems", she answered her question herself. I nodded. And if it would be of any comfort to her, I drew her attention to the news that the President had redeployed Professor Babalola Borishade from the Aviation Ministry to Culture and Tourism, a sign at least that the Federal Government is just as concerned about the state of the aviation industry as the rest of us.

"Who is now the new Minister of Aviation?", she asked. I told her. She shook her head.

"But that Professor Borishade, does he have any shame at all?," she inquired. How on earth she expected me to offer a definite opinion on this, I didn't know.

"The man should know that by redeploying him, the President is making a statement of disapproval about his headship of the Aviation Ministry and particularly his management of the ADC crash. What is he going to do at the Culture Ministry? He should have resigned; in fact the President should have sacked him."

"The man says he likes his redeployment. He is not thinking of resignation. He is happy"

"Why won't he be happy? If the President had redeployed him as a Personal Assistant in the Presidency, he would also have taken it. People like him have an explanation for everything. No shame at all."

Finally, the lady kept quiet. But as soon as the cabin hostess announced that the aircraft would commence its descent into the Lagos airport, my tormentor started fretting again. But we made it. The landing was smooth, and I saw her praying again, and singing. I took a close look at her for the first time. A pretty girl. Used to being pampered, obviously. Nice physical assets; delicate and tempting features. We disembarked. It took some time before we could collect our luggage, and now it was my turn to fret. "I don't like being kept waiting", I said. "Why is it taking these people so long to bring our luggage?" Someone spoke beside me. It wasn't the lady now, but a man who had been with us on the same flight.

"Any time they like, they can bring the luggage. You should be thanking God that we had a smooth flight and arrived safely", the fellow said.

I had nothing to say to him. I didn't want another cry baby on my hands, lamenting about the woes of Nigeria's aviation industry and how it has turned air travellers into victims of paranoia.

Anambra And Virginia Etiaba's Dilemma
The Deputy Governor of Anambra state, Mrs Virginia Ngozi Etiaba, was purportedly sworn in as Governor of the state on Friday, following the alleged impeachment of Governor Peter Obi, by a kangaroo House of Assembly which sat at 5.30 am to pass a resolution removing the Governor. Some newspapers are already referring to Mrs Etiaba as the first female Governor in the history of Nigeria. It is a title that she herself must be reluctant to accept.

History will note current events in Anambra, with a lot of question marks about the role being played by those who have sworn to subvert the course of justice and peace. Peter Obi's alleged "impeachment" was the product of criminality, an expression of legislative tyranny. If Peter Obi must be removed by the PDP-dominated Anambra state House of Assembly, then the impeachment must follow due process. That has not been done in this case. The lawmakers in Anambra should have availed themselves of the lesson of the present situation in Oyo and Ekiti states.

When the crisis began, Mrs Etiaba had sworn to stand by her boss. She rejected the offer of the position of Governor. She promised that she will not support the illegal impeachment of her boss. "Governor Obi is my Governor and my boss will continue to be my boss and Governor. I am not a Governor and will not allow myself to be sworn in as the Governor", she reportedly said.

But Mrs Etiaba has now gone back on her words. There have been many theories in the newspapers about this volte face, but I think what has suffered at all levels in the Anambra case is integrity. Mrs Etiaba should have remained loyal to her boss, through thick and thin. The impression that has now been reaffirmed is that in Nigerian politics, there are no principles at all, it is only expediency that counts. Mrs Etiaba tried to put a spin on her action at her "swearing in ceremony" by giving a speech that is shot through with sobriety and remorse. She says: "The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria has beckoned on me...." Must she accept? Must she be Governor? She added: "I wish to assure Ndi Anambra that I do not owe anybody or group any allegiance, but our state..." Really? In Anambra? Not even Mike Balonwu and his team of law-breaking lawmakers?

And then she declared: "in keeping with the mood of the state and our government, I will not entertain courtesy calls and I admonish all not to send me congratulatory messages, as we are not in a celebration mood. God bless us all." But would Madam Etiaba accept Xmas hampers and gifts? And answer "Her Excellency?" And how shall we address her husband Mr Etiaba, please? "First Husband?" or "First Man?". And is he also going to set up his own programme, the way First Ladies do? Already, the people of Nnewi are jubilating that their daughter has made history and that again, Nnewi is back in the news. In due course,. Mrs Etiaba will learn her own lessons too.

 



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 | 05.11.2006 07:18

"How can you sleep in this kind of situation?
Me, I can't sleep ...Read the full article.

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WaleAkinWaleAkin is offline

 # 2 | 05.11.2006 11:18

It's been one full week since the ADC air crash and as at this last friday 3rd of October 2006, the wreckage of the boeing aircraft is still uncleared!!! Reuben Abati just confirmed that he did see some part of the fuselage amongst the wreckage! News reports also has it that the international passport of the late Sultan was found just yesterday!!!

It's annoyingly annoying to read that a full week has passed and we still have the wreckage of a plane crash, its a psychological trauma for passengers on board other planes to see such eyesaw and i'd expect that such incident scenes are cleared off or better still cordoned off so people wont see it all.

Former Aviation Minister Aborishade was so quick to blame the late pilot but was slow to carry out a cleaning process of the scene and even the so called fiery newly appointed Minister Femi Fani-Kayode only uses his brain to abuse Nigerians all the time!

Some of these ministers should just go rot somewhere, they are just crappy!!


WaleAkin

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WayoGuyWayoGuy is offline

 # 3 | 05.11.2006 11:21

Reuben Abati states that "Some newspapers are already referring to Mrs Etiaba as the first female Governor in the history of Nigeria. It is a title that she herself must be reluctant to accept."

Statements such as the above are the type of armchair simplification of a very serious problem that runs through all Nigerian dailies and Internet discussion cites. Numerous bystanders, like Abati, "advise" Madam Etiaba not to accept the governorship position. Then they stop there. I say all those who so advise Mrs Etiaba are troublemakers as bad as the criminals and confused lawmakers who removed Peter Obi without due process in the first place. You are all spoilers. If Madam Etiaba refuses to fill the vacuum, then what? What is your solution? Another OBJ Emergency rule? Another political anarchy involving the PDP? What? What? What is your solution? Please. Spoilers.

With due credit to writer Olatunji, let me say to Abati: Oni baje ko won. Awon gogo bi atunnise.

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AbraxasAbraxas is offline

 # 4 | 05.11.2006 12:36

Hi, folks!

Short-term gratificaton is a defining characteristic of Nigerian politics: be it in the deployment of resources and personnel, or in the perception of responsibilities and duties to the electorate.

Muchas gracias.

don Juan Carlos ABRAXAS (III)

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ObiObi is offline

 # 5 | 05.11.2006 13:35


An interesting encounter with the poor girl. Flying is always an un-nerving experience. Talk less under the present situation at home. I could imagine how she felt; the anxiety when that door was finally shut behind her, and the passengers left to their fate.

Well, Mr. Abati could not have done more than the little words of comfort and reassurance. It is probable that the babe needed more than that from Oga Abati, and he didn't catch the joke.

But, how we sure sey Oga Abati tell di hol truth? Anyway shaa.

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AuspiciousAuspicious is offline

 # 6 | 05.11.2006 13:52

That was a funny encounter between Abati and that female passenger on that flight from Abuja to Lag. I couldn't help cracking up at the belated show of anxiety by the lady.."ah. they are closing the door!" LOL! LOL! Or the paranoia-driven guesses the lady kept dishing out: the pilot's Oyibo-sounding name; the weather; the plane being safe when it's at high altitude etc etc..LMAO!

Poor chick, see what Nigeria's aviation industry has done to her? Why blame the poor girl. And Abati commiting lookery. Ehn, make ein wifey cash am dey look..na den ein go know. LOL!

-----------------------------******************************------------------------------

Wayo Guy :

The outcome of a process borne of illegality has no solid foundation in integrity. If Governor Peter Obi was impeached through an illegal process, then there is no way on Earth (or Heaven sef) that his successor can claim ANY legality to his or her position as Governor (unless Obi resigned his previous position to that individual) - forget if that successor was Virgy or any of those rabble-rousers who snuck into the Anambra State House of Assembly under the cover of darkness to perpetrate illegality.

In Nigeria, our biggest problem is standards. When we justifiably called for the impeachment of that garrullous Governor Peter Ayo Fayose in Ekiti (why so many Peter Governors anyways?), we went ahead and did it illegally - we fell for the trap to remove him unconstitutionally and what is the price of our low standards today? Of course, a State of Emergency!

However, unlike Fayose, the protagonists of impeachment have nothing solid against Governor Obi, so they removed him through an illegal process. The will of the Anambrans was subjugated with impunity by a band of rogues masqurading as legislators. And Anambrans should have risen to reject that blatant abuse of the rule of law..but guess what? The Wayo Guys amongst us would rather have Anambrans condone illegality like the Ekitiketes did. If you ask them why, they'd say "politics is complex, we should not arm-chair it". The only solution? Anambrarians should continue to condone the subjugation of the rule of law in their land.

We cheapen our genuine cause by succumbing to illegality - by cutting corners/ignoring established process to achieve worthy aims - Anambrans worthy aim here being prevention of PDP hawks from gaining strenght through Andy Uba and Company. Haha! Guess what? That was the exact thought behind Obasanjo and Co's deft moves in Ekiti. They wanted to sanction the illegality of removing Fayose..so long as Olujimi (Fayose's Deputy) is left to claim Fayose's previous seat in her capacityas a PDP Chief Executive. Evetually, it was a case of the two sides (FG VS EKHA) using illegality to fight each other...before the FG checkmated the Assemblymen with a declaration of emergency rule. The rest is now history.

Condoning illegality - tolerating the abuse of the rule of law for ANY reason whatsoever - will always backfire no matter what. If not today, then it will be tommorow or "next tommorow"..or next year...it will definitely come back to haunt Anambrans again..and no matter the amount of proverbs by Wayo Guy or abuse of Reuben Abati will change that fact. Let the so-called first female Governor in Nigeria and her people at Nnewi sleep with one eye open; a house built on weak foundation will never last. So says the Oracle.

Auspicious.

PS: Let us just be thankful that Obasanjo didn't succeed in bending the Constitution to extend his mandate as Presido. We heard the same reasons as those being given now in Anambra. When will Nigeria learn that rules are rules that MUST be obeyed no matter what?

Proverb of the Day: Agba to jin si koto, a ko ara yooku l'ogbon! (Old man wey fall for 'ole, na sign for dose wey neva fall/remen on top ground to bekiaful!)

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MrOneNaijaMrOneNaija is offline

 # 7 | 05.11.2006 14:11

THE QUESTIONABLE ASCENDANCY OF DAME ETIABA

I'm reposting here my contribution under the thread "Peter Obi is not a politician".

Of course, in my reaction, I take to task the suspected insalutary role played by Ojukwu in what amounts to an acceptance of constitutional illegitimacy by Dame Etiaba and her éminence grise.

ABANDONED AT THE ALTAR OF EXPEDIENCY?


Even if one were to accept the questionable premise that Gov. Peter Obi has shown some measure of naiveté in his political conduct, there is no way one can reasonably conclude that naiveté or a lack of foresight did ultimately matter in his forced removal and consequent replacement by his deputy. When all is said and done, Anambrarians and Nigerians in general must, amongst other things, scrutinize the role played by some key figures in the likes of the ex-separatist leader, Ojukwu. To shy away from the imperative of such an investigation would be tantamount to a betrayal.

As I keep repeating, a major reason why the likes of Obasanjo and his tyrannical horde are breaking the laws of the land with reckless impunity in Nigeria today is the fact that critical, strategic segments of society have at best been inconsistent in their statements of opposition to the illegalities being carried out in places like Anambra, Oyo, Ekiti and Plateau. In the current crisis in Anambra, we may sadly be realizing now that Governor Obi was probably abandoned at a critical hour by some of the very voices that initially publicly declared strong support for his determination to resist the coup against him. For instance, media reports have consistently indicated that Ojukwu might have opted for expediency by abandoning the fight on the side of Obi, that is the insistence on the respect of due process and has instead adopted an opportunistic, largely after-thought rationalisation of the co-opting of Obi's deputy which, by all intents and purposes, is an acceptance of illegitimacy.

We need to pay close attention to pronouncements reportedly made by Governor Obi soon after the treachery by his deputy was announced. The hardly disguised sense of betrayal that can be gleaned from his remarks speaks volumes. Let's pray that Dame Etiaba - now "governor" - and her newly-found éminence grise don't in turn succumb to the depravities of the Uba clan and their sponsor, Kabiyesi, also known as the Butcher of Aso Rock (BOAR). I'm afraid, though, that this may be wishful thinking, for it is hard to imagine that the sadistic Abachanjo will leave matters the way they are at this moment. It is conceivable that Dame Etiaba has already concluded an evil pact with the 'gods' of Anambra. This would ensure her redundancy as governor. APGA - the Umeh wing, that is - and their mouthpieces will try to hoodwink Nigerians as to the nobility of their gesture. While savouring her sinecure, empty, self-serving speeches like the kind attributed to "Nigeria's first female governor" will be made even as dramatic gestures by APGA's key figures are registered in a forlorn attempt to indicate that something is being done to defend the rights of the Anambra people.

Events in Anambra, like the ones in Ekiti, have succinctly demonstrated once again that if the people want positive change, they must wake up and fight for it. They will join Governor Obi in his struggle to help restore constitutional legitimacy in Anambra and elsewhere in the land.

Anambra: The Nnewi conspiracy that finished Obi
•Ojukwu, Etiaba, ex-Gov in crucial talk
By CHRISTIAN ITA in Lagos; Geofrey Anyanwu in Awka and Christian Ochiama in Enugu
Sunnews Online
Sunday, November 5, 2006

Naivety on the part of Mr. Peter Obi and conspiracy by some power brokers from Nnewi may have accounted for his impeachment as Anambra State governor by a faction of the state House of Assembly and the subsequent swearing-in of his erstwhile deputy, Mrs. Virgy Etiaba as the new governor of the state.

The picture got clearer even as Obi, Etiaba held a closed door meeting with Chief Emeka Ojukwu last night at the Enugu residence of the former Biafran warlord.

Sunday Sun gathered that though the decision to move against Obi was reached in Boston, United States of America during the World Igbo Congress (WIC) which held in September between the former state governor, Dr. Chris Ngige, and members of the state House of Assembly, the plot was however, hijacked along the way by some powerful forces from Nnewi led by the state Chief Judge, Justice Chuka Okoli.

Obi, according to a reliable source, ran into trouble with the state lawmakers when he decided to stop the "gift of cash," a tradition begun by Ngige, to the legislatures as patronage.
Following the stoppage of the largesse, the lawmakers were said to have made representation to Obi who insisted that the condition for further disbursement is for the legislators to offer explanation on how previous allocations were spent.

Miffed by that action, the legislators agreed with Ngige in Boston that it was time to remove Obi from the equation. But the original script was to make the Speaker, Mr. Mike Balonwu, the governor and not Etiaba.
Balonwu physically attended the WIC alongside the core members of the plot.

As such, in the letter to Okoli directing him to set up a seven-man investigation panel, the Belonwu faction of the House of Assembly had listed as the panel’s brief, the investigation of allegations of gross misconduct against the governor and his deputy.

Counter plot
The Chief Judge, who under Ngige became a formidable political force, however, had his own game plan. He saw in the process, an opportunity to make Etiaba, who like him hails from Nnewi, the government of the state, thereby blocking the chances of the Speaker who hails from Onitsha or the Uba brothers who hail from Uga. Ngige hails from Alor while Obi is from Agulu.

So influential was the Chief Judge under Ngige that he was targeted on several occasions by arsonists believed to be working for the self-styled political godfather and Ngige’s estranged benefactor, Chief Chris Uba.

In the serial arson attacks on public buildings in November 2004 in Awka, for instance, his office was bombed. But he escaped unhurt.

In what seemed his self-preservation strategy, the Chief Judge shunned his official residence in Awka while Ngige lasted in power. Rather, he prefers the sanctuary of his country home in Nnewi locally referred to as a fortress with an underground bunker. He commutes daily from Nnewi to Awka.

Okoli, Sunday Sun understands, had sometime ago boasted to some top media executives as being the legal strategist who sustained Ngige in office for that long despite several audacious attempts by Chris Uba to remove him from office using the legislature.

He reportedly told them that whenever any suit involving Ngige came up in any court under his jurisdiction in Anambra, he took special interest and would not hesitate in withdrawing such cases from the judges handling them once he discovered they had been compromised.
His loyalty to Ngige, he had explained, was because he (Ngige) tarred roads in the state, thus connecting the various towns and villages.

So, the Ngige elements in the state Assembly trusted him even when four out of the seven-man investigation panel, including the chairman, Chief Chinedu Oranumba, that he named penultimate Friday to try Obi is his clanman from Nnewi.

Other members of the panel include Ifeanyi Udeze, Ijema Okwu, Hariene Uche Okonkwu, Chineze Mbonu, Reverend Dominic Ofueme and Emmanuel Chuka Ifedike.

Obi’s blind trust
Incidentally, Obi also trusted the Chief Judge. Prior to the pronouncement of the election petition tribunal in Awka in April that he was the duly elected governor, Obi was working hand in gloves with Emeka Etiaba, the son of his erstwhile deputy, in prosecuting his case at the tribunal.

So, when Obi became governor, Etiaba and his brother, Echisona, were understandably members of the governor’s think tank. They exploited that to the advantage of their mother.
And so, when Okoli named members of the panel, Obi, like the Belonwu faction of the House of Assembly, thought he was working to protect his flanks.

With the four members of that panel coming from Nnewi, Obi, Sunday Sun gathered, was at ease, beleiving that with his deputy coming from Nnewi as well, there was nothing to fear.
Indeed, it was this sentiment that lured Obi into making an appearance before the panel despite his initial description of it as an illegal body. But he read it all wrong.

However, to achieve this aim, the consent of ex-Biafran warlord and major supporter of Obi, Dim Chukwuemeka Odimegwu Ojukwu, was needed and this they reportedly got by appealing to clanish sentiments. Ojukwu, who also hails from Nnewi, is often regarded as the unofficial leader of All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA), the party on which platform Obi became governor.

Balonwu camp returns to drawing-board
Having realized they have been double-crossed by the Nnemi mafia, the Balonwu camp is said to have returned to the drawing-board with a view to plotting a new offensive to getting Etiaba out of the way. But how feasible this is remains to be seen considering that, head or tail, the Chief Judge is the one they have to depend on to raise a panel in the event that fresh "impeachable offences" are dredged up against the new governor.

Ojukwu hosts Obi & Etiaba
Meanwhile, the tripartite meeting between Ojukwu, Etiaba and Obi was still going as at press time. Contacted, the Chief of Staff to ex-Governor Obi confirmed the meeting and declined further comments. But competent sources told Sunday Sun that the meeting was at the instance of Ojukwu with a view to reconciling Obi and Etiaba.

While storming out of the State House, Awka Friday, Obi had vowed that he remained the bonafide governor, insisting that the impeachment did not follow due process.

In a radio broadcast earlier in the day, he said: "My dear good people of Anambra State, information reaching me this morning shows that the Chief Judge of this state, Hon. Justice Chuka Okoli is about to swear-in my deputy, Etiaba, as the governor of this state, but I am not prepared to surrender the sacred mandate given to me collectively by the people during the 2003 election in the state."

I accepted to heed national call to duty –Etiaba
Meanwhile, opposition from her ex-boss notwithstanding, Etiaba seems to be worming up to her new office as she visited her native Nnewi yesterday to register in the ongoing voters registeration exercise by Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

Looking cheerful, she was registered by the resident INEC Commissioner,
Alhaji Ahmed Raji, at Umudim Ward I. Afterward, she visited the Nnewi monarch, Igwe Nwafor Orizu. Defending her decision to accept the job of her boss after her initial refusal Thursday, Etiaba told the Igwe that she never wanted to be governor, but decided to accept the offer in difference to the national call to duty.





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WayoGuyWayoGuy is offline

 # 8 | 05.11.2006 14:21

Auspicious writes...

Wayo Guy :

The outcome of a process borne of illegality has no solid foundation in integrity. If Governor Peter Obi was impeached through an illegal process, then there is no way on Earth (or Heaven sef) that his successor can claim ANY legality to his or her position as Governor (unless Obi resigned his previous position to that individual) - forget if that successor was Virgy or any of those rabble-rousers who snuck into the Anambra State House of Assembly under the cover of darkness to perpetrate illegality.

In Nigeria, our biggest problem is standards. When we justifiably called for the impeachment of that garrullous Governor Peter Ayo Fayose in Ekiti (why so many Peter Governors anyways?), we went ahead and did it illegally - we fell for the trap to remove him unconstitutionally and what is the price of our low standards today? Of course, a State of Emergency!

However, unlike Fayose, the propagonists of impeachment have nothing solid against Governor Obi, so they removed him through an illegal process. The will of the Anambrans was subjugated with impunity by a band of rogues masqurading as legislators. And Anambrans should have risen to reject that blatant abuse of the rule of law..but guess what? The Wayo Guys amongst us would rather have Anambrans condone illegality like the Ekitiketes did. If you ask them why, they'd say "politics is complex, we should not arm-chair it". The only solution? Anambrarians should continue to condone the subjugation of the rule of law in their land.

We cheapen our genuine cause by succumbing to illegality - by cutting corners/ignoring established process to achieve worthy aims - Anambrans worthy aim here being prevention of PDP hawks from gaining strenght through Andy Uba and Company. Haha! Guess what? That was the exact thought behind Obasanjo and Co's deft moves in Ekiti. They wanted to sanction the illegality of removing Fayose..so long as Olujimi (Fayose's Deputy) is left to claim Fayose's previous seat in her capacityas a PDP Chief Executive. Evetually, it was a case of the two sides (FG VS EKHA) using illegality to fight each other...before the FG checkmated the Assemblymen with a declaration of emergency rule. The rest is now history.

Condoning illegality - tolerating the abuse of the rule of law for ANY reason whatsoever - will always backfire no matter what. If not today, then it will be tommorow or "next tommorow"..or next year...it will definitely come back to haunt Anambrans again..and no matter the amount of proverbs by Wayo Guy or abuse of Reuben Abati will change that fact. Let the so-called first female Governor in Nigeria and her people at Nnewi sleep with one eye open; a house built on weak foundation will never last. So says the Oracle.

Auspicious.

PS: Let us just be thankful that Obasanjo didn't succeed in bending the Constitution to extend his mandate as Presido. We heard the same reasons as those being given now in Anambra. When will Nigeria learn that rules are rules that MUST be obeyed no matter what?

Proverb of the Day: Agba to jin si koto, a ko ara yooku l'ogbon! (Old man wey fall for 'ole, na sign for dose wey neva fall/remen on top ground to bekiaful!)

-------------------------------------------------------
Good, but I am still lost (or is it that you did not make the point) on exactly who should fill the vacuum if Madam Etiaba were to refuse to be sworn in as governor? Who? Is it not precisely the constitutional purpose of a deputy governor to fill the vacuum when the governor is removed, dies, resigns, travels, is sick, etc, regardless of how the governor is removed; at least until the removed governor is re-instated (assuming he challenges his own removal through the court). Tell me what Madam Etiaba did wrong here.... I am waiting.

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denkerdenker is offline

 # 9 | 05.11.2006 14:34

hi folks,

....if 21 legislators signed the impeachment and got the impeachment through...on what basis are we arguing the issue of illegality/ies....have talked vastly/extensively with my people in onicha, nnewi and ojoto...they don't have problem with the impeachment...we have to get our facts right...folks!


visit: that impeached Peter Obi - ...

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AuspiciousAuspicious is offline

 # 10 | 05.11.2006 14:44


=WayoGuy;137435>
Good, but I am still lost (or is it that you did not make the point) on exactly who should fill the vacuum if Madam Etiaba were to refuse to be sworn in as governor? Who? Is it not precisely the constitutional purpose of a deputy governor to fill the vacuum when the governor is removed, dies, resigns, travels, is sick, etc, regardless of how the governor is removed; at least until the removed governor is re-instated (assuming he challenges his own removal through the court). Tell me what Madam Etiaba did wrong here.... I am waiting.


The so-called removal of Governor Peter Obi of Anambra was simply illegal. Hence, his purported impeachment is null and void by ALL standards - no matter how high or low. Meaning what? There is/was NO void created in the Anambra State Governor's office! As such, Virgy didn't have to step-in to fill ANY vacuum. She should have stuck with her boss to the very end.

What Madam Deputy did wrong was that she gave in to that ridiculous assumption/belief/postulation/assertion/delaration etc that her boss has been impeached. Hell naw! There is NOTHING like that. There was NO impeachment. That was a charade of the process of impeachment. That was a joke! And the legislators who trooped into town like the cowards/slaves of gluttony that they are are the clowns.

Until we adopt a ZERO TOLERANCE for usurpation of the rule of law in that dear Motherland of ours, Wayo Guy, we will continue to run around in circles chasing our tails.

Auspicious.


PS:

Is it not precisely the constitutional purpose of a deputy governor to fill the vacuum when the governor is removed, dies, resigns, travels, is sick, etc, regardless of how the governor is removed...?



No, no, no, no, no, no! Wayo, heeey! Why, where'd you get that from??? Which statute books??? Think about that question again, my guy.
 

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