EBERE WABARA, [email protected] 08055001948
PENULTIMATE Thursday, I discussed with a colleague of mine based in Enugu over his earlier reportage on Imo State. After lengthy elucidations and exchange of professional banter on the activities of the governor, Rochas Anayo Okorocha of the APC, his leadership style and allied good governance issues, I did an opinion article last Monday entitled “Rochas: Misperceived and demonized (1).”
From the multi-media responses I got, I knew, for the first and last time in my over-three-decade quintessential journalism, that I had been misled by a colleague! This has confirmed professorial admonitions I had received in my profound communications scholarship that I should never depend on secondary sources for critical information.
I had largely taken a laudatory standpoint last week that bordered on misinformed eulogy for maverick Rochas. Following the copious feedback I got last Monday, I was so livid that I had to travel to Owerri pronto to see things for myself. At the end of my four-day visit, I was embarrassed and scandalized by what I saw and heard.
Some of my audiences said Rochas did fairly well in his first term, but that the second tenure has been characterized by haughtiness and indifference. The people are so despondent and disenchanted that they wish 2019 was tomorrow. Bitterness over the emergence of Rochas symbolizes their rage.
Again, for the first time in my robust career as a developmental journalist, I am compelled to retract the encomiums I lavishly and inadvertently poured on Rochas. As I apologize to those offended by my celebration of Rochas, I responsibly declare that Rochas is taking innumerable wrong steps for reasons adduced presently.
I unequivocally assert that Rochas is in no way misperceived and demonized. The perception is an incontrovertible reflection of his weirdness and affirmatively not demonized. Indeed, taking his two immediate predecessors, Achike Udenwa and Ikedi Ohakim, into reckoning, Rochas pales into insignificance, comparatively. I never believed any governor could be as bad as vicious Theodore Ahamefule Orji of Abia State of yore— the only former governor who recklessly stopped President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB) from campaigning in Umuahia township stadium shortly before the last presidential election and also desecrated royalty by dealing with the traditional ruler who defiantly gave PMB a chieftaincy title during the aborted electioneering.
Even journalists who covered Buhari’s campaign were endlessly harassed while those who reported APC activities in Abia were brutalized by Ochendo. PMB never forgives nor forgets! At the fullness of time, T.A. Orji will inevitably get his Dasuki treatment from PMB.
Going by Okorocha’s needless serial defections and other utopian democratic antecedents, I can reasonably affirm that he is one of the vanishing Igbo political stalwarts whose utter disregard for people’s feelings underscore South East retrogression and neglect by the APC central government because of the region’s unflinchingly inexplicable loyalty to the thievish and dubious PDP of yesteryear!
On arrival at Owerri, I went to the Federal Medical Centre where I saw not less than 2000 outpatients waiting for attention. One of the tragedies of Rochas is the curious attempt by him to build 27 general hospitals across the state all of which are not functional (and will never be completed going by the governor’s reputational profile for abandonment of projects) hence the swamping of the FMC. Three efficient and effective government hospitals in the senatorial headquarters and a few well-stocked clinics in the remote areas would have touched copious lives.
The cab driver took me to sites where people’s structures were callously and indiscriminately demolished by Rochas for purported urban renewal. The irony, according to the victims some of whom I interacted with, is that nothing had been done with space from previous structural demolitions. Yet, Rochas goes ahead destroying more and more properties.
We stopped over at the Ministry of Justice and some courts in Owerri. They were like graveyards as there was no activity due to unpaid salaries and infrastructural deficiency. The dismay, I was authoritatively informed, is that Rochas does not care a hoot about the year-long unprecedented degeneracy! I was also in Okigwe where no project had been inaugurated in the past five years.
I equally went to Orlu: the roads that were accessible before the arrival of Rochas have all become craters—almost impassable even for pedestrians! Rochas must realize that constructing all manner of elitist parks, spaces and erection of monuments and comical signposts are of no benefit to most people.
Virtually all the Owerri municipal roads like Wetheral, Bank, Douglas, Egbu, Okigwe, Orlu have been taken over by heaps of refuse. Unlike in the past (MCC, RCC et al), pretentious/dubious/phony road “construction” is being done by nondescript companies that offer poor quality services. The few existing good roads are the ones built by De Sam Mbakwe and military administrators and marginally rehabilitated by Udenwa/Ohakim.
As Rochas carries on like a dreamer, workers’ salaries, pensions, gratuities and other statutory entitlements/allowances are owed minimally for nine months. There is angst in the land—that Imolites are merely existing (not living) in asphyxiating bondage is a fatalistic understatement!
Only two things thrive here: prostitution and kidnapping. This is so because almost all productive engagements, gainful employment, entrepreneurship, industries and investment prospects have collapsed because of poor infrastructure, governmental lethargy and the general (national) APC worsening leadership.
In summation, systemic policy summersaults and cavalier administrative idiosyncrasies are trivializing governance.